Not being facetious here, guns don't reproduce themselves. They require people to make them.
The pictures you'll see of guns being made will tend to be the very high end shotguns and rifles that involve a lot of incredibly skilled input, and they sell for the same amounts of money that would buy you a mid range super car or a house.
The main stay is commercial mass production. It's hard to match the price of guns made on big highly mechanised production lines, whether for civilian or state sector consumption. Iirc the metal innards that go into a Remington 66 nylon,'s plastic outer, cost about $8 to replace (it's a semi auto. 22 rim fire rifle. Imo it's a gun that's unsafe by design, but that's another story)
At the other end, the guns that you are unlikely to see pictures of being made are the guns made in places like the tribal lands of "Pakistan" (the line on the map that says pakistan goes around the area, but the central state has virtually no control) or (iirc) Luzon in the Philippines.
These are cottage industry knock offs of AKs MAC 10s etc. The philipinos also make revolvers chambered for rifle ammunition!
There was a fairly big craze for home building in the united state a few years back. I haven't heard much of it recently. It was a hobby,
Apart from just as a hobby, The home built stuff appears when the commercial stuff isn't available.
By far the easiest things to build, are submachineguns. They can be built using standard size piping and hand tools at home. No lathes or milling machines are needed.
They're also very effective.
In the early 1950s, American decisions to go for 7.62 ×51 as the standard Nato rifle round, meant dropping the idea of anumbers intermediate calibre (intermediate between full power effective to about 1000 yards rifle, and pistol calibres) selective fire rifle. Full auto fire with a rifle chambered for full a power round is totally uncontrollable.
Many nato armies continued using 9mm and .45 submachineguns for suppressive fire and in final stages of assaults, right into the middle of the 19 80s. Out to 200 yards, they're incredibly effective, arguably more effective than an intermediate calibre selective fire rifle. The problems are in logistics of two types of ammunition and when range exceeds 200 yards.
Out to 80 yards, a 12 guage shotgun loaded with buckshot is arguably even more effective as a fighting gun than either a selective fire intermediate calibre rifle or a submachinegun.
That's something that the Elmer Fudds of this world, who regurgitate the lines
"A hunt wabbitzez, but no one needs a...."
Really don't like to acknowledge
The pictures you'll see of guns being made will tend to be the very high end shotguns and rifles that involve a lot of incredibly skilled input, and they sell for the same amounts of money that would buy you a mid range super car or a house.
The main stay is commercial mass production. It's hard to match the price of guns made on big highly mechanised production lines, whether for civilian or state sector consumption. Iirc the metal innards that go into a Remington 66 nylon,'s plastic outer, cost about $8 to replace (it's a semi auto. 22 rim fire rifle. Imo it's a gun that's unsafe by design, but that's another story)
At the other end, the guns that you are unlikely to see pictures of being made are the guns made in places like the tribal lands of "Pakistan" (the line on the map that says pakistan goes around the area, but the central state has virtually no control) or (iirc) Luzon in the Philippines.
These are cottage industry knock offs of AKs MAC 10s etc. The philipinos also make revolvers chambered for rifle ammunition!
There was a fairly big craze for home building in the united state a few years back. I haven't heard much of it recently. It was a hobby,
Apart from just as a hobby, The home built stuff appears when the commercial stuff isn't available.
By far the easiest things to build, are submachineguns. They can be built using standard size piping and hand tools at home. No lathes or milling machines are needed.
They're also very effective.
In the early 1950s, American decisions to go for 7.62 ×51 as the standard Nato rifle round, meant dropping the idea of anumbers intermediate calibre (intermediate between full power effective to about 1000 yards rifle, and pistol calibres) selective fire rifle. Full auto fire with a rifle chambered for full a power round is totally uncontrollable.
Many nato armies continued using 9mm and .45 submachineguns for suppressive fire and in final stages of assaults, right into the middle of the 19 80s. Out to 200 yards, they're incredibly effective, arguably more effective than an intermediate calibre selective fire rifle. The problems are in logistics of two types of ammunition and when range exceeds 200 yards.
Out to 80 yards, a 12 guage shotgun loaded with buckshot is arguably even more effective as a fighting gun than either a selective fire intermediate calibre rifle or a submachinegun.
That's something that the Elmer Fudds of this world, who regurgitate the lines
"A hunt wabbitzez, but no one needs a...."
Really don't like to acknowledge