Zarvan
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As you may (or not) have seen among the myriad of AR platforms in different calibers fighting for the attendees’ attention during this year’s SHOT Show, Brazil’s Forjas Taurus is another entrant in this apparently crowded market segment with its T4 (or FAT 556, in some earlier fact sheets), an M4 clone fully manufactured in the company’s facilities now concentrated in the city of São Leopoldo, just 33 km away from the traditional premises in Porto Alegre, capital city of Rio Grande do Sul State. You may find it interesting to learn how it all happened.
Taurus is a long-time manufacturer of revolvers (since the 1950s) and semi-auto pistols (1980s), having also ventured in the field of submachine guns (Beretta M12 variants and joint ventures with Chile’s FAMAE) and pistol-caliber carbines (also in collaboration with the Chilean company). It was only a matter of time until it turned its eyes to the military/LE rifle market. In April 2009, the Taurus stand in the LAAD Defense & Security exhibition in Rio de Janeiro was full of posters, literature, and, of course, display guns announcing the company’s intention to start a cooperative program with Israel’s IWI to manufacture the 5.56x45mm Tavor bullpup rifle in Brazil. The frisson it raised in the market, however, gradually died away and it seemed that rifles were no longer in the company’s plans.
“Shalom, Brazil!”: one of the many IWI Tavor rifles displayed in the Taurus stand during the LAAD 2009 Exhibition in Rio de Janeiro.
Another shiver, however, was felt exactly two years later at the 2011 LAAD show, when Taurus presented its own 5.56x45mm ART 556 rifle and CT 556 carbine designs. The guns were to be available with 1:7in pitch 254, 368, 419 and 508 mm barrels, and with semi-automatic and selective fire options. Following obvious market trends, polymer components were found everywhere in the guns, as well as Picatinny rails, the use of STANAG magazines, et al. Operation was a pretty conventional gas action with piston and a rotary bolt with six locking lugs. The lower receiver and foldable/adjustable stock were just the same as used in the company’s MT40 G2C submachine gun (200mm barrel) and CT40 G2 semi-auto carbine (412mm barrel) announced at the same occasion.
This scope-fitted, long -barrel ART 556 rifle occupied a prominent position in Taurus’ stand in the 2011 LAAD exhibition.
Photographed at the Taurus Porto Alegre facilities in November, 2011, an ART 556 prototype displays design similarities with the company’s .40 S&W CT40G2 carbine and MT40G2 submachine gun. The “G2” suffix was a provisional measure to distinguish the weapons from the earlier Taurus/Famae CT40 and MT40 guns.
Initial testing with prototypes made in the Porto Alegre factory proceeded regularly for about one year or so, the author having a chance to briefly test fire an early example in November, 2011, with a slightly more complete hands-on evaluation taking place in September, 2012.
This ART 556 is seen here in author’s hands fitted with a foregrip/tactical flashlight unit. Flip-up sights were used on the top rail.
Gas-operated with a piston and rotary-bolt locking system, the semi-auto CT 556 carbine had a 318mm barrel in 1:7in pitch, weighed 3.4kg empty, and was 800mm long overall. By folding the polymer stock to the right, this was reduced to 600mm.
The CT 556 standard sights, similar to those used in the company’s new subguns, were mounted on the top receiver rails, but foldable or red-dot units were a better choice. The grip-type shape of the magazine housing’s forward end tended to attract many shooters’ supporting hands, but not the author’s.
All in all, the examples tested worked flawlessly all the time and appeared to just being plain able to fight for its share in the military and LE market. But, remember, to reach that expected stage the Taurus weapons would have to undergo a long and costly test certification program, tooling set up, and series manufacture process, which apparently made the company have second thoughts as to if the whole thing was necessary. In fact, late in 2012, it appeared that the path to follow would probably involve what many companies worldwide had done: make an AR-based platform and go! At that time, examples of both AR-15 rifles (16-in barrel, semi-auto only) and M4 carbine (12.5-in barrel, selective fire) lookalikes were completed, myself also having had a chance to fire them at the factory.