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Recommend a gun safe, maybe sub 1200.
Posted on 7/18/21 at 8:11 am
Posted on 7/18/21 at 8:11 am
About 8 long guns(currently have 5) 4 with scopes and maybe 10 pistols.
Posted on 7/18/21 at 8:25 am to lsu xman
Keep an eye on Costco safe deals, they run them every couple months
Posted on 7/18/21 at 9:03 am to lsu xman
+1 for Mike Ward's Liberty Safes.
I went through the Mandeville showroom and they were all similarly constructed (ended up with a deal on Colonial 64 for 2K delivered and setup).
Their lifetime warranty and service is top notch.
I went through the Mandeville showroom and they were all similarly constructed (ended up with a deal on Colonial 64 for 2K delivered and setup).
Their lifetime warranty and service is top notch.
Posted on 7/19/21 at 9:32 am to lsu xman
I only have 3 recommendations:
1. Think of what size you think you need and double it.
2. Get a mechanical lock.
3. Don't be stingy on your safe. Most of us have gun/scope combos that easily reach $3-4k.
I have a timber ridge I got on sale at Gander. It's a 60 gun that will actually hold about 35-40.
Edit-- You will be keeping a lot of stuff besides guns in there.
1. Think of what size you think you need and double it.
2. Get a mechanical lock.
3. Don't be stingy on your safe. Most of us have gun/scope combos that easily reach $3-4k.
I have a timber ridge I got on sale at Gander. It's a 60 gun that will actually hold about 35-40.
Edit-- You will be keeping a lot of stuff besides guns in there.
This post was edited on 7/19/21 at 9:37 am
Posted on 7/19/21 at 9:35 am to lsu xman
quote:Just know you will need a safe that holds about 48 guns with 8 long guns. I dont even know how they establish the capacity. The only way my 36 gun safe could hold 36 guns is if they were melted down.
About 8 long guns(currently have 5) 4 with scopes and maybe 10 pistols.
Posted on 7/19/21 at 10:04 am to lsu xman
Tractor Supply has Cannon safes. That's what you want. They run frequent sales on them too.
Posted on 7/19/21 at 10:42 am to lsu xman
So often people say "buy bigger than you think you'll need". I agree that whatever numerical designation a particular safe may have is extremely optimistic. But I'm also a big believer in distributed risk. So rather than have one monster safe big enough to hold what I have now and may add in the future, I'd rather have two or three safes in multiple locations throughout the house. In a smash/grab scenario they're not likely to take the time to find and open each of them, whereas with one monster safe once it's open they have all your stuff.
Think a lot about where you're putting it as well. In the corner of a big room in the basement gives potential burglars the ability to tip over the safe and attack it from the sides where the metal is thinner. Better to install it in a tight space where the sides are not accessible - even if that means building a false wall to surround it.
Remember what you're protecting against: gun safes are more accurately called "secure cabinets" and are fairly easy to defeat by someone who knows what they're doing and has the time to do it. For me, my biggest concern is smash-n-grab and keeping them out of the hands of kids/visitors. Someone who knows what they're doing and has plenty of time while you're known to be out of town will get into your safe - make your peace with that now. "Security" is a continuum of acceptable risk, it's not an absolute.
Think about where you're installing it in relation to a possible house fire. The basement where a fully engulfed fire is going to collapse into said basement probably means your guns won't survive the fire. "fireproof", like "waterproof" are not absolute statements, but measured in duration of time at a certain temperature and water pressure respectively - exceed either and all bets are off. Better to put it on an outside wall that will expose the safe from the bulk of the heat in a fire when the fire collapses that wall.
Don't forget to use multiple big lag bolt to secure it to the floor and one or more walls. Most people skip this step and tipping the safe over exposes the vulnerable sides very easily. Or worse, they'll just cart your safe off to the garage to load it and take it to open at their leisure elsewhere.
I'm not personally a fan of keypad locks because I've seen even good ones fail but I agree they're convenient.
Be sure to address the humidity inside the safe and you ARE going to need an interior light - a stick on battery powered LED closet light at Walmart works great for me.
Think a lot about where you're putting it as well. In the corner of a big room in the basement gives potential burglars the ability to tip over the safe and attack it from the sides where the metal is thinner. Better to install it in a tight space where the sides are not accessible - even if that means building a false wall to surround it.
Remember what you're protecting against: gun safes are more accurately called "secure cabinets" and are fairly easy to defeat by someone who knows what they're doing and has the time to do it. For me, my biggest concern is smash-n-grab and keeping them out of the hands of kids/visitors. Someone who knows what they're doing and has plenty of time while you're known to be out of town will get into your safe - make your peace with that now. "Security" is a continuum of acceptable risk, it's not an absolute.
Think about where you're installing it in relation to a possible house fire. The basement where a fully engulfed fire is going to collapse into said basement probably means your guns won't survive the fire. "fireproof", like "waterproof" are not absolute statements, but measured in duration of time at a certain temperature and water pressure respectively - exceed either and all bets are off. Better to put it on an outside wall that will expose the safe from the bulk of the heat in a fire when the fire collapses that wall.
Don't forget to use multiple big lag bolt to secure it to the floor and one or more walls. Most people skip this step and tipping the safe over exposes the vulnerable sides very easily. Or worse, they'll just cart your safe off to the garage to load it and take it to open at their leisure elsewhere.
I'm not personally a fan of keypad locks because I've seen even good ones fail but I agree they're convenient.
Be sure to address the humidity inside the safe and you ARE going to need an interior light - a stick on battery powered LED closet light at Walmart works great for me.
This post was edited on 7/19/21 at 11:05 am
Posted on 7/20/21 at 12:13 pm to lsu xman
If you are in BR, I suggest Alford Safe and Lock! Great service and deals.
Posted on 7/20/21 at 3:47 pm to lsu xman
Alford safe and lock in BR. Large selection full service.
Posted on 7/20/21 at 7:02 pm to lsu xman
I have a liberty USA 30 gun that was around $1200 w mechanical dial. Very happy with it so far. Nobodys tried to burn the house down around it or bust into it yet though. Once you get used to the dial its ultra fast to get into. Not the same as a combo master lock.
Posted on 7/23/21 at 3:46 pm to lsu xman
The next house I buy (or build) I want to wall up a room with concrete filled blocks and get a safe door to put in it. The best option imho would be an OLD safe door from a small town closed up bank. I keep meaning to ask the lady whose family owned Pine Hill Bank in AL if they sold the safe door there when she closed that bank. I’m curious as to how they handle those big doors like that.
Mike Ward’s sells new safe doors for people who want to build their own and that might be a better option than the old bank style, nostalgia notwithstanding.
Mike Ward’s sells new safe doors for people who want to build their own and that might be a better option than the old bank style, nostalgia notwithstanding.
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