As suggested by John Traveller,the problem is "where are you going to put the bullets?" Most guns have the magazine up from underneath, which would get in the way of your downward ejection. The magazine on top (FN P90/PS90, as mentioned above, the Calico, and the Bren gun) could have a problem with getting in the way of sights, etc. Those few existing bottom-ejects are tube load (bullets either in front of or behind the action); and, as noted, you can't have pointy bullets in a tube loaded gun ... so you'll see the tube-loaded down-ejects in shotguns (Ithaca, I think) and .22LRs (like the Browning ATD). If your main reason for going down-eject is to accomodate lefties, gun makers have either chosen to ignore the problem or make a separate left-ejecting version. I think the Steyr AUG can be switched fairly readily to eject either way. It's an interesting gun-design excercise ... one of the basic issues (similar to "how do you get the trigger action, which happens in front of a pistol's magazine, to the sear & hammer, which are behind the magazine?").