Hate to throw cold water on your plans. But speaking from experience Save your self the hard earned cash.They also have a mail-in-rebate for $50 with it this week making it $499. I'm buying one tomorrow.
Any suggestions? I'm just needing a fire proof safe to keep inportant stuff in and can keep kids away from the guns. I'm not to concerned with somebody breaking in and stealing anything that is inside of the safe.Hate to throw cold water on your plans. But speaking from experience Save your self the hard earned cash.
What you would be buying is a false sense of security! Ask me how I know.
unless you are going to spend the cash on a real safe please look into alternatives there are a lot of far better choices out there.
Good luck
Would also recommend a Great Pyrenees. We kept one from a litter for a companion in the house. Uninvited people are going to have a real problem real fast. Lots of good points made above. Sometimes secured concealment is a better option than a safe that is a pos.No safe is a be all, do all solution. Whatever price point you buy one at, it should be integrated into a multi level security plan.
These lighter safes should be placed somewhere that is not in an easy access area/ out of sight as much as possible. Secure the damn thing to the floor and/or wall studs with lag bolts and heavy washers. Try to place the safe so that someone doesn't have pry access to the opening side of the door by putting that side next to a wall, if at all possible. Place them in a closet or other close quarter area to make it more difficult for someone to have room to work on gaining access.
You should always layer your home security in as many layers as you can. Cameras, lighting, dog, motion sensors, and the number one deterent, not letting every Joe and his brother know what you have, valuable wise. Many thefts are perpetrated by someone that the person knows.
Agreed, we have 6 security cameras and a Pit. Like I said before, I'm not as worried about somebody breaking in as much as I am worried about my daughter's friends, neices, and nephews getting ahold of one of the guns. I went with a safe vs cabinet because we also wanted to protect important papers that are hard to replace incase of a house fire.No safe is a be all, do all solution. Whatever price point you buy one at, it should be integrated into a multi level security plan.
These lighter safes should be placed somewhere that is not in an easy access area/ out of sight as much as possible. Secure the damn thing to the floor and/or wall studs with lag bolts and heavy washers. Try to place the safe so that someone doesn't have pry access to the opening side of the door by putting that side next to a wall, if at all possible. Place them in a closet or other close quarter area to make it more difficult for someone to have room to work on gaining access.
You should always layer your home security in as many layers as you can. Cameras, lighting, dog, motion sensors, and the number one deterent, not letting every Joe and his brother know what you have, valuable wise. Many thefts are perpetrated by someone that the person knows.