Demro TAC-1 | |
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Type | Carbine/Submachine gun |
Place of origin | United States |
Specifications | |
Weight | Unloaded: 7.7 lbs |
Length | 25.7 in |
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Caliber | .45 ACP |
Action | Screw-delayed blowback |
Muzzle velocity | 960 frame/s |
Feed system | .45 ACP: 30-round box magazine 9mm: 32-round box magazine |
Sights | Iron |
The Demro TAC-1 is a semi-automatic carbine chambered in either .45 ACP or 9x19mm Parabellum. It is visually similar to the Thompson submachine gun. It is unusual in that it is one of the few open bolt firearms that it is legal to own and sell in the United States.
Contents |
The TAC-1 is an open bolt, blowback-operated firearm that uses a screw-delayed blowback operation that was first used on Mikhail Kalashnikov's submachine gun prototype.
The weapon has a grip safety as well as a safety lever on the left side of the receiver, over the pistol grip. The standard version also has a combination lock above the trigger near the safety lever. In the selective-fire variants, this safety lever doubles as a fire selector. The magazine release is found behind the magazine well, and the charging knob is on the left side of the upper receiver.
The stock, pistol grip, and foregrip of the TAC-1 are wooden.
Weapons with no combination lock bear the designation TAC-1M.
As the weapon was originally marketed towards law enforcement, the earliest models had selective-fire capability.
The XF-7 variant is identical, internally, to the standard TAC-1, but has a plastic stock, foregrip and pistol grip and a folding stock.