Just out of experience, sometimes it's easier and faster to cut the bottom out, break the concrete, then just tear the inner liner out. I have used an air nibbler and a jigsaw to cut the inner wall out, it's usually 14-16 gauge.
awesome man!, shame there was nothing in it :(. I cut open a tiny little safe once, had enough change in it to buy a new wheel for the 9" grinder, and some really old bank books and cards :(
Too bad you didn't have a professional come and open it. That Meilink fire safe was probably worth anywhere from $600.00 to $800.00+ and probably had better fire resistance than the newer models. It was entertaining watching a couple of guys pry open a good safe though...glad there wasn't tear gas in it!
This guys obviously haven't heard how Richard Feynman broke into every safe during Manhattan project. Mind you I doubt they've even heard of Richard Feynman...
first of all i don't even think that classifies as a safe more like a security box something to store paper work in as an insurance company would not cover you if you put money in a low grade cheap box like this ... a proper safe would box the metal so you wouldn't be able to rip the face off as it would have no edges and a real safe would have at least a 20 mm steel plate at the front with a reinforced concrete mix then another metal plate that is hardened a proper rated safe should withstand at at least 1 hour of drilling ,grinding or a thermal lance not just two guys with some crowbars and a screwdriver
+turboslag Just because it's heavy and has a dial on it, doesn't mean it has anything but minimal burglary resistance. That safe in the video was not designed or intended to resist physical attack. It is (or rather was) a Fire Resistive save designed to protect papers from fire for a specified time; usually 1 hour. The "concrete" is insulation that is placed while in a somewhat liquid state. Most successful safe attacks are on fire resistive safes. Why do people buy fire resistive instead of burglary resisrive safes? Because fire resistive safes are cheaper and easier to move.
Clearly not a very good safe if you can move that around that easy. I just had to use a crane truck to get a 2000 pound safe into my house. It’s an old J and J Taylor and it’s about the size of a dishwasher
The title should be "breaking into a toy safe". This is not a burglar proof safe! This is a fire safe. It has sure protection against fire but not real protection against a burglar attact. Of course it can protect you against the "circumstantial" burglar who will not have serious tools.
The guy that owned the safe is the guy with the open shoes, He stopped by to see if I had something to open the safe with, and I did and also had a camera what you see is what you get.. But your right BTW I don't like open toe shoes
Not only open toe shoes, but no heavy work gloves. Then the only one there with brains suggests the obvious ... "LET ME GIVE YOU A HEAVIER BAR"....which Mr.Dumb-Dumb at first resisted. Then he suggests "YOU'D BE MUCH BETTER OFF PUTTING THE SAFE ON ITS BACK!" Then, the final smart suggestion: WHY NOT TRY TO OPEN THE DOOR NOW USING THE MECHANISN THAT WE CAN NOW EXPOSED? ...Which of course saved the day! By the way, that suggestion came just before MR. DUMB-DUMB WAS PREPARING TO TRY TO SMASH PAST THE MECHANISM. I knew right from the start where this was going as soon as a gloveless Mr. Dumb-Dumb complained that the safe was hot and nobody told him ... so he burned himself😂 This video is a perfect learning tool to showcase the difference between COMMON SENSE AND THE LACK THEREOF!
@@moncorp1 it depends on the year. Older safes used abestos since it was a miracle material for heat resistance and insulation until they realized the stuff killed you.
Trabajaron de mas...solo hubieran arrancado el dial y retirado el protector del mismo, luego empujan el perno para botar los discos de combinacion y meten un alambre para desbloquear el mecanismo....esfuerzo inutil
ROTARYCOMPTECH traduction from google They worked more ... they would only have ripped the dial and removed the protector from it, then push the bolt to throw out the combination discs and put a wire to unlock the mechanism .... useless effort
wow! proof scammer safe technicians do exist. a real safe technician would have opened that with minimal to no damage. proof you get what you pay for. cheapest is not always best.
Are you a goof bud? Who said anything about being a safe technician, scammer? The guy that owned the safe was a friend of mine he just wanted it open I didn't charge him anything.