Taurus Raging Bull

This article is about the Brazilian-made revolver. For other uses, see Raging Bull (disambiguation).
Raging Bull

Taurus Raging Bull that holds six .44 Remington Magnum Rounds.
Type Revolver
Place of origin  Brazil
Specifications
Weight 0.802.20 kg (1.84.9 lb)
Length 254419 mm (1016.5 in)
Barrel length 50.8254 mm (210 in)

Cartridge
Action Double action / single action
Feed system

Revolving cylinder

  • 5 rounds (.45/.454/.410, .454, .480, .500 & 28 ga.)
  • 6 rounds (.41, .44 & .45 )
  • 7 rounds (.45/.410 & .223)
  • 8 rounds (.218, .22 and .30)

The Raging Bull is a revolver manufactured by the Brazilian Taurus International firearm company.

In its larger calibers it is marketed as a hunter's sidearm because it is a potent weapon with plenty of stopping power. The .454 Casull cartridge has been used to hunt animals as large as Cape Buffalo[1] and African elephants.[2]

The Raging Bull has a ported barrel and a red rubber strip along the back of its grip (in some variants such as the Raging Hornet, this strip is yellow), which cushions the shooter's hand and lowers perceived recoil. Functionally, the Raging Bull has a manually operated front cylinder latch, whose release can be seen on the crane. Front cylinder latches are required for such high-powered double-action revolvers, and are found on the Ruger Super Redhawk and the S&W Model 500 revolver, but they are actuated by the rear cylinder latch. The manually operated latch on the Raging Bull is simpler (and thus less expensive to produce) yet equally strong, but requires two hands to open the cylinder.

Variants

The Raging Bull comes in several models, classified by caliber. Additionally, each model has its own barrel length and metal finish options.

Model 218 (Raging Bee) (Discontinued) 
.218 Bee caliber, 10" barrel. Stainless steel only.
Model 22H (Raging Hornet) (Discontinued) 
.22 Hornet caliber, 10" barrel. Stainless steel only.
Model 223 (Raging 223) 
.223 Remington caliber, 10" barrel. Stainless steel only.[3][4]
Model 30C (Raging Thirty) (Discontinued) 
.30 Carbine caliber, 10" barrel. Stainless steel only.
Model 416 (Discontinued) 
.41 Magnum caliber.
Model 444 
.44 Magnum caliber, can also fire the shorter .44 Special.
Model 444 Ultralite 
Compact .44 with a 4-inch barrel. Blued and titanium only.
Model 45 (Discontinued) 
.45 Colt caliber only and featured a six round cylinder
Model 454 
.454 Casull caliber, can also fire the less powerful .45 Colt.
Model 480 (Discontinued) 
.480 Ruger caliber.
Model 500 (Discontinued) 
.500 S&W Magnum caliber, can also fire the shorter .500 S&W Special.
Model 513 Ultralite (Raging Judge) (Discontinued) 
.45 Colt, .410 shot shell - featured a light weight frame, 3 inch barrel and 7 round cylinder.
Model 513 (Raging Judge Magnum) 
.454 Casull, .45 Colt, .410 shot shell - 5 round cylinder.
Model 528 (Raging Judge XXVIII) (Unreleased) 
28 Gauge shot shell

Optional finishes include stainless steel, matte stainless steel, nickel plated and blued. Barrel options include 2", 4", 6", 8", 10". Not all finishes or barrels are available for every model. All models have ported barrels, except for the 22H, 30C, 513, 528 and Ultralite. All models have fixed front sights and adjustable rear sights.

The Raging Hornet, the Raging Bee and the Raging Thirty have yellow rubber insert strips, as opposed to the typical red strip.

Most Raging Bull variants can mount commercial optical sights and lasers with the aid of an optional screw-on Picatinny rail.

According to Taurus' website, the Raging Bull in 500 S&W is discontinued as of December 2007.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, January 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.