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Welding 1/4 strip steel around the door that has the gap would stop anyone getting in. A safe just keeps out honest people. If they want in, they will get in.
you dont have walls around the safe to prevent you to take leverage. if the left side of the safe was near a wall, you wouldn't be able to even shove that crowbar it the hole
YT sent me here is 2024. Good video, but misses the main issue with most safes vs burglars. This assumes a singular method of attack against the strongest part of the safe. Safe companies love to point out bits of their doors for marketing, which is just nonsense unless you are forcing the assailant to deal with the door, denying them any better option. Typically, the steel on the sides and top are nowhere near the thickness on the door and burglars are known to tote battery angle-grinders which make quick work of cutting access in the thinner wall steel and leaving the door intact. Real heavy duty door construction only matters if you install the safe in a manner that denies access to the weaker walls around it. I wager its is a very small number of residential safes are installed in a manner that forces burglars to deal with the door, vs going around it.
I'll take it! Deterring the rare opportunists of people that might have access to your home and, if needed, adding a few min of very hard, very noisy work by a very buff thief to ply to open. For a few $100s that sounds good to me..I don't expect Fort Knox..
This case is rock solid (like other Pelican cases). ru-vid.comUgkx3jMFPw9QX_Iu4DNcjW-t9AZ4_iNhJzhE I paired it with the Master Lock 140T set of padlocks. The US Airways ticket agent that checked the case was impressed by how completely the latches were secured. The case has layers of removable foam cubes that can be easily adapted to the contents of the case and keep everything secure. After declaring its contents to the ticket agent, I was allowed to put this case in other checked luggage. Due to its size and black color, this helped insure that it wasn't misplaced by a baggage handler. TSA was (apparently) happy with the packaging as well. If you plan on flying with more than one of the main items, I would recommend buying a larger Pelican case and just transport the case as another piece of checked luggage.
Looks like a wafer lock on the door as an override. A simple cheap lock jiggling (very little knowledge required) key would open this up with no destruction. If physical attack is the preferred option to avoid then fasten it down deep in a closet. That way it is difficult to have space to lever the door.
I’m a huge fan of the slider system. No more scratched guns, complete honesty about the number you can fit in it, and most importantly no more moving guns out of the way.