User Panel
You got to do what you got to do - that will keep the boys out.
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The box is meant for job site tool storage. It uses two number 5 Master lock padlocks.
They install into recesses built into the front of the box. The only portion that is visable is where the key goes in. |
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I have a former friend who does something similar for ammo storage. It should work well until you can get a legitimate safe. Kudos for protecting your little ones.
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You can pick up halfway decent safes for $200 and up. Just keep an eye out for sales at the big box stores.
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No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there.
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No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there. Agreed. For a "decent" safe, you should expect to spend at least $1K - $1.3K...and that's for something "low-end decent". The job box is a practical stop-gap measure while the OP saves his $$$... ETA: SUMMIT SAFE "CASCADE" SPECS... A SC18 or SC25 should fit the bill quite nicely... I really like Summit Safes...I got a "Teton Edition" (Discontinued model...) ST23 on clearence from a local dealer for $800 OTD last Spring. Not quite up to "Cascade" specs but too good of deal to pass up. I'm already out of room in it and will be getting a "Cascade" or better this Fall when I can save more $$$... I'm going to pass the "Teton" on to my Brother-In-Law, who has three small kids that he needs to start keeping things out of reach of... |
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No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there. this is true. i have three of this same box (and six like it) and they all are much stronger than the stack on safe that has my reloading stuff in it. keep saving for the safe that you need later. untill then, keep your guns well oiled. edit- +1 on the summit. i have a denalli and it is a good safe. see the safe pics pg 4 for it. |
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No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there. You need to shop around a little more thoroughly then. Walmart had Sentry 10 gun Safes for $199. They had 1/8" thick steel and a "regular" dial safe locking mechanism with 6-8 1" locking pins on the doors. Are they fireproof and all that...no. Would they keep a determined thief out...no but neither would ANY safe. They were a great safe for someone with a small collection. I think they were an outstanding value and if I ever see them near that price again I am going to buy one. |
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I have been rethinking my plan to stand it up on its side. If I do I will loose all the storage under the rifles. Can't afford to loose that extra space.
So I will finish lining it on the inside and dial in the paint. |
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No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there. You need to shop around a little more thoroughly then. Walmart had Sentry 10 gun Safes for $199. They had 1/8" thick steel and a "regular" dial safe locking mechanism with 6-8 1" locking pins on the doors. Are they fireproof and all that...no. Would they keep a determined thief out...no but neither would ANY safe. They were a great safe for someone with a small collection. I think they were an outstanding value and if I ever see them near that price again I am going to buy one. I sell gun safes for a living. I am pretty up to date on how almost all safes are built, who sells what, and how much it is. I popped open one of those sentry safes with a huge flat blade screwdriver and a hammer in less than 2 minutes a few weeks back (owner was locked out). That job box would be a lot harder to pry open. It costs more to drill a sentry and replace the lock than the safe costs usually. What gave you the idea that the body was 1/8" thick? All those sentry safes have 12 gauge and 14 gauge bodies. All the internals in the door are made of plastic also. Sentry Does not make a decent safe. Granted the job box has no fire protection, its still more pry and cut security than a sentry is. Also, the sentry safes dont have any fire protection that would actually protect the contents in a real house fire. |
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No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there. You need to shop around a little more thoroughly then. Walmart had Sentry 10 gun Safes for $199. They had 1/8" thick steel and a "regular" dial safe locking mechanism with 6-8 1" locking pins on the doors. Are they fireproof and all that...no. Would they keep a determined thief out...no but neither would ANY safe. They were a great safe for someone with a small collection. I think they were an outstanding value and if I ever see them near that price again I am going to buy one. I sell gun safes for a living. I am pretty up to date on how almost all safes are built, who sells what, and how much it is. I popped open one of those sentry safes with a huge flat blade screwdriver and a hammer in less than 2 minutes a few weeks back (owner was locked out). That job box would be a lot harder to pry open. It costs more to drill a sentry and replace the lock than the safe costs usually. What gave you the idea that the body was 1/8" thick? All those sentry safes have 12 gauge and 14 gauge bodies. All the internals in the door are made of plastic also. Sentry Does not make a decent safe. Granted the job box has no fire protection, its still more pry and cut security than a sentry is. Also, the sentry safes dont have any fire protection that would actually protect the contents in a real house fire. Walmart had this safe for $199. Is it the best - no. Is it made of 1/8" steel and steel internals - yes. Does Sentry make the model that you describe - probably. We are obviously talking about different models so my original assertion still stands. The model I linked above is a good value at the $200+ish price range but not at the $620 MSRP. |
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Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there. You need to shop around a little more thoroughly then. Walmart had Sentry 10 gun Safes for $199. They had 1/8" thick steel and a "regular" dial safe locking mechanism with 6-8 1" locking pins on the doors. Are they fireproof and all that...no. Would they keep a determined thief out...no but neither would ANY safe. They were a great safe for someone with a small collection. I think they were an outstanding value and if I ever see them near that price again I am going to buy one. I sell gun safes for a living. I am pretty up to date on how almost all safes are built, who sells what, and how much it is. I popped open one of those sentry safes with a huge flat blade screwdriver and a hammer in less than 2 minutes a few weeks back (owner was locked out). That job box would be a lot harder to pry open. It costs more to drill a sentry and replace the lock than the safe costs usually. What gave you the idea that the body was 1/8" thick? All those sentry safes have 12 gauge and 14 gauge bodies. All the internals in the door are made of plastic also. Sentry Does not make a decent safe. Granted the job box has no fire protection, its still more pry and cut security than a sentry is. Also, the sentry safes dont have any fire protection that would actually protect the contents in a real house fire. Walmart had this safe for $199. Is it the best - no. Is it made of 1/8" steel and steel internals - yes. Does Sentry make the model that you describe - probably. We are obviously talking about different models so my original assertion still stands. The model I linked above is a good value at the $200+ish price range but not at the $620 MSRP. Where are you getting that from? Nowhere do I see it say that "safe" is made from 1/8" steel. A 1/8" body is 10ga steel. The owners manual doesn't even make that claim from what I can see. Oh and as for job boxes, I keep my ammo locked up in a job box and am pretty happy with it in there as opposed to eating up room in my safe |
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tag
I am looking at one of those Ridgid boxes for ammo storage |
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No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there. You need to shop around a little more thoroughly then. Walmart had Sentry 10 gun Safes for $199. They had 1/8" thick steel and a "regular" dial safe locking mechanism with 6-8 1" locking pins on the doors. Are they fireproof and all that...no. Would they keep a determined thief out...no but neither would ANY safe. They were a great safe for someone with a small collection. I think they were an outstanding value and if I ever see them near that price again I am going to buy one. I sell gun safes for a living. I am pretty up to date on how almost all safes are built, who sells what, and how much it is. I popped open one of those sentry safes with a huge flat blade screwdriver and a hammer in less than 2 minutes a few weeks back (owner was locked out). That job box would be a lot harder to pry open. It costs more to drill a sentry and replace the lock than the safe costs usually. What gave you the idea that the body was 1/8" thick? All those sentry safes have 12 gauge and 14 gauge bodies. All the internals in the door are made of plastic also. Sentry Does not make a decent safe. Granted the job box has no fire protection, its still more pry and cut security than a sentry is. Also, the sentry safes dont have any fire protection that would actually protect the contents in a real house fire. Walmart had this safe for $199. Is it the best - no. Is it made of 1/8" steel and steel internals - yes. Does Sentry make the model that you describe - probably. We are obviously talking about different models so my original assertion still stands. The model I linked above is a good value at the $200+ish price range but not at the $620 MSRP. Where are you getting that from? Nowhere do I see it say that "safe" is made from 1/8" steel. A 1/8" body is 10ga steel. The owners manual doesn't even make that claim from what I can see. Oh and as for job boxes, I keep my ammo locked up in a job box and am pretty happy with it in there as opposed to eating up room in my safe I mic'd it. I think it was a little over 1/8" so I chalked up the extra to the paint thickness. I don't have a paint thickness guage so i just guesstimated. YMMV |
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I've always wondered what those who deal with safes think of these job boxes as a temporary stand in. I mean can one of these possible be worse than my stack on cabinet that's in my basement? That job box is no $2000+ safe, but it sure as hell looks more secure than my semi punch resistant 8 or 10 gun stack on cabinet. With the recessed lock model, these seem like an adequate stop gap till a poor college student like myself can get in and through med school and making money for a real safe (s) and vault.
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No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there. You need to shop around a little more thoroughly then. Walmart had Sentry 10 gun Safes for $199. They had 1/8" thick steel and a "regular" dial safe locking mechanism with 6-8 1" locking pins on the doors. Are they fireproof and all that...no. Would they keep a determined thief out...no but neither would ANY safe. They were a great safe for someone with a small collection. I think they were an outstanding value and if I ever see them near that price again I am going to buy one. I sell gun safes for a living. I am pretty up to date on how almost all safes are built, who sells what, and how much it is. I popped open one of those sentry safes with a huge flat blade screwdriver and a hammer in less than 2 minutes a few weeks back (owner was locked out). That job box would be a lot harder to pry open. It costs more to drill a sentry and replace the lock than the safe costs usually. What gave you the idea that the body was 1/8" thick? All those sentry safes have 12 gauge and 14 gauge bodies. All the internals in the door are made of plastic also. Sentry Does not make a decent safe. Granted the job box has no fire protection, its still more pry and cut security than a sentry is. Also, the sentry safes dont have any fire protection that would actually protect the contents in a real house fire. Walmart had this safe for $199. Is it the best - no. Is it made of 1/8" steel and steel internals - yes. Does Sentry make the model that you describe - probably. We are obviously talking about different models so my original assertion still stands. The model I linked above is a good value at the $200+ish price range but not at the $620 MSRP. That safe has 3 locking bolts, and a 14 gauge body. That is nowhere near the description of the safe you said you saw in walmart. The one you provided the link to is the same construction as the one I popped open a few weeks ago. Something is not matching up here with what your claiming. That sentry in the link is a crap safe. Regardless what you think, the reality is that there is no sentry safe that is good. All of them can be pried open fairly quick, and some are even easier to open using other methods. They keep out little kids, or kids that dont want to demolish your stuff, and thats it. |
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No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there. You need to shop around a little more thoroughly then. Walmart had Sentry 10 gun Safes for $199. They had 1/8" thick steel and a "regular" dial safe locking mechanism with 6-8 1" locking pins on the doors. Are they fireproof and all that...no. Would they keep a determined thief out...no but neither would ANY safe. They were a great safe for someone with a small collection. I think they were an outstanding value and if I ever see them near that price again I am going to buy one. I sell gun safes for a living. I am pretty up to date on how almost all safes are built, who sells what, and how much it is. I popped open one of those sentry safes with a huge flat blade screwdriver and a hammer in less than 2 minutes a few weeks back (owner was locked out). That job box would be a lot harder to pry open. It costs more to drill a sentry and replace the lock than the safe costs usually. What gave you the idea that the body was 1/8" thick? All those sentry safes have 12 gauge and 14 gauge bodies. All the internals in the door are made of plastic also. Sentry Does not make a decent safe. Granted the job box has no fire protection, its still more pry and cut security than a sentry is. Also, the sentry safes dont have any fire protection that would actually protect the contents in a real house fire. Walmart had this safe for $199. Is it the best - no. Is it made of 1/8" steel and steel internals - yes. Does Sentry make the model that you describe - probably. We are obviously talking about different models so my original assertion still stands. The model I linked above is a good value at the $200+ish price range but not at the $620 MSRP. That safe has 3 locking bolts, and a 14 gauge body. That is nowhere near the description of the safe you said you saw in walmart. The one you provided the link to is the same construction as the one I popped open a few weeks ago. Something is not matching up here with what your claiming. That sentry in the link is a crap safe. Regardless what you think, the reality is that there is no sentry safe that is good. All of them can be pried open fairly quick, and some are even easier to open using other methods. They keep out little kids, or kids that dont want to demolish your stuff, and thats it. OK. Now I've got you to concede that the internals are not plastic. All I have to do now is prove the wall thickness. Correct? And let me guess...you don't sell Sentry brand safes. I know, I know it's because they are junk - even their top of the line fireproof, blahblahblah safes. I'm sure there is NO safe that will keep out the most determined thief (or legitimate safe cracker such as you) with proper equipment at hand. What I am asserting is that there are all kinds of safes to fill every persons needs and pocketbooks. BTW - I checked out a jobox at home depot this morning and their wall thickness was probably around 1/16" thick. |
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There are plastic internal parts in the doors of them. I have 2 out in the shop, and 1 in our warehouse.
We sell them, we just don't stock them. The ones we have on hand right now are for a video we are shooting to show how easy it is to break into safes from box stores. Its not hard to breach a sentry REGARDLESS of who you are. An idiot can pound a screwdriver into the door jamb and breach the bolts, or pop one open with a pry bar in no time. I looked at a job box yesterday at home depot, and it was 12 gauge (.1046") body thickness on the giant orange one I looked at. It would be a lot harder to pry open than one of those sentry gun safes. 1/16" would be .0625" thick, which they arent. I don't gain anything from telling you guys what is a good safe, and what isn't. You aren't going to buy from me regardless, all you guys are out of my sales area. If someone was to pay attention to the advice I gave, they more than likely would be saying something like "Man, I sure am glad I got a good safe" someday later down the road after they may have had a home fire, or a burglary. My main goal here in the security forum is to provide accurate and direct assistance with questions about safes, security, and gun storage questions. Anyone is entitled to their opinion, but fact is, those safes at Walmart are not built the way you said they are. Sorry, its just the truth. |
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I put the third coat of paint on it today. Starting next week I will be able to get the interior finished up.
I will have some in progress pics up soon. |
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Finished the third coat of paint and worked out the layout of the custom extras for the box. Here is the box after the third coat on the top and sides and first coat on the legs. http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2758/4337668447_a31c74b9b5.jpg The airbrush work should happen on Tuesday and the vinyl graphics should be here by Thursday. Interior of box is being worked on Monday night. This will be done and filled this weekend. cool dude looking forward to seeing the end results, its looking good already |
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I have went this route as well and use the Home Depot RIGID job box to keep my guns and ammo in. For the money, you get a lot of secure space. It's not pretty and has no bells or whistles but for me it was the perfect solution. OP, good luck with your project. I will be following this.
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Heads up on job boxes - there is a VERY easy trick to get into them. The security is far better than other options, and will certainly keep the kids out, but they aren't quite as secure as they seem.
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Quoted: Major update! Paint is done and the Vinyl graphics are on the box. I also started the lining of the box. Here is what the paint work looks like. Airbrush work prior to clear coat. http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2774/4351182283_dabc406a56.jpg Tribute to Trijicon. http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4070/4351182575_e5e3c3590e.jpg Clear applied http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4062/4351932166_a75c5f5bdd.jpg Damn! That's cool as hell! You wanna come paint mine? |
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Excellent idea and the paint work it tits! Great job!
Keep the keys secure, don't hide them, keep them with you. I eventually found my Dad's hidden keys, almost by accident. I was about 8yrs old at the time. To this day, he never knew. |
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I've always wondered what those who deal with safes think of these job boxes as a temporary stand in. I mean can one of these possible be worse than my stack on cabinet that's in my basement? That job box is no $2000+ safe, but it sure as hell looks more secure than my semi punch resistant 8 or 10 gun stack on cabinet. With the recessed lock model, these seem like an adequate stop gap till a poor college student like myself can get in and through med school and making money for a real safe (s) and vault. It is better than a sheet metal Stack On cabinet in that it is much larger and therefore requires a larger vehicle to steal it out right. It also holds more guns. |
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Awesome paint job––does your friend usually work on cars? Wondering what kind of airbrush guy I'd need to look up to get something similar done.
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Here are the finished pics of the exterior. Vinyl graphics applied. This thing is awesome. I love the way it turned out and can't wait to mount it to the floor and fill it with the good stuff. http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2701/4351265755_415edcf285.jpg Here the whole box with the airbrushing and vinyl. http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2595/4351266051_2cbed24a2b.jpg Close up of contents list. http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2680/4351266297_cddf7832d3.jpg A big thanks to my old friend from high school (Rob) for the airbrush work. I should have pics of the interior panels by Sat. That would be really cool to use it as a coffee table with one of those doilly things covering it. All sophisticated with a degree of kewlness and lethality underneath. The only drawback would be hiding all that artwork from regular viewing. |
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Here are the finished pics of the exterior. Vinyl graphics applied. This thing is awesome. I love the way it turned out and can't wait to mount it to the floor and fill it with the good stuff. http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2701/4351265755_415edcf285.jpg Here the whole box with the airbrushing and vinyl. http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2595/4351266051_2cbed24a2b.jpg Close up of contents list. http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2680/4351266297_cddf7832d3.jpg A big thanks to my old friend from high school (Rob) for the airbrush work. I should have pics of the interior panels by Sat. So what does the interior look like? |
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No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there. Agreed. For a "decent" safe, you should expect to spend at least $1K - $1.3K...and that's for something "low-end decent". The job box is a practical stop-gap measure while the OP saves his $$$... ETA: SUMMIT SAFE "CASCADE" SPECS... A SC18 or SC25 should fit the bill quite nicely... OP isn't looking to keep criminals out, just his kids. And if you think that you need a $1k safe to keep the kids out... you must have quite the family. |
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No safe for $200 is halfway decent. I bet his job box has thicker steel than most the entry level safes out there. Agreed. For a "decent" safe, you should expect to spend at least $1K - $1.3K...and that's for something "low-end decent". The job box is a practical stop-gap measure while the OP saves his $$$... ETA: SUMMIT SAFE "CASCADE" SPECS... A SC18 or SC25 should fit the bill quite nicely... OP isn't looking to keep criminals out, just his kids. And if you think that you need a $1k safe to keep the kids out... you must have quite the family. That's what I was trying to get at but the thread devolved quickly into a safe bashing thread. |
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Heads up on job boxes - there is a VERY easy trick to get into them. The security is far better than other options, and will certainly keep the kids out, but they aren't quite as secure as they seem. Quoted:
So what is the trick then? Yep, still waiting on that trick. |
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Quoted: Quoted: Heads up on job boxes - there is a VERY easy trick to get into them. The security is far better than other options, and will certainly keep the kids out, but they aren't quite as secure as they seem. Quoted: So what is the trick then? Yep, still waiting on that trick. My guess would be having the key or a sawzall/angle grinder. That's some trick! |
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There are plastic internal parts in the doors of them. I have 2 out in the shop, and 1 in our warehouse. We sell them, we just don't stock them. The ones we have on hand right now are for a video we are shooting to show how easy it is to break into safes from box stores. Its not hard to breach a sentry REGARDLESS of who you are. An idiot can pound a screwdriver into the door jamb and breach the bolts, or pop one open with a pry bar in no time. I looked at a job box yesterday at home depot, and it was 12 gauge (.1046") body thickness on the giant orange one I looked at. It would be a lot harder to pry open than one of those sentry gun safes. 1/16" would be .0625" thick, which they arent. I don't gain anything from telling you guys what is a good safe, and what isn't. You aren't going to buy from me regardless, all you guys are out of my sales area. If someone was to pay attention to the advice I gave, they more than likely would be saying something like "Man, I sure am glad I got a good safe" someday later down the road after they may have had a home fire, or a burglary. My main goal here in the security forum is to provide accurate and direct assistance with questions about safes, security, and gun storage questions. Anyone is entitled to their opinion, but fact is, those safes at Walmart are not built the way you said they are. Sorry, its just the truth. Sing it! Buying a cheap safe is exactly like trusting TSA. It is a false sense of security. If you are happy with a RSC rated container, then you can't complain about airline security. http://i47.tinypic.com/68y3x4.jpg I just got a quote from Brown for the above safe in a "C" rating with fire lining - almost $10k shipped and installed. The safe was about $8k alone, but shipping and installation is big $ as well. |
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