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Thread: Gunsafes

  1. #1
    Member JConn's Avatar
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    Mar 2011
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    Gunsafes

    I'm about ready to put down some money on my first gun safe. I was wondering if anyone here has any recommendations or warnings about certain brands. I cannot afford to drop 10-20000 on a real high grade safe. I'm just looking at a cannon/liberty/patriot safe in the $2-3000 range. Are some a better value than others, are some noticably higher quality and worth a higher price? Do some rust and fall apart after you breath on them? Stuff like that. Thanks guys (and gals).
    Evil requires the sanction of the victim. - Ayn Rand

  2. #2
    Site Supporter
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    If you want to see some in-person, check out VA Safe and Lock.

    Virginia Safe & Lock Service
    5528 Port Royal Road
    Springfield, Virginia 22151
    Telephone: 703-503-5200

  3. #3
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    Combination locks or biometric, not keys..... Keys get lost... DAMHIK.

  4. #4
    Member LHS's Avatar
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    Jan 2012
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    Behind that cactus
    I'm a fan on American Security (Amsec). I bought one several years ago, and it's put together better than my old Liberty (better welds, more solid lockup, more durable lock)

  5. #5
    Site Supporter Odin Bravo One's Avatar
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    I found that you can end up paying a lot of extra money for features that may or may not help you at all, or you may not want or need.

    Active bolts, passive bolts. Dial vs. Touchpad. 45 min of fire at 1500 degrees, or an hour at 1300 degrees. Or 90 minutes at 1400? It made my head spin as I tried to sort out actual protection vs. marketing.

    I thought long and hard about the fire protection, and called and spoke to a guy who lost his entire collection in a house fire. His safe, like mine, was located in the center of his house. No one was home at the time of the fire. The house was a total loss. His safe would have had to have been rated for 1800+ (or more) for about 5 hours to have any hope of doing any good. Fortunately, no one was hurt. What he lost was just "stuff" and mostly replaceable.

    As far as the active and passive bolt protection and numbers of each, if someone has the time, and wants in............they are going to get in unless you are at the super high end, high dollar, where you are not wanting to go. For comparable safes by Cannon, Browning, Liberty, etc., I found the prices to be competitive at some stores, and way, way off at others. (Talking about advertised price, not good old boy or crack deal). Similar features, and sometimes similar pricing, but other times not even close. This was mostly the case with retail stores such as BPS, Cabela's, and LGS's.

    When I started the side by side comparisons on the web, Liberty really jumped out at me because of price. They came in on average, under the other big names for safes of similar size and features. I am lucky in that I have a local Liberty shop. All the guy sells is Liberty safes. He also came in at about $300 under the MSRP/Advertised prices in their catalog, and took another 15% off for LEO/MIL/EMS. Being local, I did not have to pay for delivery.......just a couple of buddies, a truck, and a case of beer with some pizza's. That was a HUGE selling point for me. I paid $600 under retail for my first safe, and nearly $750 under on the second.

    I bought both of my safes from the local guy, and couldn't be happier with the quality of the product Liberty provides. I touched on my opinion/decision in terms of the fire ratings, so it really became a "nice to have" rather than a "must have XYZ protection". The first safe was a dial lock, which I liked for the key lock in the dial. This enabled me to lock the safe, then lock the dial with a key. I was also concerned about an electronic lock losing battery power and having a perma-locked safe. Another concept I liked about the key lock dial was I could take the key with me when I left town, thus making it impossible for someone at home to be coerced to open it. They flat out did not have the capability. That safe was also stashed in a coat closet. The closet was disassembled to get the safe in, then reassembled around the safe after installation. You needed a tow truck and crash through the front half of the house to yank it out. But........with enough time, anyone with the will could have broken into it.

    That first safe, which performed well for me, and met my needs was the Colonial 23. http://www.libertysafe.com/safe-colo...html?tab=sizes

    My second safe, I needed to grow, so I was looking for most room for the buck, without going too overboard. I knew the closet idea was out, as I don't have any closets big enough for a larger than what I already had safe. I also decided I wanted an electronic lock. I was in and out of the safe often enough that I decided the ease of opening outweighed my perceived need to prevent coercion. Thinking back to my buddy who lost it all...........it is just stuff. They can have it if it comes down to threats and coercion. I wanted an in-door panel built in, not an aftermarket/afterthought, so I sought out a model with that feature. (I had added a nylon coated wire door accessory to the Colonial, and while functional, was pretty ghetto). I also wanted some form of light inside, as well as a plug to use a dehumidifier. I used a plug and play dehumidifier pack in the Colonial, and it worked (kind of), but every time I opened the safe, it indicated it needed to be plugged back in. Not terribly convenient or efficient.

    Like you, I hit up the boards for some info, and one of our members was kind enough to zap me some real pictures, with other objects nearby so I could visualize the size and put it in perspective. I ended up with the Liberty FatBoy. http://www.libertysafe.com/safe-colo...html?tab=sizes

    Now, the Colonial 23 advertised 23 long guns. But keep in mind, this means 23 slick, standard profile rifles. No optics. No custom stocks. No pistol grip AR's. FatBoy says 64 guns in that configuration. And I believe them. But how many of us have those guns? Sure we have a few that are slick like that, but we also have our AR's, scoped hunting rifle, custom stock this, Red Dot sight that.

    Still, I was easily able to store nearly 30 items in the safe, about 50/50 long guns to pistols in the Colonial 23.

    The FatBoy gave me a few more options for configuration, which I found nice. I use the tall side (right) with the top shelf cut out for the long guns. The cut out is nice so I can fit my long barreled shotguns through, as well as one long barreled rifle. Under the long guns on that side, I store some high performance ammo, as well as my fixed blade knives that are not otherwise on gear.

    The left side is for SBR's, SBS's, but also serves well for many other non-NFA "Assault Rifles" with the use of the "Rifle Rod". http://www.libertysafe.com/accessories.php
    Not quite as sturdy as a rack, but it keeps the guns still, and easily accessible. It also gave me more room on the right side for the guns that had to fit over there due to length. Depending on if the inventory is 100%, I can sometimes get an 8lb keg of powder in there as well.

    Because the right side rifles take up that side, my middle shelf only gives me half of the safe to work with, but I found a carousel gun rack for the pistols to work nicely. In addition to the eight pistols it holds, there are 10 slots inside the door for pistols. When I ran out of room there, a 6 pistol nylon coated wire rack on the top shelf picked up the slack. Those are not super easy to get to, or put away, but they are still accessible with a little twisting and turning. And I still have plenty of room for accessories such as WML's, HHL's, laser's, etc. My door accessory also has some full size zippered pouches where I can keep documents such as my binder with all NFA Stamps, Will, Power of Attorney, Life Insurance Policy. And I use one to hold suppressors. There are other smaller zippered pouches for Baton, Handcuff's, folding knives, whatever.

    All told, I have about 60 items in the safe, + 30 knives, + approx. 600 rounds of high performance ammunition, + Goldenrod dehumidifier (plugged into the wall outlet 24/7)+ about 10-12 WML's, 5 HHL's, 2 lasers, and a custom leather cowboy action rig, and misc. accessories that I don't want sitting in my non-climate controlled garage.

    If you can, like JV mentioned..............go look. I kept a picture of my entire inventory laid out on the floor handy as I window shopped for safes, trying to keep in mind that it is a high dollar item, and I will want/need room to grow, and keeping that picture to helped visualize how much room I am taking up. If you can look at the various brands in one location, so much the better. It will give you a better feel for what you are really paying for.

    Remember, given enough time...........any residential safe can be breached. And if a fire engulfs your home, do you really think 60 minutes of protection is going to save your precious H&H double rifle more than the 45 min will? A decision only you can make for yourself, but think about it before the sales pitches start.

    I am very happy with the value, and performance of my Liberty safe. I am biased. And I only have considerable first hand experience with the Liberty brand, so take my comments with the proverbial grain of salt. But for the money, Liberty will always be the first place I look when it is time to upgrade again.

    Oh look..............it's about that time!

    Good luck.
    You can get much more of what you want with a kind word and a gun, than with a kind word alone.

  6. #6
    Member jstyer's Avatar
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    Nov 2011
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    Lubbock, TX
    Excellent write up Sean. And coming from someone who used to sell safes... I say Liberty all the way.
    I train to be better than I was yesterday. -F2S

  7. #7
    Member
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    Dec 2011
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    Austin,TX
    There are a lot of good options as far as Gunsafes go. The only thing I can add is DO NOT get an electronic safe lock(unless you have the need for multiple combinations or audit capability). Electronic safe locks are unreliable and will eventually fail. How do I know? I was a locksmith/safe-and-vault tech for about 6 years.

  8. #8
    Member LHS's Avatar
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    Maybe it's just my sample of 1, but I wasn't impressed at all with my Liberty safe. I got one of the shorter safes to store my pistols while I lived in my college apartment, and at the time I knew nothing about safes. When I started researching larger safes to store my long guns, I started looking more closely at the little Liberty. The back panel is just spot-welded on, you could easily wedge a crowbar in the gap and go to work. Also, the dial lock's housing has grown loose in its mount, so I had to paint on a witness mark to line it up prior to spinning in the combination, otherwise it won't work. I'm about to seal it in place with some silicone caulk to keep it from loosening any further. For $600 or so (ten years ago), it was hardly the best deal, and I kick myself at buying without proper research. But, I've learned from that mistake.

  9. #9
    Just a comment on fires: The trend in the fire service is to decrease the number of aggressive interior attacks in favor of more defensive "surround and drown" tactics unless there's a life threat. The problem is that newer construction techniques(prefab wood trusses, engineered lumber joists, etc.) make structural collapses more likely and less predictable, and no good officer puts his guys in that situation without a compelling reason.

    If you think fire is a real threat, consider a residential sprinkler system, or at least an alarm system that gives the fire department a fighting chance to get there in time to stop a fire.

    Videos:http://www.usfa.fema.gov/fireservice.../dry_tree.shtm
    (also good to show near Christmas)

  10. #10
    Site Supporter Odin Bravo One's Avatar
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    Or it could be that the two I got were exceptional, and your shitty safe is the norm?

    My experience is limited to only two specimens. Saying that I have twice as much experience as you in terms of Liberty safes, while technically true, would be pretty weak chili.

    Though it has been my experience with man portable safes, the smaller they go, the less concerned the makers seem to be with security. I have only owned Liberty, but I have broken into all makes and models from around the world. The little file cabinet sized safes were always a breeze. The lock box types like Sentry (like the one my nightstand gun resides in) are hardly a speed bump.

    But when we get down to it, the dead bolt and lock on my front door is only a solid kick from being defeated. A piece of ceramic from a spark plug gets me in through the window. Then I have as much time as I want to work on the safe, regardless of make, model, or marketing. There are certain illusions we allow ourselves to believe. Physical security of premises is a very common one.
    You can get much more of what you want with a kind word and a gun, than with a kind word alone.

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