A drop safety, an auto-sear, and select fire, in a stamped steel, 7 piece subgun. That's Engineering folks. The design of the intertial drop safety alone is impressive, but the sear/trigger is crazy.
My grandfather made this gun, i never met him, but i know he was ahead of his time.Unfortunatly he died of lung cancer due to heavy smoking. If you google him you can see he was always with a cigarrete on his hands. If he was alive today, i believe he would be doing great things, not only guns. He loved nature thats why he gave this gun the name of a bird. (Uirapuru / Uru) Thank you Ian for keeping this memory of my grandfather alive. 🇧🇷
As a policeman myself I only ever met one guy who claimed to have shot with one, a professor of forensics in the police academy. He was a professional marksman for decades and got his hands on one at one point of his life. He spoke very highly of it in comparison to the 40 caliber models used today. He said it felt very "smooth" and easy to control during shooting, while also being very reliable due to its simplicity of design, saying that he never got a single problem while shooting it. I remember him saying that anyone with decent knowledge of firearms could easily create an uru in a machine shop, and after seeing this video, I believe him completely. Sadly I haven't found any shooting videos of it yet.
Even in its extreme simplicity, this gun seems like a swiss watch compared to some things that are produced today in Brazil. Thanks Ian, for shining some light in this project. This gun seem so forgotten that it probably remains in obscurity even for brazilians. I was thinking that my father could have been issued or at least have handled one of these, since he served in the military and was a police officer right in the production time of this gun. But, after a short search, I discovered the reason for this gun's obscurity, it has a pretty hazy and infamous history. The military apparently rejected this gun some time after its adoption, for considering it unsafe and also because they wanted it to have a slower rate of fire. Seems that Olympio was an ex-military engineer and was producing this gun in a small shed under the name of "Mekanika Indústria e Comércio" in exclusivity for the military, and was hoping to get more law enforcement contracts in the future. Sadly, after the military rejected the gun, his company went in bankruptcy in 1984 and Olympio died shortly after it, in 1986. This is the part were the history gets really confusing. Apparently, the production numbers of this gun were something around 8.000, but the military only acquired 850 and the rest of the production was stored under the custody of a major gun company called Imbel. Somehow, a large number of this guns (more than 2.000) have then broke into the black market and ended up in the hands of criminals, becoming especially known for being used by bank robbers and other gang criminals. Apparently, the extremely simple project of the gun became sort of a template and inspiration for inumerous clandestine manufacturers of criminal guns since then, with the police having seized various guns and gun projects in different calibers with basis in the Uru. A pretty unfortunate story for an otherwise promising gun.
João Sérgio I had no idea about that. I suppose that is why a couple of these ended confiscated in Portugal in illegal drug shipments a decade ago. Well that was before they changed drug criminalization.
I wonder if the rear "drop safety" Ian highlighted in this video was a response to the military safety concerns. I also wonder if Imbel's influence was used to undermine this project. Imbel was licensed by FAN, to make an FN/FAL clone, and IIRC, Imbel was also licensed to produce a sub-gun (possibly UZI or MP5?). Imbel might not have wanted the competition. It would be interesting to know Olympio's design process, as it seems to have been influenced by guns like the "Swedish-K", the early Czech sub-guns, and perhaps the PPsh-44.
João Sérgio thank you for such an interesting history on the history of the weapon, I'm sure I'm not the only one who appreciates the effort you put in to let us all in on even more background on the gun :)
So... essentially a Brazilian MAC-10 or Tec-9, huh? Nice. Ah, e obrigado pelas informações. Nunca havia ouvido falar nessa companhia, de fato. Cliquei esperando encontrar algum projeto fracassado da Taurus. Hehe
@@Luftwaffe-Brasil O vídeo foi feito por um americano e lá fora, no mundo todo, se escreve BraZil. É só conferir em publicações estrangeiras e mapas que você vê isso.
@@zakazany1945 Era Brazil em Português também até o fim do Império se não me engano, depois que virou Brasil, vai ver por isso que o mundo nos conhece por Brazil e não Brasil.
@@EgielPBR Se não me engano originalmente o termo se escrevia com "z" não lembro em qual língua, mas em alguma das reformas ortográficas do português acabou que a grafia mudou pra Brasil.
A genius design in it's simplicity, I would imagine if made from good materials it would be reliable and durable. Complicated designs get all the attention but I think it takes just as much if not more engineering skill to make it simple.
I feel proud to see a Brazilian weapon being analyzed and even being praised by such a prestigious specialist. And especially from a developed country. Thank you Ian.
That fire control group is impressive. “Spartan elegance” so to speak. Incorporating a select fire mechanism into a gun with three moving parts is incredible
@@Jesse1066locking system keeps it lightweight. Open bolt blowback guns are heavier, harder to control, less reliable, more prone to dust and dirt and are less safe
thing is... have you ever shot an open bolt smg? You really have to be pulling on them to avoid the bolt's movement from messing up your shot. When you take into account the ergonomics, this can either be fixed by the center of mass in bursts or full auto (bolt slam makes the gun pivot downwards, recoil makes it climb) or made a lot worse. Sure, from the engineering perspective they are beautiful in their simplicity, but in terms of handling one in any caliber hotter than a pitiful 9mm I'd rather have a closed bolt german overcomplicated mess.
That makes the Kalashnikov design seem complicated, ha. I have never seen a trigger system like that before. Also, what a cleaver drop safety. I wish we did not have silly illegal laws as I am sure a small start up company could produce these in the states for abou $100, ha.
Maybe even less, pretty sure that with the technical drawings of the pieces any college student with access to a STEM workshop with basic machinery could build one. The Uru is like just one step above 3-d printed handguns in terms of complexity
I am a 29 year old police officer (investigator) in the State of São Paulo, Brazil and the few times I have seen this national weapon was in the hands of bad guys. Tanks for the video
Man i am from Brazil and i didn't even knew that we actually had a submachine gun produced here. Awesome vídeo and thank you for this! The engineering on this project is just amazing. Best regards from Brazil.
Hello Ian, I don't know if I got it wrong, but the "Mtr." stamped on the receiver is the abbreviation for "Metralhadora", machine gun in Portuguese, and not "Manufactured" sorry if I'm wrong and about my English!
@@smpmuzpid "metralladora" doesnt even exist in spanish... Iti s called "ametralladora"... and smgs are usually named "metralletas"...or "sub fusil automatico"....and no. no, in spanish the diferentiation is even more clear than in english, where "machine gun" can be used and it is used for any automatic weapon (check the american laws).....You are confusing languages with ignorant people...
WOW, just wow... What an amazing piece of engineering. It oozes of being maufactired in a shed with little to no machining tool..! Perfect demonstration Ian :)
Maybe the Brazilian contract Mausers, or the Brazilian contract Luger's, our Madsen LMG's or any other gun what were bought from other countries and have our republic simbols
My father and I have a friend police officer, Subtenente Silva, who usually used this old SMG even in 90's and 2000's years, this video remember him, RIP.
here in Brazil we have a word for this kind of thing, its called a gambiarra. A brazilian expression. It basically means to use improvised methods / solutions to solve a problem, with any avaiable material. English equivalents would include "McGyverism", "Kludge","Quick Fix", "Alternative Engineering", "Workaround", and so on.
Ah! I originally got the meaning from Lonely Planet (20 years ago). They gave the impression it was creative problem solving to get around things like governmental red tape. It sounded more like something Brazilians prided themselves on.
I was doing some mental gymnastics the other day, and I’m so glad to see the wonky trigger assembly I was imagining works in practice! I totally wrote it off at the time thinking “nahhhhhh, that’s probably not how it’s done for a reason I’m not thinking of.” Turns out it just works™️
This was another interesting one that I hadn't heard of before, Ian. That looks like it would be probably well liked and very reliable for military and police use, especially in mostly hot and sometimes even jungle-like terrain. The minimal parts would also greatly help in the field, so troops and police have little or no small parts to lose.
That's a beautiful firearm in my sight. The 9mm provides plenty of stopping power, but with little recoil. Brazilian Designers are smart. Love my country 💪
O percursor fixo lembra a submetralhadora Beretta também usada no Brasil! Lembrando que na época o Brasil não importava tecnologia, então fora desenvolvida aqui mesmo. Como outros tantos equipamentos (desde tanques de guerra até computadores)
Another clever feature is that extended magazine well... which (IMO) can act as a fore-grip, and minimize feed issues with the magazine. (That's why British soldiers were trained / discouraged from grabbing the mag on a STEN... the chief reason for it jamming.)
The mag was designed to be held, because if you take a look at it, there is no fore-grip or anywhere that you can place your front hand in it... Except the mag. Where Ian held the gun in the video, would burn your hands, because that is the ventilation system of the Uru... So the mag is TO BE HELD, if you are shooting the gun.
@@atianfirebolt8125 metalhadora é toda arma com capacidade de rajada continua com gatilho pressionado. inclui machineguns, sub machineguns, assault rifles e tudo mais
@@atianfirebolt8125 ele está descrevendo o que é uma metalhadora e não traduzindo ao pé da letra a palavra. pqp flexibilidade zero de adaptação vc heim. e no fim das contas metralhadora também não é machine gun.
@@GraveUypo Como alguém vai descrever algo de maneira certa usando a palavra errada? E se você quiser se provar errado só digita "metralhadora em inglês" no amigo Google já que você mostrou que o teu inglês é de escola pública. Mas agora vou ter que ignorar antes que a burrice esfregue em mim ✌️
Eu que sou brasileiro nem sabia que essa arma existia (I'm Brazilian and I didn't even know this gun existed) Thanks for show this awesome submachine gun to us.
I have a 1908 Brazilian Mauser (Crest on receiver) made by FN - Herstal in Belgium. I had it sporterized to 30-06 with a Boyd Stock and Shilen barrel. I also have a Browning, Hi-Power made for the Brazilian Police also by FN - Herstal in Belgium. I am very proud of the craftmanship of both these weapons. Wish I had a Brazilian Uru SMG if only to try shooting!
That recoil spring/guide, it's "biscuit" stopper and the slot in the top of the bolt to accommodate the recoil spring assembly, and its stopper looks surprisingly like the same parts on a Browning Buckmark.... almost identical in design.
Nice to see a brazilian firearm here... I never heard of this one, but it seems to be a sweet to shoot. At first, it really seems like a MAT 49 or something. Well, I'm glad you did a review on this one, Ian! Cheers from Brazil!
When we come to an age of high-technological weaponry, these more simple yet still professional arms look like something that came out of a hobbyist's garage.
Maybe this is naive, bit this gun looks so similar, simple, and intuitive that I suspect any paintball player familiar with a mechanical like a Spyder could probably maintain it without a manual.
Probably a dumb question, but... On that drop safety, why couldn't you build it so that the sear engages before the bolt travels far enough back to chamber a cartridge? Possibly some sort of a ratchet system where the bolt has to come all the way back before it can go forward?
I'm a Brazilian and I live in Brazil. More than a decade ago, a Brazilian magazine published an article, about the uru. They gave complete support for this sub machine gun. Even so, the company that built the uru, Mekanica company failed in 1980 decade. First, the end of Brazilian military regime, in 1985, was soon followed by a terrible crisis into the military industrial complex of Brazil. Not only Mekanica closed, but also Engesa ( built tanks), Bernardini, Hidroar, etc. Even knowing that uru was simple and cheap sub machine gun, it also used an outdated magazine. The trigger was also small. Uru was crudely built. Not having a national market, from political reasons and also any real exportation possibility, the end of production of this gun was unavoidable. Yes. Uru was a cheap and reliable gun, but these facts weren't enough to avoid its failure in the market.
Ian, that "MTR" stands for "metralhadora" or "machinegun". In Brazil there was a tendency to call anything automatic a machinegun in the late twentieth century, even in official records.
@@adrianfirewalker4183 Can make larger blowback systems however the spring rate makes them a PITA to charge the weapon, and the necessary bolt weight makes the weapon overly heavy and requires excessive material usage.
@@slimjim7411 , back in WW2, the weight of a straight blowback bolt for the 30-06 cartridge was calculated at 22lbs. That is the reason I stated it would need a locking system; a blowback system would be too cumbersome to carry.
7.62 too strong will probably lose acurracy or destroy the gun , maybe 5.56 but will need a lot of work to make it more safe like 9 mm its okay but 5.56 its a lot of power
A drop safety, an auto-sear, and select fire, in a stamped steel, 7 piece subgun.
That's Engineering folks. The design of the intertial drop safety alone is impressive, but the sear/trigger is crazy.
The trigger. I am trying to figure out how it works. I rather have an mp5 only in semi than the same gun in full auto only. This trigger is something.
Well why should german-speakers have all the fun? Agreed- exquisite engineering to achieve worthy goals for a mission-critical tool.
that's Brazilian Space Magic there folks :D
Its called jeitinho brasileiro,when need arise you find a way.
@@bladerj gambiarra in its finest
My grandfather made this gun, i never met him, but i know he was ahead of his time.Unfortunatly he died of lung cancer due to heavy smoking. If you google him you can see he was always with a cigarrete on his hands.
If he was alive today, i believe he would be doing great things, not only guns.
He loved nature thats why he gave this gun the name of a bird. (Uirapuru / Uru)
Thank you Ian for keeping this memory of my grandfather alive. 🇧🇷
As a policeman myself I only ever met one guy who claimed to have shot with one, a professor of forensics in the police academy. He was a professional marksman for decades and got his hands on one at one point of his life.
He spoke very highly of it in comparison to the 40 caliber models used today. He said it felt very "smooth" and easy to control during shooting, while also being very reliable due to its simplicity of design, saying that he never got a single problem while shooting it. I remember him saying that anyone with decent knowledge of firearms could easily create an uru in a machine shop, and after seeing this video, I believe him completely. Sadly I haven't found any shooting videos of it yet.
There is one now.
that must explain why public schools in the usa are so eager to dump shop classes in favor of "diversity" courses.
Even in its extreme simplicity, this gun seems like a swiss watch compared to some things that are produced today in Brazil. Thanks Ian, for shining some light in this project. This gun seem so forgotten that it probably remains in obscurity even for brazilians. I was thinking that my father could have been issued or at least have handled one of these, since he served in the military and was a police officer right in the production time of this gun. But, after a short search, I discovered the reason for this gun's obscurity, it has a pretty hazy and infamous history. The military apparently rejected this gun some time after its adoption, for considering it unsafe and also because they wanted it to have a slower rate of fire. Seems that Olympio was an ex-military engineer and was producing this gun in a small shed under the name of "Mekanika Indústria e Comércio" in exclusivity for the military, and was hoping to get more law enforcement contracts in the future. Sadly, after the military rejected the gun, his company went in bankruptcy in 1984 and Olympio died shortly after it, in 1986. This is the part were the history gets really confusing. Apparently, the production numbers of this gun were something around 8.000, but the military only acquired 850 and the rest of the production was stored under the custody of a major gun company called Imbel. Somehow, a large number of this guns (more than 2.000) have then broke into the black market and ended up in the hands of criminals, becoming especially known for being used by bank robbers and other gang criminals. Apparently, the extremely simple project of the gun became sort of a template and inspiration for inumerous clandestine manufacturers of criminal guns since then, with the police having seized various guns and gun projects in different calibers with basis in the Uru. A pretty unfortunate story for an otherwise promising gun.
João Sérgio, wow - very interesting, thank you.
João Sérgio I had no idea about that. I suppose that is why a couple of these ended confiscated in Portugal in illegal drug shipments a decade ago. Well that was before they changed drug criminalization.
I wonder if the rear "drop safety" Ian highlighted in this video was a response to the military safety concerns. I also wonder if Imbel's influence was used to undermine this project. Imbel was licensed by FAN, to make an FN/FAL clone, and IIRC, Imbel was also licensed to produce a sub-gun (possibly UZI or MP5?). Imbel might not have wanted the competition. It would be interesting to know Olympio's design process, as it seems to have been influenced by guns like the "Swedish-K", the early Czech sub-guns, and perhaps the PPsh-44.
João Sérgio thank you for such an interesting history on the history of the weapon, I'm sure I'm not the only one who appreciates the effort you put in to let us all in on even more background on the gun :)
So... essentially a Brazilian MAC-10 or Tec-9, huh? Nice.
Ah, e obrigado pelas informações. Nunca havia ouvido falar nessa companhia, de fato. Cliquei esperando encontrar algum projeto fracassado da Taurus. Hehe
it´s a rare gun even in Brazil, after 13 years in police service I never saw one!
@@Luftwaffe-Brasil O vídeo foi feito por um americano e lá fora, no mundo todo, se escreve BraZil.
É só conferir em publicações estrangeiras e mapas que você vê isso.
@@Luftwaffe-Brasil Na maioria das outras línguas Brasil se escreve com "z". Português é uma das poucas que escreve dessa maneira.
@@Luftwaffe-Brasil Brasil em português, brazil em inglês
@@zakazany1945 Era Brazil em Português também até o fim do Império se não me engano, depois que virou Brasil, vai ver por isso que o mundo nos conhece por Brazil e não Brasil.
@@EgielPBR Se não me engano originalmente o termo se escrevia com "z" não lembro em qual língua, mas em alguma das reformas ortográficas do português acabou que a grafia mudou pra Brasil.
Caramba, tão esquecida que nem nós brasileiros sabíamos!
Não é? Eu provavelmente já tinha visto mas nunca tinha realmente ouvido falar.
Is that Portuguese? cool gun you guys built. I love simplicity.
What he said . . .
This is very rare on Brazil too. This caliber is restrict to civilians so just few people own this machine gun!
Tiago Gonçalves do you guys use the 9x21 IMI? Also heard the .38 super and .38 ACP are very popular in Latin America.
A genius design in it's simplicity, I would imagine if made from good materials it would be reliable and durable. Complicated designs get all the attention but I think it takes just as much if not more engineering skill to make it simple.
Certainly, designing something simple is a really a complicated process.
@@josuelservin2409 it honestly is
There's even a gun more simple than this.
That's why I love my Mavarov, simple and reliable.
Designing something with 100 parts is easier than getting it down to 25 parts. I mean the Sten is like 45 parts, and it’s a tube
I feel proud to see a Brazilian weapon being analyzed and even being praised by such a prestigious specialist. And especially from a developed country. Thank you Ian.
Nossa senhora, que cachorro vira lata! Au. Au. Au, au! Pais desenvolvido hahahahahhahaha
That fire control group is impressive. “Spartan elegance” so to speak. Incorporating a select fire mechanism into a gun with three moving parts is incredible
4. u forgot the spring ;-)
I'm a Brazilian Air Force soldier, I've seen some of these weapons in the sotrage before, but didn't knew what it was until now... It's a nice weapon.
Storage, you say? And where is this storage facility?🕵
BINFAE!
Cheap, simple, and effective. All important traits for a submachine gun.
Also the safety mechanism on this gun is an incredibly clever design.
This is so beautifully simple.
I love seeing SMG mechanisms. The simpler the better.
RIP Jesse
Except the mp5 , that thing is all but simple
@@raptor_boquita Yeah, I don't know why a 9mm SMG needed roller delayed blowback, but it's been very successful.
@@raptor_boquita well its "made in germany" we dont like simple things!
@@Jesse1066locking system keeps it lightweight. Open bolt blowback guns are heavier, harder to control, less reliable, more prone to dust and dirt and are less safe
0:48 i'm glad you know we don't speak spanish but portuguese. Greatings from Brazil.
This is a perfect example as to why I absolutely love tubular-based submachine guns. They're simple & straight-forward in their designs.
thing is... have you ever shot an open bolt smg? You really have to be pulling on them to avoid the bolt's movement from messing up your shot. When you take into account the ergonomics, this can either be fixed by the center of mass in bursts or full auto (bolt slam makes the gun pivot downwards, recoil makes it climb) or made a lot worse. Sure, from the engineering perspective they are beautiful in their simplicity, but in terms of handling one in any caliber hotter than a pitiful 9mm I'd rather have a closed bolt german overcomplicated mess.
Oh wow, I never thought I'd see a gun from my country in here.
Don't think anyone would say they're "forgotten", though. Or liked...
moonra Look up Taurus.
nem eu...
Bom, Imbels e Taurus não são tão esquecidos e escondidas.
I'm from brazil and i can say for sure that Taurus fucking sucks.
The engineer that designed this is a freaking genius.
Humbling even when you think you are quite clever, this just shows how some people operate at another level.
How it's a basic sub gun
@@Coonskinkinit looks basic, being SIMPLE, does not make it basic.
That makes the Kalashnikov design seem complicated, ha. I have never seen a trigger system like that before. Also, what a cleaver drop safety. I wish we did not have silly illegal laws as I am sure a small start up company could produce these in the states for abou $100, ha.
Maybe even less, pretty sure that with the technical drawings of the pieces any college student with access to a STEM workshop with basic machinery could build one. The Uru is like just one step above 3-d printed handguns in terms of complexity
very impressive surprised this isn't in any fps game
999squidy it's gonna be now..
999squidy Watch this be in the next update of Rust
999squidy looks like the tec-9
Francefire if the tech 9 and the mac 11 had a baby this would be it
HASHKING7000 408 wow hahaha it does holy crap u nailed it
I am a 29 year old police officer (investigator) in the State of São Paulo, Brazil and the few times I have seen this national weapon was in the hands of bad guys. Tanks for the video
Man i am from Brazil and i didn't even knew that we actually had a submachine gun produced here. Awesome vídeo and thank you for this! The engineering on this project is just amazing.
Best regards from Brazil.
Shit, looks simple enough to build in your garage.
Basically all open bolt guns are.
Royal nonesuch did looks like a meathook abortion but it does work.
D3faulted1 I've heard stories of prisoners building open bolt guns out of plumbing while in maximum security, so it's gotta be easy.
Sucks you'd get arrested for it.
Jack Mcslay Not if you build it to legal specifications.
Wow... I am thoroughly impressed by how crude, yet awesome that little thing is!
The "Mtr." stands for metralhadora, which is Portuguese for machine gun (sub or otherwise).
Thanks for the great video!
In this case it’s supposed to be SMG, which means submachine gun
the selector switch and safety are genius in their simplicity, great firearm design
Look at that gorgeous piece of machinery.
Hello Ian, I don't know if I got it wrong, but the "Mtr." stamped on the receiver is the abbreviation for "Metralhadora", machine gun in Portuguese, and not "Manufactured" sorry if I'm wrong and about my English!
Your english is perfectly fine! ^-^
You are correct, it means "metralhadora"
@@smpmuzpid same thing in portuguese. People here think that every "fast rate of fire" weapon is a "metralhadora" (machine gun)
@@smpmuzpid "metralladora" doesnt even exist in spanish... Iti s called "ametralladora"... and smgs are usually named "metralletas"...or "sub fusil automatico"....and no. no, in spanish the diferentiation is even more clear than in english, where "machine gun" can be used and it is used for any automatic weapon (check the american laws).....You are confusing languages with ignorant people...
@@Trikipum American laws don't define language.
Absolutely floored by its simplicity. Select fire capability with nothing more than a trigger and a selector switch!
I love this gun! Elegant design.
This is impresively simple
This is my favorite FW episode.. Making something this simple is very complicated and awesome.
WOW, just wow... What an amazing piece of engineering. It oozes of being maufactired in a shed with little to no machining tool..!
Perfect demonstration Ian :)
simple but very well engineered, the designer knew what he was doing !
As always, a brilliant take down and insightful reveal of
the innards.
1:10 love the simplicity of its construction, great stuff!
Thanks from Brazil 🇧🇷!!!Muito obrigado!!
More brazilian guns please
PARA Fal
Nasaq Licos quero ver o IA2 quando chegar lá pena que vai demorar
agree totalmeichon with u ideia
Em breve. Logo teremos outros modelos.
Maybe the Brazilian contract Mausers, or the Brazilian contract Luger's, our Madsen LMG's or any other gun what were bought from other countries and have our republic simbols
My father and I have a friend police officer, Subtenente Silva, who usually used this old SMG even in 90's and 2000's years, this video remember him, RIP.
When you can't pay for tools, make a gun that doesn't use any!
Show us how you cut steel with your bare hands, master.
@destruidor12-1488 Olha o virgem, racista, incel, valentão da internet que vira uma cadelinha na rua.
@@alanwatts8239 No need to cut if you use appropriate pieces of scrap metal ;)
@@LDP-o2b "Ui ui,vo fala incel mas nem sei o que significa",cerebro de bosta
@@R............. Sei não, sou um fudido que nunca saiu do Brasil igual a você mesmo
I don't think I'll ever stop being impressed by the sheer ingenuity of gun designers.
here in Brazil we have a word for this kind of thing, its called a gambiarra.
A brazilian expression. It basically means to use improvised methods / solutions to solve a problem, with any avaiable material.
English equivalents would include "McGyverism", "Kludge","Quick Fix", "Alternative Engineering", "Workaround", and so on.
So you're saying the designer was jeitinho?
nah, just find it amusing how we brazillians can always solve our problems in simple and effective ways
Its a world in the brazillian portuguese, i cant find its origin, but probably it begun as a made up word
Frankdude72 Jeitinho is more like cheating your way around something or doing something dishonest in like, the last minute in order to succeed.
Ah! I originally got the meaning from Lonely Planet (20 years ago).
They gave the impression it was creative problem solving to get around things like governmental red tape. It sounded more like something Brazilians prided themselves on.
From time to time I come back to this video just to admire the engineering. Beautiful.
that drop safety is genius
Hello. I'm Brazilian, and it's great to see a brazilian gun in the channel. I really enjoyed.
It's so simple, it's beautiful.
Well well well, after many, many videos I'm surprised to see Gun Jesus handling something from my country. Glad to see it. Thanks, Ian!
I am a cop in brazil. Amazing that some police forces still use it down here. Jams a lot but does the job.
Provavelmente por causa dos carregadores ne? Ou algum problema na arma em si?
I was doing some mental gymnastics the other day, and I’m so glad to see the wonky trigger assembly I was imagining works in practice! I totally wrote it off at the time thinking “nahhhhhh, that’s probably not how it’s done for a reason I’m not thinking of.”
Turns out it just works™️
This was another interesting one that I hadn't heard of before, Ian. That looks like it would be probably well liked and very reliable for military and police use, especially in mostly hot and sometimes even jungle-like terrain. The minimal parts would also greatly help in the field, so troops and police have little or no small parts to lose.
That's a beautiful firearm in my sight. The 9mm provides plenty of stopping power, but with little recoil. Brazilian Designers are smart. Love my country 💪
I wanted to know just how simple an SMG could get, seems like my long quest is at an end...
I have to thank you, for do some light on this old and forgotten gun. RUclips recomend this for me also.
Incrivelmente simples e simplesmente incrivel...
Incredibly simple and simply incredible...
I love this thing... It's so easily understood and because of that I can appreciate the brilliance of simple engineering.
I would love to see a video on single feed vs double feed magazines.
I am impressed.
Almost as simple as the gevarm smg
FInalmente uma arma brasileira! Ótimo video como sempre Ian! ^^
I love this gun, everything about it. Its like a newer version of the grease gun, super simple and cheap to make but works beautifully.
great info
I envy your life. Thanks for the obscure history. Been a follower for four years now and still learning!
O percursor fixo lembra a submetralhadora Beretta também usada no Brasil!
Lembrando que na época o Brasil não importava tecnologia, então fora desenvolvida aqui mesmo. Como outros tantos equipamentos (desde tanques de guerra até computadores)
Another clever feature is that extended magazine well... which (IMO) can act as a fore-grip, and minimize feed issues with the magazine. (That's why British soldiers were trained / discouraged from grabbing the mag on a STEN... the chief reason for it jamming.)
And with the way the mag release works you also wouldn't accidently drop the mag.
The mag was designed to be held, because if you take a look at it, there is no fore-grip or anywhere that you can place your front hand in it... Except the mag.
Where Ian held the gun in the video, would burn your hands, because that is the ventilation system of the Uru... So the mag is TO BE HELD, if you are shooting the gun.
Esse vídeo caiu de para quedas pra mim.
Nem sabia da existência dessa arma.
entao, agora tu sabes, o meu senhor tupac
A mais brava, muita gente já morreu pra uma dessas na mão da rota.
Muito daora
@@hauptmannjoachimtotenkopf6081Curte também? Muito louco o som...
Me to ! eu tamben nao !
A very clever design! Very very interesting!
would love to see this design modernized
2:44 "Manufacture Uru" not, Mtr. stands for "metralhadora" or burst-fire gun.
metralhadora é machinegun
@@atianfirebolt8125 metalhadora é toda arma com capacidade de rajada continua com gatilho pressionado. inclui machineguns, sub machineguns, assault rifles e tudo mais
@@GraveUypo E daí? metralhadora não é burst-fire gun em inglês.
@@atianfirebolt8125 ele está descrevendo o que é uma metalhadora e não traduzindo ao pé da letra a palavra. pqp flexibilidade zero de adaptação vc heim. e no fim das contas metralhadora também não é machine gun.
@@GraveUypo Como alguém vai descrever algo de maneira certa usando a palavra errada? E se você quiser se provar errado só digita "metralhadora em inglês" no amigo Google já que você mostrou que o teu inglês é de escola pública. Mas agora vou ter que ignorar antes que a burrice esfregue em mim ✌️
There's "simple" and then there's "baffling-ly simple."
Eu que sou brasileiro nem sabia que essa arma existia (I'm Brazilian and I didn't even know this gun existed)
Thanks for show this awesome submachine gun to us.
*Notices Submachine gun*
URU what's this?
This: ruclips.net/video/QyYkjCBMRuo/видео.html
*blushes*
Danilo é um meme... Não uma pergunta de verdade hehehsheheh "OwO whats this?"
Pedro Vivot :D
Is the bird from my country.
My wife's father worked at the manufacture of this weapon. He manufactured the barrel, he took the blank and did everything until the end.
say hello to Brazil! abraços!!!
SAY HELLO TO HUE
Olá, chapa!
Say "hello" to my little friend!
Thanks :D
"Abraços" Is Hugs :)
I have a 1908 Brazilian Mauser (Crest on receiver) made by FN - Herstal in Belgium. I had it sporterized to 30-06 with a Boyd Stock and Shilen barrel. I also have a Browning, Hi-Power made for the Brazilian Police also by FN - Herstal in Belgium. I am very proud of the craftmanship of both these weapons. Wish I had a Brazilian Uru SMG if only to try shooting!
Damn I can see a few different guns within this
It never ceases to amaze me that Brazil is an actual place and not just something created to come up with the weirdest headlines possible
It's not whether or not you can pass the NFA background check (that's the easy part), it's whether or not you can pass the wallet check. :-)
That recoil spring/guide, it's "biscuit" stopper and the slot in the top of the bolt to accommodate the recoil spring assembly, and its stopper looks surprisingly like the same parts on a Browning Buckmark.... almost identical in design.
Gun Jesus please come to Brazil
pra que? pra ser roubado?
Ding ding ding ding ding
@@danillo.eu.rodrigues Do jeito que ele entende de armas, duvido que seria kkk
eu adorei q vc chamo ele de Gun Jesus, agr todo video vo comenta isso KKKKKK
vlw @JonSnowize
Nice to see a brazilian firearm here... I never heard of this one, but it seems to be a sweet to shoot. At first, it really seems like a MAT 49 or something. Well, I'm glad you did a review on this one, Ian! Cheers from Brazil!
Da orgulho de ver! Muito bom!
He doesn't care about how you look on the outside, but he only cares about the inside.
Ian is a love gUru.
Start making some phone calls, I want to see you putting some rounds through this
the uru shots .22LR too, for trainning.
good machine
It's beautiful. Lets start the bidding at $5.
That high? :o
To an one hundred?
"Sold for $9,200." lol
5 cent take it or leave it
Annnnd banned, sold to the nra thank you all for comming
When we come to an age of high-technological weaponry, these more simple yet still professional arms look like something that came out of a hobbyist's garage.
Maybe this is naive, bit this gun looks so similar, simple, and intuitive that I suspect any paintball player familiar with a mechanical like a Spyder could probably maintain it without a manual.
In an alternate universe where PA Luty didn't go to prison and got a contract for Brazil
Probably a dumb question, but...
On that drop safety, why couldn't you build it so that the sear engages before the bolt travels far enough back to chamber a cartridge? Possibly some sort of a ratchet system where the bolt has to come all the way back before it can go forward?
its very calming hearing you talk about guns.
I'm a Brazilian and I live in Brazil. More than a decade ago, a Brazilian magazine published an article, about the uru. They gave complete support for this sub machine gun. Even so, the company that built the uru, Mekanica company failed in 1980 decade.
First, the end of Brazilian military regime, in 1985, was soon followed by a terrible crisis into the military industrial complex of Brazil. Not only Mekanica closed, but also Engesa ( built tanks), Bernardini, Hidroar, etc.
Even knowing that uru was simple and cheap sub machine gun, it also used an outdated magazine. The trigger was also small. Uru was crudely built.
Not having a national market, from political reasons and also any real exportation possibility, the end of production of this gun was unavoidable.
Yes. Uru was a cheap and reliable gun, but these facts weren't enough to avoid its failure in the market.
Thanks for making a video in one of our boom sticks
That is a quite cool SMG mechanism!
The amount of really simple parts home manufacture is possible with a degree of quality.
PIMBA para o Brasil !!!!
Enzo Japa kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
Sim, essa é mais uma esquecida de nosso país.
Ian, that "MTR" stands for "metralhadora" or "machinegun". In Brazil there was a tendency to call anything automatic a machinegun in the late twentieth century, even in official records.
I wonder if the design used here could be replicated to fire intermediate cartridges, such as the 7.62, 5.56, etc.
BC Nation I'm sure that it could
Not as a blowback.
It would need a locking bolt and had system
@@adrianfirewalker4183 Can make larger blowback systems however the spring rate makes them a PITA to charge the weapon, and the necessary bolt weight makes the weapon overly heavy and requires excessive material usage.
@@slimjim7411 , back in WW2, the weight of a straight blowback bolt for the 30-06 cartridge was calculated at 22lbs.
That is the reason I stated it would need a locking system; a blowback system would be too cumbersome to carry.
7.62 too strong will probably lose acurracy or destroy the gun , maybe 5.56 but will need a lot of work to make it more safe like 9 mm its okay but 5.56 its a lot of power
There is so much beauty in functional minimalism.
Nothing cooler than an incredibly simple gun that delegates functions efficiently
VEM UM DE URU NA FRENTE ESCOLTANDO O CAMBURAO VEM MAIS DOIS NA RETA GUARDA MAS TAO DE GLOCK NA MAO
Pensei na musica quando vi o video 😂
Rap da armas huehue
Crocki**
Tava pensando nessa parte agora
Monka?
Nice video!!! I like Brazil's guns, for exemple Imbel IA2 and CBC 12 Pump.
I worked with uru in PMPI in 2005. The security system of this weapon is very dangerous.