nunya Posted January 10 Posted January 10 (edited) Dude said "Liberty." Do they make Cabela's branded safes? edit: Yep. https://www.libertysafe.com/pages/cabelas Edited January 10 by nunya
uhhello Posted January 11 Posted January 11 Thats pretty bad ass. I'm curious what the safe specs were.
Smokin Posted January 11 Posted January 11 Impressive. Looks like it said 45 on the door as it opened, so probably 45 min at 1200. Also impressive as it's my understanding that most fire rated gun safes like that won't really survive a house fire. The temp and duration of the rating is usually well under what most stick built houses will burn. I'm getting ready to build a fire-proof walk in gun safe room and was going to sell my safe, but am now thinking of putting it in the corner as a double protection.
uhhello Posted January 11 Posted January 11 3 hours ago, Smokin said: Impressive. Looks like it said 45 on the door as it opened, so probably 45 min at 1200. Also impressive as it's my understanding that most fire rated gun safes like that won't really survive a house fire. The temp and duration of the rating is usually well under what most stick built houses will burn. I'm getting ready to build a fire-proof walk in gun safe room and was going to sell my safe, but am now thinking of putting it in the corner as a double protection.
uhhello Posted January 11 Posted January 11 3 hours ago, Smokin said: Impressive. Looks like it said 45 on the door as it opened, so probably 45 min at 1200. Also impressive as it's my understanding that most fire rated gun safes like that won't really survive a house fire. The temp and duration of the rating is usually well under what most stick built houses will burn. I'm getting ready to build a fire-proof walk in gun safe room and was going to sell my safe, but am now thinking of putting it in the corner as a double protection. Yeah, dude got very lucky from a rudimentary search for total loss fire safes.
uhhello Posted January 11 Posted January 11 (edited) This video explains it all. Essentially you're counting on a rapid fire response (within 10 minutes) to get water on the fire and save the gats. Keep the safe in a room with an internal door to keep the room heat down as much as possible. Edited January 11 by uhhello
brabus Posted January 11 Posted January 11 (edited) Liberty is the company who gave the feds the code to open private citizen’s safes. Fuck them. But I’m glad that guy’s guns didn’t burn, so there’s that. Edited January 11 by brabus
Smokin Posted January 11 Posted January 11 The other thing to consider is basically fireproofing the closet or whatever your safe is in. I originally considered adding three layers of fire rated drywall (which is basically what gives the safe a fire rating) on all the sides, which might allow the contents to survive a real fire. My current plan is to basically line a room in the basement with fire drywall and then cinder blocks. Big problem to solve is how to protect the ceiling... I actually did do the safe within a safe, put a "fireproof" document safe inside the "fireproof" gun safe thinking that the documents might actually survive. Until I didn't have space in the gun safe. Did the feds have a warrant for the Liberty event? While I'm against a backdoor code even existing for something like a gun safe, if they had a warrant then they were going to get into the safe one way or another. Just saved some time, money, and destroying the safe. 1
uhhello Posted January 11 Posted January 11 2 hours ago, Smokin said: The other thing to consider is basically fireproofing the closet or whatever your safe is in. I originally considered adding three layers of fire rated drywall (which is basically what gives the safe a fire rating) on all the sides, which might allow the contents to survive a real fire. My current plan is to basically line a room in the basement with fire drywall and then cinder blocks. Big problem to solve is how to protect the ceiling... I actually did do the safe within a safe, put a "fireproof" document safe inside the "fireproof" gun safe thinking that the documents might actually survive. Until I didn't have space in the gun safe. Did the feds have a warrant for the Liberty event? While I'm against a backdoor code even existing for something like a gun safe, if they had a warrant then they were going to get into the safe one way or another. Just saved some time, money, and destroying the safe. There was a warrant. 1
uhhello Posted January 11 Posted January 11 (edited) Some of you assholes (def not me) are felons again for a few more days according to the ATF. Edited January 11 by uhhello
Smokin Posted January 12 Posted January 12 ATF is setting itself up to be next after Dept of non-Education for cost savings under the next administration. 2
brabus Posted January 12 Posted January 12 (edited) 11 hours ago, Smokin said: While I'm against a backdoor code even existing for something like a gun safe, if they had a warrant then they were going to get into the safe one way or another. Just saved some time, money, and destroying the safe. True, but like you I am adamantly against any back door codes held by a manufacturer. Also, Liberty could have fought back at least a little (e.g. Apple), but they just handed it over after seeing the warrant. If in that situation - fuck the gov, they can deal with cutting open the safe. And this wasn’t a time-sensitive matter where the safe contents were life or death type stuff, it was just more J6-related bullshit. Edited January 12 by brabus
uhhello Posted January 12 Posted January 12 4 minutes ago, brabus said: True, but like you I am adamantly against any back door codes held by a manufacturer. Also, Liberty could have fought back at least a little (e.g. Apple), but they just handed it over after seeing the warrant. If in that situation - fuck the gov, they can deal with cutting open the safe. And this wasn’t a time-sensitive matter where the safe contents were life or death type stuff, it was just more J6-related bullshit. While I generally agree, after looking into it, it was a sealed warrant. They were not aware of why the govt was seeking the code.
brabus Posted January 12 Posted January 12 51 minutes ago, uhhello said: While I generally agree, after looking into it, it was a sealed warrant. They were not aware of why the govt was seeking the code. Even more reason to push back. Unless they did fight it and I’m unaware, but from what I read and take from their public statement, they handed it over without any pushback. Either way doesn’t affect me, never had a gun safe and never will be in the market for one. 1
Smokin Posted January 12 Posted January 12 Sealed warrants, along with the ATF, are bull. The only possible justifications are organized crime and terrorism where any information can be used by the bad guys to stop the bleeding. But, even then it is borderline un-American like civil forfeiture and the like. I recant my defense of Liberty Safes. 1
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