We fly, we hunt, we fish, we endurance race, we play basketball... What we do is FUN!
We handle firearms too; we do this in a controlled environment. If you have never had gun training, DO IT! It can never hurt you to know how to handle firearms!
Very nice rifle, except the swept back bolt handle that might hit you on the knuckle of your index finger. Years ago, I had a Austrian born master gunsmith, Edmund Gall build me a .416 Rem on a Mauser M98 action with a octogan barrel. Beautiful functional piece of art. Very accurate and reliable.
Gun safes have only sheetrock wall board for insulation . Not at all the same thing as a real fire safe designed to protect documents at a max 350 degrees F (inside temp). Or a digital media safe with a max 150 degrees F (inside temp). Real fire safes do not boast the external fire temperature, but clearly state the max allowed temperature INSIDE the safe during a fire. The cooldown period is included as part of a UL test! Also, a UL fire rating test for a records safe is tested at much higher than 1200 degrees F! Guns don't fare well in a records safe because of the steam released to keep the inside temps down. Poor guns 😞 House fires suck!
You can tell NO ONE is adept at filming in this event given the camera being whipped around all over the safe and contents rarely focusing for more than a few seconds.. An otherwise ridiculous and wasted effort and display.
Those guns did not survive the fire. They rusted because the temperature was high enough to alter the bluing of the steel allowing even the slightest moisture to start the rusting process. Gun safes are not just rated on temperature. Safes are rated in temperature over time, for example you could have a safe rated at 1200F at 30 minutes. Judging by the deformed panels that safe endured high temperatures for longer than 30 minutes or the temperatures were extremely high.
Dude you are going to have to find an expert gunsmith to fix all those guns. I had two gun safes that were in a fire. You should have opened it as soon as the fire was out.
WE had a fire and yes the water did more damage than the fire - its discouraging. But getting to stuff ASAP after a fire is out and sometimes one can salvage some things.
wow that is not what I would expect from a "fireproof" safe. All they had to do was line the inside with some refractory material and the heat would just bounce off and protect whatever's inside. One of the first forges I made was just a few white refractory bricks held together with refractory cement. And even with the forge glowing white on the inside, you could put your hands on those bricks and it would just feel warm. If a safe was lined with material like that, no housefire would affect the stuff inside.
There's no such thing as a fireproof safe learn your shit before you put it on this station I've been a locksmith for over 40 years I've opened more safe than you've ever even seen okay fired not fired they are only fire resistant and they're only waiting for a certain amount of fire for a certain amount of time so you know what you people act like you know what you're talking about