If you can`t get it done with 15 rounds of 12
Transcription
If you can`t get it done with 15 rounds of 12
If you can’t get it done with 15 rounds of 12-gauge, better bring reinforcements. With the UTS-15, firepower will never be your problem. By Robert W. Hunnicutt Photos by Mike Anschuetz [Cont. to page 9] The UTS-15 from UTAS offers 15-round capacity with 23/4-inch 12-gauge ammo. It’s a very unusual design that uses a lot of lightweight materials. [Cont. from page 5] uch to the disgust of the Andrew Cuomos of the world, large-capacity magazines are here to stay in rifles and pistols, but what’s a shotgunner to do? You can get some honkin’ big magazines of up to 20 rounds capacity for Saiga variants, but they weigh a ton and are pretty clumsy, as well. What if you could have enhanced capacity in something a little more shotgun-like? The first example of that thinking was the Kel-Tec KSG (7/1/11 issue), which combined a bullpup configuration with dual seven-round magazines located below the barrel. The KSG was an instant sensation, with about the only complaint against it being that the shooter is required to switch manually between the two magazine tubes. If that bothered you, the solution is here in the form of the UTAS UTS-15, which alternates feeding between its magazine tubes. Since this is a shotgun, you will not be surprised to hear that UTAS is a Turkish company, relatively unknown until now because it mainly did OEM work. The story of the UTS-15 starts with a South African gun called the Neostead. It was a large-capacity pump gun, but was very complex and pumped forward, rather than to the rear in traditional fashion. Nevertheless, Smith & Wesson was intrigued by the possibilities and asked its Turkish partners to reengineer the Neostead into something a little more user-friendly. That process took a lot more time and effort than anticipated, and S&W lost interest. The Turkish manufacturer, which had bought the Neostead patents, eventually abandoned the design and started from a fresh computer screen. The result has almost nothing in common with the earlier gun. While it was originally hoped to use modified parts from existing guns, the need to keep weight down meant the UTS-15 evolved into an entirely distinct creation. And though UTAS is a Turkish company, the Turkish content is limited to the bolt, slide, trigger assembly and a few other small parts. The bulk of the gun is made of plastics and other lightweight components that are sourced and assembled in this county. While the Kel-Tec carried its magazine tubes below the barrel, they are above it in the UTS-15. This gives the gun a very unusual silhouette and a peculiar feel. If you think “Purdey” when someone says “shotgun,” you won’t find the UTS-15 all that shotgun-like. It reminded me of certain experimental military arms like the HK G11 or the OICW, whose general outline was a box with a pistol grip at the bottom. You can tell it’s a gun, but you might not necessarily identify it as a shotgun. That said, many prospective buyers will like the cool factor imparted by the overall flat black finish and sundry vent and cartridge counter holes. The UTS-15 has a bright future as a star of action films and video games, I would say. The heart of the UTS-15 is a monobloc that looks like a large double-barrel shotgun’s. It is a one-piece magnesium casting made by a process called thixomolding. Magnesium chips are heated in an argon atmosphere to a semisolid state about the consistency of dough, then injected at very high pressure into a steel mold. This process allows the production of complex parts with very thin walls. Magnesium has been used sparingly in firearms production, one recent exception being the Taurus Model 856 revolver, but as the metal is 30% lighter than aluminum, the weight savings are significant, especially in a relatively massive piece like the UTS-15 monobloc. On each side of the monobloc is an outward-hinged door with a central latch. Opening the doors allows magazine loading. When you open the door, you’ll see the magazine follower plunger; push the plunger forward until it catches against the latch at the front of the door opening. The follower and plunger must extend all the way to the back of the monobloc to power the last shell of a magazine. Closing the door pivots the latch, allowing the magazine follower assembly to drive shells rearward into the action. The magazine tubes insert and lock with studs into the front of the monobloc. These are aluminum extrusions with a prominent V-shaped channel to accommodate a guide rib on the magazine follower. Each tube has 14 lozenge-shaped viewing ports that allow a white patch on the follower to show through. White numerals on the side covers indicate the rounds remaining in each tube. The parts crucial to letting the UTS-15 do what it does are the shell release gates at the bottom rear of the monobloc. These are deceptively simple pieces that control the shell as it passes through and out of the monobloc. The gates are operated by a curved track in an aluminum part below the monobloc called the shell release plate. The plate is in turn is controlled by two protrusions from the bolt The business end of the UTS-15 shows a breach- carriage. One moves it back as the fore-end ing choke tube and combination laser-flashlight. is retracted; the other pushes it forward as the fore-end is A Troy folding front sight fit the rail perfectly. returned to battery position. against the rear of the bolt. It serves there only to keep the bolt from opening if the muzzle is pointed up; locking is by a rotating bolt head that engages the barrel extension. When the trigger is pulled and the hammer falls, the latter carries the release out of its position against the bolt, freeing the bolt to move rearward in preparation for firing another round. The receiver has an AR-like dust cover that is held closed by a magnet that contacts the bolt. When the bolt is retracted, the magnet loses contact, allowing the dust cover to rotate downward away from the ejection port. What is called the lower stock incorporates the trigger blade, which is connected to the trigger assembly in the receiver by a hooked link. A coil spring surrounding the link returns the trigger blade to normal position after firing. The pistol grip is an AR type and can be replaced by any aftermarket AR grip. At the front of the lower stock is a short section of magazine tube that has two functions: it’s the support for the barrel ring, and a mounting place for a combination flashlight/laser that is controlled by a lever above the right front of the trigger guard. The barrel and magazine tubes are held together by three supports that in turn retain the plastic side covers and the top rail, which is molded magnesium. At the front of the whole assembly is an end cap that attaches to the front barrel support. The end cap has two guide posts that support the magazine springs and the follower and plunger when the magazine is fully loaded. With six rounds in the tube, the spring follower assembly telescopes down to the length of a single 23/4-inch shell. If there’s a lower stock, there must be an upper stock, Hunnicutt would have liked a little rougher surface on the buttpad; the UTS-15 is butt-heavy and and in this case it’s an injection-molded piece pivoted at will tend to slide down the shoulder under recoil. the top rear of the butt. Resembling an M60 machine a hinged cover and a shell-handling assembly called the mousetrap. Once a shell has passed through its four stops in the monobloc, it is ejected forcefully rearward into the receiver. There it strikes the mousetrap trigger plate, tilting that part out of engagement with the mousetrap spoon. The spoon snaps down on the shell, pinning it against a platform molded into the receiver and aligned with the chamber. Pushing the fore-end forward chambers the shell, returns the mousetrap spoon to its cocked position, and rotates the bolt release into a position propped The lower stock assembly allows installation of any AR-style pistol grip. The safety lever works exactly as it does on the AR-15 for a familiar feel. The gate pivots at the rear of the monobloc, and controls each shell at three different positions. In the first position, the gate is pivoted up at the front and blocks the shell rim. In the second, it is tilted down at the front and the shell stops against an angle in the gate. In the last, the shell comes to rest against a hook at the rear of the gate. From there, it is ejected into the action. In the middle of that process, the shell is stopped a fourth time by a pivoting interrupter that alternately allows a shell from one magazine tube or another to move rearward. There’s also a manual cutoff pivoted at the top of the monobloc that allows either magazine tube to be blocked, so that feeding is out of one magazine tube. The receiver is a large injection-molded plastic piece that incorporates the trigger assembly, the rubber buttpad, Magazine follower plungers extend into the loading ports. Push them forward to latch before starting to load ammunition into the magazine tubes. gun cheekpiece, it has two functions. It gives your cheek a place to rest, and it funnels shells from the left and right magazine tubes toward the center of the gun. The barrel is a complex unit with attaching points for the magazine supports. The sample UTS-15 came with a ventilated breaching tube, almost a visual requirement for defensive shotguns these days, and a 7.5-inch extension tube. The extension tube has male threads at the back and female threads at the front, allowing you to turn in the breaching tube or any other Beretta-pattern choke tube. Installing the extension tube stretches overall length of the gun to 39 inches. Internal bore diameter was .726", a little below the nominal .729". The extension tube had a slightly tighter bore of .719". So you’re getting about a skeet choke with the extension tube, though I would doubt that was the intention. The sample UTS-15 didn’t come with iron sights, and we found a set of Troy Industries AR sights were OK for some users, not tall enough for others. I dug out a Lucid red dot sight that, with an aiming point about 13/4 inches above the sight rail, was perfect. With 19 inches of rail space available, you should be able to mount just about anything in the scope department, though I would wonder how the magnesium rail might stand up to heavy night-vision scopes. So now that we know what’s inside, how does it work? To load, press up on the bolt release in the bottom of the butt, retract the fore-end and open the loading port doors. Push the magazine follower plunger into the magazine tube until the catch retains it. Then load six 23/4inch or five 3-inch shells in each tube. Insert one more into each opening in the monobloc. Closing the doors will pivot the latch, allowing the column of shells to move rearward under pressure from the magazine springs. If you want to load a full complement of 15 rounds, drop a round into the receiver [Cont. to page 12] Loading is through doors on either side of the monobloc. Push the latch in the center to swing them open and allow access to the gun’s magazine tubes. The magazine tubes are above the bore line. Shells are thrown back against the mousetrap assembly and placed on a platform in line with the bore. The mousetrap assembly works exactly like its namesake. The shell travels rearward against the mousetrap trigger, allowing the spoon to drop onto the shell. [Cont. from page 10] through the ejection port and slide the fore-end forward to chamber it. The safety is in the AR-15 pattern in exactly the position you would expect. The magazine cutoff is on the top centerline of the monobloc: move it to one side or the other to cut off that magazine. It is quite easy to move when the action is open, quite difficult when it is closed. When finished firing, lift up the upper stock (it just snaps to the receiver at the front) to inspect the magazine tubes and monobloc to ensure the gun is empty. The manufacturer doesn’t suggest any special method for unloading. Just apply the safety and pump any unused ammo through the action, being sure the cutoff is in its central position allowing alternate feeding from the two magazine tubes. The manufacturer suggests sharp, vigorous pumping to prevent jams caused by weak ejection. Keep in mind that there are a lot more moving parts drawing power from the movement of the slide than there are in your trusty 870. Given the preponderance of lightweight parts, it’s probably a lot more flexible, too. I patterned the UTS-15 with results shown in the accompanying table, and function-fired it with a variety of 23/4-inch and 3-inch ammunition. Just as the manufacturer stated, I had continual failures to eject if I didn’t pump vigorously. If you really rack back hard, the empty will go 6–8 feet, but that’s about the limit. Like the Kel-Tec KSG, the UTS-15 has a very unfortunately located sling swivel at the left front of the fore-end. This will jam your thumb every time if you let it stray far forward. It’s in a great spot for carrying, not so great for shooting. You can take it off or switch it to the right side, and you will want to do one or the other. When loading the magazines, angle the shell into the tube; you don’t want to get it all the way in the monobloc in line with the tube, since there will be almost no clearance for the thumb. Be careful about crawling the stock or the magazine cutoff lever can grab your cheek. Having sights or a scope tall enough to allow an upright head position is vital here. Because the UTS-15 is butt-heavy, even with a full ammo load, it will tend to slide down on the shoulder if you don’t maintain a very secure grasp. A rougher surface on the rubber buttpad might help, but a hard choke hold on the gun is ultimately the answer. Recoil is not bad at all with managed-recoil buckshot loads; it is snappy with 23/4-inch hunting loads and pretty unpleasant with 3-inch loads. Why exactly you’d ever shoot waterfowl loads in the UTS-15 is unclear to me, but you can if you insist. The trigger pull is actually not too bad by bullpup standards, and was no barrier to accurate slug firing. There has been a lot of internet chatter about the UTS15, much of it predicated on its potential use as a military arm. The answer to that is simple; it is not one. Any shotgun with 153 parts, many of them held together with hex socket screws, is not intended to be humped up the Hindu Kush. It’s a very interesting gun with clever engineering that is fun to shoot, but judging it by the same criteria you’d apply to an M1 Garand is ridiculous. The maker doesn’t claim it’s a military shotgun, and judging it as one is silly. Having seen a lot of cops handle guns, I would not think it a candidate for wide-scale law enforcement use outside certain special units where the ability to switch quickly between different ammunition types could be a benefit. My guess is the vast majority of buyers will be civilian shooters who just want the chance to whale away 15 shots of 12-gauge at a sitting. There’s not a thing wrong with wanting a gun that impresses your buddies at the range, and the UTS-15 will do that admirably. UTAS UTS-15 CYLINDER BORE = point of aim UTAS UTS-15 SHOTGUN Manufacturer: UTAS Makine, Ltd., Caglayan Mah. 2001 Sok. Ugur Apt. No:11/1 07230 Antalya, Turkey Importer: UTAS-USA, 1247 Rand Road, Dept. SGN, Des Plaines, IL 60016 Type: Pump shotgun Gauge: 12, 3-inch Magazine Capacity: 14 Weight: 8.5 pounds Overall Length: 303/4 inches Barrel Length: 22 inches Length of Pull: 121/4 inches Drop at Heel: 1/2" Drop at Comb: 1/2” Trigger Pull: 5 pounds The false magazine tube at the front of the lower stock supports the combination flashlight-lower, which is controlled by a lever on the right side. Accessories: Barrel extension Price: $1,200 1 0 2 2 NobelSport Law Enforcement Buckshot 1200 fps, 12 00 Buck Pellet count: 12 2 2 1 1 ON THE COVER Like the power of a shotgun, but looking for rifle-like magazine capacity? The UTAS UTS-15 has 15 rounds of 12-gauge on tap. Photo by Mike Anschuetz. Average of 10 shots at 25 yards 21¼" inner circle:8 (67%) 30" outer ring:3 (25%) Total: 11 (92%)