UTAS UTS-15

Designed by former American Rifleman editor Ted Hatfield, the UTAS UTS-15’s single, 18.5-inch barrel surpasses the minimum requirement for legality, yet the entire shotgun measures a mere 28 inches overall. The 7-pound Turkish shotgun features an all-polymer receiver that’s reinforced at stress points with magnesium. Its grip, trigger and fire-control buttons are borrowed from an AR-15 and therefore familiar.

A Picatinny rail allows for easy optic mounting, although you won’t need an aftermarket flashlight or laser because both are integral. The gun’s genius lies in its system of horizontally mounted magazine tubes that rest atop the barrel. Each hold 7 rounds of 2½-, 2¾- or 3-inch shells and is numbered for fast visual metering. Loading is accomplished via two separate ports, like this. When the magazine selector lever is set in the middle, the gun feeds alternately from each magazine. However, one magazine can be blocked in order to feed from the other magazine before defaulting to the other.

You can learn more about the UTS-15 in the video below, hosted by American Hunter's Jeff Johnston.

Technical Specifications:
Gauge: 2 ½”, 2 ¾” and 3”
Finish: Black, Desert, Hunting and Marine
Barrel Length: 18.5"
Overall Length: 28.3"
Weight: 6.9 lbs.
Capacity: 15 rounds
MSRP: $1,200 (Standard Finish)

For Further Reading:
141st NRA Annual Meetings: UTAS UTS-15
142nd NRA Annual Meetings: New Finishes for the UTS-15

Multimedia:

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3 Responses to UTAS UTS-15

SlowBurn wrote:
October 20, 2013

Re bull pups, the Israeli military did not create the Tavor to get around the law or make an unreliable design their standard carry.

JJ wrote:
October 18, 2013

bullpup designs have been around since 1901. nothing to do with keeping them 'legal' it makes sense from an ergonomics standpoint and while some models have had reliability issues others have worked flawless.

oogie wrote:
October 16, 2013

I still don't trust bullpups. Aside from the fact that I shoot left-handed, bullpup chambers are located to close to where your head would be located while shooting. In the event of a catastrophic failure, it could mean the death or disfigurement of the shooter. I believe the Bullpup design was created just to get around the law. A 'legal' way of owning a rifle with a 16' barrel or a shotgun with an 18' barrel with the compact size of machine pistols or sawed-off shotguns. Has AR ever seen a gun it didn't like?