BATTLE RIFLE BELT-FED DMR CARBINES
FAMAE/ TAURUS CT-30 CARBINE
No-frills gun to meet basic LE requirements in mission-specific niches! by RONALDO OLIVE
T
he reasons behind the creation of the .30 M1 carbine and its corresponding cartridge in World War II are generally well known, but let’s very briefly remind them to newcomers. At the time, the U.S. military needed a kind of intermediate weapon, something between the .45 ACP M1911A1 pistol and the .30-06 M1 Garand rifle, to arm so-called secondline troops (drivers, communications and artillery crews and so forth). The final result was a lightweight gun-and-ammunition combination that proved so popular that front-line troops often used the light and handy semiauto M1 and its selective-fire version, the M2, as their primary weapons—no wonder that over 6.5 million examples were produced by a dozen or so manufacturers. The weapon was in action in the Korean and Vietnam Wars, not to mention in countless smaller conflicts worldwide to this day. The M1 and its dedicated .30 Carbine round (the 7.62x33mm) also found their way into the law enforcement world, mainly due to the comparatively low ballistic performance of the caliber’s moderate-velocity, moderaterange, jacketed 110-grain bullet, which minimizes over-penetration in human targets, a major consideration for public security. Israel’s police was (and still is) an early user of the “ol’ reliable” M1. In the late 1990s, Israel even went ahead and designed a local carbine chambered to the .30 Carbine round, the IWI Magal (see the March 2013 issue of Tactical Weapons).
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The author fires the CT-30 at an indoor range in Porto Alegre, Brazil, where Taurus has its main production facilities. The .30 Carbine cartridge (and the author) is over 70 years old and still in action.
SPECIFICATIONS:
TAURUS CT-30
CALIBER: .30 Carbine BARREL: 10.24 inches OA LENGTH: 19.88 inches (stock folded), 30.91 inches (stock unfolded) WEIGHT: 7.05 pounds (empty) STOCK: Side-folding SIGHTS: Protected blade front, U-notch rear ACTION: Gas-operated, rotating bolt, semi-auto FINISH: Matte black CAPACITY: 30+1
The Taurus FAMAE’s design lineage can be traced back to the SIG SG 540 family of assault rifles, whose stamped receiver can be recognized in the CT-30. The carbine’s side-folding stock, however, is sturdier than the original Swiss model’s.
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