High precision Titanium 3D printers exist, so yes I'd say printing an action is more than possible. Check out EOS's Metal printers. They are not a viable option for a consumer though as they are verrrry pricey.
Exactly this... Rolls-Royce has been 3D printing very complex blades for its Jet engine turbines for years. Parts are printed then sintered and final machined. If they can print turbine blades which undergo incredible rotational and thermal stresses, a rifle action is certainly doable.
The question is not one of can you, however. The question is “why would you?” Rifle actions are simple. The raw material is a relatively mild forged bar or drop forging that is cheap and fast to make. All the machining operations use equipment and methods that has existed since that late 1800’s, though now is CNC and has lots more widgets and geegaws ranging from coolants to tool changers that have made the process fast and have eliminated the need in many cases for expensive labor (machinists and toolmakers) on the shop floor. There is simply no need to print a rifle action.
3D printing for suppressors is another matter, because acoustics engineers can design really interesting baffling systems that include blind chambers, helix’s, torroids and other shapes that become impossible to machine in a single piece. Think of a Nautilus shell and its chambers. You can’t machine that... or if you could, it would have to be done in sections and then assembled.
But with 3D printing, you can make blind chambers, twisted passages, areas to tune out specific sounds, Harmonics, or dissipate gas more efficiently. The result is really effective suppressors in small packages that do things ordinary baffled/chambered suppressors can’t do.
Every tool has a use. But every tool also comes with a run time, programming, materials set-up, MRO and operator cost. The engineer today can’t just design an action and say, “here, 3D print this.“ Because the production engineering and cost engineering departments won’t let it get through. Every part is calculated to fractions of cents in todays markets. Because when you make a lot of something, quarter cents add up. So all that gets factored in to making a design an affordable reality... not just a reality.
BTW it is in production Engineering that companies like Ruger utterly shine. And why they can offer a RPR that performs almost as well as a rifle costing 3x the price. Design, engineering, production engineering and materials all come together... along with an understanding that with volume, their cost comes down. Sako and AI make amazing rifles, but don’t sell nearly as many. Since it costs the same to keep the lights on, heat the building and pay the overheads... the company that can sell more, can amortize those costs across more guns... and the customer gets them cheaper. Economics 101.
For a couple of good books on the history of this stuff... Civil War Barons; The American System of Manufacturing 1700-1920 (about Springfield Armory among other concerns), and Wheels for the World, Douglas Brinkley’s masterful history of Ford Motor Company. All three all delve deep into the beauty of production engineering... and the arms industry.
cheers, Sirhr
PS, there is another great book which Ican’t remember the title of, but is a biography of Lord Armstrong, the brilliant cannon and gun and steel maker in England. Utterly amazing mind!