February 20th, 2012 — Uncategorized
If you’re conscious about home security then you’ve more or less thought about getting an safe to protect your items. Many people will think about purchasing a safe but most will put it off until its too late. Some people think that a safe is so important that everyone should have one installed in their homes by law. This would not only protect everyone items but would also stop home robberies dead in their tracks. Having under floor safes installed in our homes would be such a deterrent for any criminal that crime would take a massive hit. There is some truth to this, just think about it for a moment, if criminals make their living form robbing homes and they spend the money they make form robbing on drugs and firearms then all of this criminal industry would stop. So as you can see its really important that you not only protect your items but its just as important that you keep these items out of the criminal network.
The only really way to protect your valuable items is to put them into a good branded safe. Your valuables will be more or less completely safe from any burglar as most will not be able to break into these modern safes. To make it even harder for the criminal, you should think about under floor safes as your main option. Installing a safe under the floor is a lot of hassle and can also take some time but it is the best option is you’re serious about keeping your goods away from criminal hands.
Encasing your safe in concrete ensures that the burglar has absolutely no way of removing your safe from the house unless they brought drilling equipment with them which is not going to be the case so there’s no way of removing the safe. If a burglar gets lucky enough to find your under floor safe & then sees that its embedded in concrete, he’s going to know that there’s no way he can take the safe with him so he can try to open it later. So, he either just gives up right there and then and leaves or he tries to break into the safe. Most burglars will try to guess the combination password but this is almost impossible as most safes these days have over one million different combination’s.
Some of these safes will only allow for three attempts at entering a password and will then shut down so there’s no way of getting in via guessing the password. Once the burglar figures out that he cant guess the combination, he’ll try to break into it but this is futile as there’s no real way anyone can break into a modern safe. If you invest in a good brand safe like the fire safe brand then you’ll be safe in the knowledge that you items are well protected with these under floor safes. This brand is one of the best on the market and will protect against fire as well as burglary so your most valuable possessions will be protected.
Many business people take their record keeping for granted. It is a necessary nuisance. It is not that they think records are not important but too many business people fail to realize that their business records are what keep them in business.
For over 40 centuries, humans have been protecting their personal and valuable possessions in strong boxes. It has been a relentless challenge for the designers and manufacturers of safes to outwit the safe crackers and burglars of the world.
Today, the science of safe and vault makers can provide protection against virtually any conceivable hazard â save perhaps a direct hit from an atomic bomb.
Despite the remarkable advances in the design and production of protection equipment, it is estimated that more than 75% of the equipment in use by businesses today are incapable of protecting the valuables inside the safe. An additional mountain of vital business records has no protection whatsoever!
When Is a Safe NOT a Safe?
There is confusion of terms in the use of fire and theft resisting equipment. This confusion in terms leads many users to believe that they have more protection than they really have. It is natural for customers who have a âsafeâ to believe that anything they put into it will be âsafe.â Our job is to be sure that our customer recognizes the type of protection they are getting with the equipment they purchase.
A safe having an Underwritersâ Laboratories labeled relocking devise is eligible, under certain conditions, for a reduction in burglary insurance.
There are occasions within the business office where the combination of the safe is known only by one or a few persons, yet a number of employees are required to work with the contents of the safe.
An older method of dealing with this problem is the use of a separate key-locked inner door. Authorized employees are issued keys to the inner door but do not know the combination to the safe. The inner door has dropped in popularity, but it is still available on some safes.
The modern approach to the same problem is locked interior compartments. Employees are issued keys to the compartments they are entitled to enter. An alternative method used on some safe models is a separate key lock in the bolt work of the safe. After the combination is worked, the safe can be opened with a key. Turning the combination dial makes the key inoperative.
This is an INSULATED VAULT door.
It gives similar protection to that of a fire safe but is somewhat limited in it’s degree of burglary protection.
VAULTS
Underwriters Laboratories assigns one of four ratings to vault doors and modular vault panels based on expert burglary attack with cutting torches, fluxing rods, portable electric power tools, portable hydraulic tools and common mechanical tools for a specific time period. UL labels are mounted on the vault door and individual modular vault panels. When the UL rating for the door and panels are different, the overall vault rating is determined by the least burglary resistive component.
The ratings are:
Class
Attack time
M 15 minutes attack time
I 30 minutes attack time
II 60 minutes attack time
III 120 minutes attack time
Vault construction
Vault doors that are not UL-listed are evaluated based on the construction and thickness of the steel incorporated in the door. For non-UL listed vaults or panels, construction of the vault floor, ceiling, and walls is evaluated in terms of their thickness, and construction (steel, masonry, cinder block, filled cinder block, or reinforced concrete). Vaults constructed of poured concrete with reinforcing rods must meet the standards of construction established by the American Society of Testing and Materials to assure appropriate burglary resistant protection, but are not rated by U.L.
Doors and vault construction that are not burglary resistant may be listed as fire resistant and containers with these components should be used for storage of records and other valuable papers. Vaults constructed with masonry block, brick, or steel are not typically acceptable for burglary protection, except when values are low and other burglary protection compensates for the deficiency.
When the electricity fails and phones are out, your safe or vault is your last defense against a burglar
In centuries past, humankind worshiped fire because they feared it. They saw it ravage palaces and dwellings with devastating results. So much of the written records of early human civilization are gone because of the lack of protection of these documents.
Through the ages, humankind has sought to protect their possessions from the terror of fire. The Egyptians buried their scrolls deep in the pyramids. The Assyrians buried duplicates of important documents at separate locations. The Greeks carved their important records on ivory slabs.
When no record material proved suitable for protection against the destruction by fire, they turned their talents to the development of protective devices to house records. Julius Caesar filed his records in strong, iron boxes but found that the metal readily conducted the heat of a fire. Feudal lords build underground vaults and stationed trusted guards for their protection. Merchants of the 15th Century developed the treasure chest of pirate story fame, made of oak and banded with iron.
After 1830 came the iron âsafesâ with inner walls of stone, plaster, wood, cement, brick, asbestos, mica, alum, chalk, clay, or simply dead-air space.
The first standardized tests for the adequacy of safe protection were not made until 1917, however. These tests caused radical changes in safe construction because they proved many of the old theories of protection to be false. Safe equipment today, thanks to technological progress and thorough testing, can provide modern business with record protection like never before known in the history of civilization.
Selecting the Right Safe is an Important Decision!
The selection of a safe is a more serious obligation than the selection of other types of office equipment. If a chair, desk, or printer does not do what it was supposed to do for the customer, an adjustment is easily made. A replacement or an alteration can be made and the only harm done is a little delay and some annoyance.
But what happens when the selected safe fails to perform satisfactorily? It can only be tested by fire! After the fire, unfortunately, it is too late to make replacements and adjustments. Statistics show that the chances are almost 50-50 that a business will survive a fire!
Any Safe is Safe â Sometimes
Every safe, regardless of whether it has a specific rating or not, and regardless of its age or condition will resist some type of exposure to fire and will protect its contents.
Ordinary steel files will come through some fires satisfactorily. In fact, unprotected records on a shelf or on top of a desk could survive an office fire. The important factors — how hot a fire and for how long â are the important issues.
Safes Have Certified Security
No firm can afford to test its own safe equipment in an office fire. Consequently, new models of safe are given extensive tests by manufacturers and by private testing laboratories before they are put on the market. Established safe models are also taken off the regular assembly line periodically and given tests to see that they still conform to their ratings.
The Underwriters Laboratories, sponsored by the National Board of Fire Underwriters, is the primary testing agency. It is chartered as a nonprofit organization for the examination and testing of devices, systems, and materials for safety.
Underwriters Laboratories test the safes supplied to them by manufacturers and authorize the use of a series of labels according to the types of test which the equipment has successfully passed.
The modern fire safe depends on a blanket of steam to protect the documents within it. The common insulation elements like glass wool, shiny fooils and the others used in refrigerators, stoves, and home construction give little protection against the intense and prolonged heated developed in a building fire.
The older safes utilized free moisture retained in the cement and water mixture used for insulation. This water evaporated over the years and with it went the potential steam protection. This free water also made damp safe interiors, musty papers and rust. Newer formulas and treatments produce a safe insulation with the water retained in permanent crystalline form. As the heat increases during a fire, these crystals turn to water and then to steam which blankets and cools the interior of the safe.
The insulating element of the safe can be made in either one of two methods. It may be cast in a one-piece, oven-dried monolith, then the metal shell built around it. The second method is to form the metal shell first, then pour the insulation mixture into the shell.
Sudden heat changes during the course of a fire sometimes cause safe to explode. The explosion is caused by an accumulation of hydrogen. In the manufacture of a modern quality safe, provisions are made to eliminate this hazard.
Remember the Date, 1917
It was not until 1917 that safes were given any reasonable tests for protection against fire hazards. The results of the first standardized tests proved that many of the old theories about adequate protection were false. After the test, manufacturers changed construction methods radically.
A massive, heavy safe looks like it can give plenty of protection. But, if it is old, it probably lost all of the fire-protective properties it ever had. If it was made before 1917, it never had some of the protection we consider necessary today!
Most safes made before 1917 we insulated with plain water and cement. When the free water evaporated, there was none left to make the steam blanket which protects the records from heat.
Older safes depended on supporting strength on their outer shells alone or on heavy bands at the front and back. At the comparatively low temperature of 1,000 degrees, this supporting metal lost as much as 70% of its strength. With the support weakened, the safe would warp and allow the heat to enter. Any drop during the course of the fire, of course, would burst the safe and open the contents to flames.
Safe construction methods have changed radically since the test on safes have been conducted scientifically. In the older safes, the heat was rapidly transmitted to the interior of the safe by its metal hinges, spindles and handles. Openings between the door and frame often permitted direct access for the heat of a fire. Solid steel fittings in the door and jamb conducted the heat quickly.
Doors are now tongue and grooved in a design that impedes the path of the heat. Casings for the insulation are of light material and assembly methods are engineered so that there is a minimum of heat penetration to the interior of the safe.
Relocking Devices
Knocking off the combination lock and driving out the spindle was a favorite method of opening a safe at one time. Safes can now be equipped with a relocking device, however, which foils this practice. The relocking mechanism is very sensitive to any tampering with the combination lock and any pounding will immediately deadlock the bolt work of the safe.
EFREN FLAHARTY, WOOROOLIN, QLD
More articles on gun safes for sale can be found here.
AMS Small Safes http://SMALLSAFE.INFO
February 20th, 2012 — Uncategorized
This is an INSULATED VAULT door.
It gives similar protection to that of a fire safe but is somewhat limited in it’s degree of burglary protection.
VAULTS
Underwriters Laboratories assigns one of four ratings to vault doors and modular vault panels based on expert burglary attack with cutting torches, fluxing rods, portable electric power tools, portable hydraulic tools and common mechanical tools for a specific time period. UL labels are mounted on the vault door and individual modular vault panels. When the UL rating for the door and panels are different, the overall vault rating is determined by the least burglary resistive component.
The ratings are:
Class
Attack time
M 15 minutes attack time
I 30 minutes attack time
II 60 minutes attack time
III 120 minutes attack time
Vault construction
Vault doors that are not UL-listed are evaluated based on the construction and thickness of the steel incorporated in the door. For non-UL listed vaults or panels, construction of the vault floor, ceiling, and walls is evaluated in terms of their thickness, and construction (steel, masonry, cinder block, filled cinder block, or reinforced concrete). Vaults constructed of poured concrete with reinforcing rods must meet the standards of construction established by the American Society of Testing and Materials to assure appropriate burglary resistant protection, but are not rated by U.L.
Doors and vault construction that are not burglary resistant may be listed as fire resistant and containers with these components should be used for storage of records and other valuable papers. Vaults constructed with masonry block, brick, or steel are not typically acceptable for burglary protection, except when values are low and other burglary protection compensates for the deficiency.
When the electricity fails and phones are out, your safe or vault is your last defense against a burglar
The modern fire safe depends on a blanket of steam to protect the documents within it. The common insulation elements like glass wool, shiny fooils and the others used in refrigerators, stoves, and home construction give little protection against the intense and prolonged heated developed in a building fire.
The older safes utilized free moisture retained in the cement and water mixture used for insulation. This water evaporated over the years and with it went the potential steam protection. This free water also made damp safe interiors, musty papers and rust. Newer formulas and treatments produce a safe insulation with the water retained in permanent crystalline form. As the heat increases during a fire, these crystals turn to water and then to steam which blankets and cools the interior of the safe.
The insulating element of the safe can be made in either one of two methods. It may be cast in a one-piece, oven-dried monolith, then the metal shell built around it. The second method is to form the metal shell first, then pour the insulation mixture into the shell.
Sudden heat changes during the course of a fire sometimes cause safe to explode. The explosion is caused by an accumulation of hydrogen. In the manufacture of a modern quality safe, provisions are made to eliminate this hazard.
Remember the Date, 1917
It was not until 1917 that safes were given any reasonable tests for protection against fire hazards. The results of the first standardized tests proved that many of the old theories about adequate protection were false. After the test, manufacturers changed construction methods radically.
A massive, heavy safe looks like it can give plenty of protection. But, if it is old, it probably lost all of the fire-protective properties it ever had. If it was made before 1917, it never had some of the protection we consider necessary today!
Most safes made before 1917 we insulated with plain water and cement. When the free water evaporated, there was none left to make the steam blanket which protects the records from heat.
Older safes depended on supporting strength on their outer shells alone or on heavy bands at the front and back. At the comparatively low temperature of 1,000 degrees, this supporting metal lost as much as 70% of its strength. With the support weakened, the safe would warp and allow the heat to enter. Any drop during the course of the fire, of course, would burst the safe and open the contents to flames.
Safe construction methods have changed radically since the test on safes have been conducted scientifically. In the older safes, the heat was rapidly transmitted to the interior of the safe by its metal hinges, spindles and handles. Openings between the door and frame often permitted direct access for the heat of a fire. Solid steel fittings in the door and jamb conducted the heat quickly.
Doors are now tongue and grooved in a design that impedes the path of the heat. Casings for the insulation are of light material and assembly methods are engineered so that there is a minimum of heat penetration to the interior of the safe.
Relocking Devices
Knocking off the combination lock and driving out the spindle was a favorite method of opening a safe at one time. Safes can now be equipped with a relocking device, however, which foils this practice. The relocking mechanism is very sensitive to any tampering with the combination lock and any pounding will immediately deadlock the bolt work of the safe.
Many business people take their record keeping for granted. It is a necessary nuisance. It is not that they think records are not important but too many business people fail to realize that their business records are what keep them in business.
For over 40 centuries, humans have been protecting their personal and valuable possessions in strong boxes. It has been a relentless challenge for the designers and manufacturers of safes to outwit the safe crackers and burglars of the world.
Today, the science of safe and vault makers can provide protection against virtually any conceivable hazard â save perhaps a direct hit from an atomic bomb.
Despite the remarkable advances in the design and production of protection equipment, it is estimated that more than 75% of the equipment in use by businesses today are incapable of protecting the valuables inside the safe. An additional mountain of vital business records has no protection whatsoever!
When Is a Safe NOT a Safe?
There is confusion of terms in the use of fire and theft resisting equipment. This confusion in terms leads many users to believe that they have more protection than they really have. It is natural for customers who have a âsafeâ to believe that anything they put into it will be âsafe.â Our job is to be sure that our customer recognizes the type of protection they are getting with the equipment they purchase.
A safe having an Underwritersâ Laboratories labeled relocking devise is eligible, under certain conditions, for a reduction in burglary insurance.
There are occasions within the business office where the combination of the safe is known only by one or a few persons, yet a number of employees are required to work with the contents of the safe.
An older method of dealing with this problem is the use of a separate key-locked inner door. Authorized employees are issued keys to the inner door but do not know the combination to the safe. The inner door has dropped in popularity, but it is still available on some safes.
The modern approach to the same problem is locked interior compartments. Employees are issued keys to the compartments they are entitled to enter. An alternative method used on some safe models is a separate key lock in the bolt work of the safe. After the combination is worked, the safe can be opened with a key. Turning the combination dial makes the key inoperative.
In centuries past, humankind worshiped fire because they feared it. They saw it ravage palaces and dwellings with devastating results. So much of the written records of early human civilization are gone because of the lack of protection of these documents.
Through the ages, humankind has sought to protect their possessions from the terror of fire. The Egyptians buried their scrolls deep in the pyramids. The Assyrians buried duplicates of important documents at separate locations. The Greeks carved their important records on ivory slabs.
When no record material proved suitable for protection against the destruction by fire, they turned their talents to the development of protective devices to house records. Julius Caesar filed his records in strong, iron boxes but found that the metal readily conducted the heat of a fire. Feudal lords build underground vaults and stationed trusted guards for their protection. Merchants of the 15th Century developed the treasure chest of pirate story fame, made of oak and banded with iron.
After 1830 came the iron âsafesâ with inner walls of stone, plaster, wood, cement, brick, asbestos, mica, alum, chalk, clay, or simply dead-air space.
The first standardized tests for the adequacy of safe protection were not made until 1917, however. These tests caused radical changes in safe construction because they proved many of the old theories of protection to be false. Safe equipment today, thanks to technological progress and thorough testing, can provide modern business with record protection like never before known in the history of civilization.
Selecting the Right Safe is an Important Decision!
The selection of a safe is a more serious obligation than the selection of other types of office equipment. If a chair, desk, or printer does not do what it was supposed to do for the customer, an adjustment is easily made. A replacement or an alteration can be made and the only harm done is a little delay and some annoyance.
But what happens when the selected safe fails to perform satisfactorily? It can only be tested by fire! After the fire, unfortunately, it is too late to make replacements and adjustments. Statistics show that the chances are almost 50-50 that a business will survive a fire!
Any Safe is Safe â Sometimes
Every safe, regardless of whether it has a specific rating or not, and regardless of its age or condition will resist some type of exposure to fire and will protect its contents.
Ordinary steel files will come through some fires satisfactorily. In fact, unprotected records on a shelf or on top of a desk could survive an office fire. The important factors — how hot a fire and for how long â are the important issues.
Safes Have Certified Security
No firm can afford to test its own safe equipment in an office fire. Consequently, new models of safe are given extensive tests by manufacturers and by private testing laboratories before they are put on the market. Established safe models are also taken off the regular assembly line periodically and given tests to see that they still conform to their ratings.
The Underwriters Laboratories, sponsored by the National Board of Fire Underwriters, is the primary testing agency. It is chartered as a nonprofit organization for the examination and testing of devices, systems, and materials for safety.
Underwriters Laboratories test the safes supplied to them by manufacturers and authorize the use of a series of labels according to the types of test which the equipment has successfully passed.
If you’re conscious about home security then you’ve more or less thought about getting an safe to protect your items. Many people will think about purchasing a safe but most will put it off until its too late. Some people think that a safe is so important that everyone should have one installed in their homes by law. This would not only protect everyone items but would also stop home robberies dead in their tracks. Having under floor safes installed in our homes would be such a deterrent for any criminal that crime would take a massive hit. There is some truth to this, just think about it for a moment, if criminals make their living form robbing homes and they spend the money they make form robbing on drugs and firearms then all of this criminal industry would stop. So as you can see its really important that you not only protect your items but its just as important that you keep these items out of the criminal network.
The only really way to protect your valuable items is to put them into a good branded safe. Your valuables will be more or less completely safe from any burglar as most will not be able to break into these modern safes. To make it even harder for the criminal, you should think about under floor safes as your main option. Installing a safe under the floor is a lot of hassle and can also take some time but it is the best option is you’re serious about keeping your goods away from criminal hands.
Encasing your safe in concrete ensures that the burglar has absolutely no way of removing your safe from the house unless they brought drilling equipment with them which is not going to be the case so there’s no way of removing the safe. If a burglar gets lucky enough to find your under floor safe & then sees that its embedded in concrete, he’s going to know that there’s no way he can take the safe with him so he can try to open it later. So, he either just gives up right there and then and leaves or he tries to break into the safe. Most burglars will try to guess the combination password but this is almost impossible as most safes these days have over one million different combination’s.
Some of these safes will only allow for three attempts at entering a password and will then shut down so there’s no way of getting in via guessing the password. Once the burglar figures out that he cant guess the combination, he’ll try to break into it but this is futile as there’s no real way anyone can break into a modern safe. If you invest in a good brand safe like the fire safe brand then you’ll be safe in the knowledge that you items are well protected with these under floor safes. This brand is one of the best on the market and will protect against fire as well as burglary so your most valuable possessions will be protected.
SIMON SHIVER, BERRIEDALE, TAS
More articles on gun safes for sale can be found here.
AMS Small Safes http://SMALLSAFE.INFO
February 4th, 2012 — Uncategorized
In centuries past, humankind worshiped fire because they feared it. They saw it ravage palaces and dwellings with devastating results. So much of the written records of early human civilization are gone because of the lack of protection of these documents.
Through the ages, humankind has sought to protect their possessions from the terror of fire. The Egyptians buried their scrolls deep in the pyramids. The Assyrians buried duplicates of important documents at separate locations. The Greeks carved their important records on ivory slabs.
When no record material proved suitable for protection against the destruction by fire, they turned their talents to the development of protective devices to house records. Julius Caesar filed his records in strong, iron boxes but found that the metal readily conducted the heat of a fire. Feudal lords build underground vaults and stationed trusted guards for their protection. Merchants of the 15th Century developed the treasure chest of pirate story fame, made of oak and banded with iron.
After 1830 came the iron âsafesâ with inner walls of stone, plaster, wood, cement, brick, asbestos, mica, alum, chalk, clay, or simply dead-air space.
The first standardized tests for the adequacy of safe protection were not made until 1917, however. These tests caused radical changes in safe construction because they proved many of the old theories of protection to be false. Safe equipment today, thanks to technological progress and thorough testing, can provide modern business with record protection like never before known in the history of civilization.
Selecting the Right Safe is an Important Decision!
The selection of a safe is a more serious obligation than the selection of other types of office equipment. If a chair, desk, or printer does not do what it was supposed to do for the customer, an adjustment is easily made. A replacement or an alteration can be made and the only harm done is a little delay and some annoyance.
But what happens when the selected safe fails to perform satisfactorily? It can only be tested by fire! After the fire, unfortunately, it is too late to make replacements and adjustments. Statistics show that the chances are almost 50-50 that a business will survive a fire!
Any Safe is Safe â Sometimes
Every safe, regardless of whether it has a specific rating or not, and regardless of its age or condition will resist some type of exposure to fire and will protect its contents.
Ordinary steel files will come through some fires satisfactorily. In fact, unprotected records on a shelf or on top of a desk could survive an office fire. The important factors — how hot a fire and for how long â are the important issues.
Safes Have Certified Security
No firm can afford to test its own safe equipment in an office fire. Consequently, new models of safe are given extensive tests by manufacturers and by private testing laboratories before they are put on the market. Established safe models are also taken off the regular assembly line periodically and given tests to see that they still conform to their ratings.
The Underwriters Laboratories, sponsored by the National Board of Fire Underwriters, is the primary testing agency. It is chartered as a nonprofit organization for the examination and testing of devices, systems, and materials for safety.
Underwriters Laboratories test the safes supplied to them by manufacturers and authorize the use of a series of labels according to the types of test which the equipment has successfully passed.
The modern fire safe depends on a blanket of steam to protect the documents within it. The common insulation elements like glass wool, shiny fooils and the others used in refrigerators, stoves, and home construction give little protection against the intense and prolonged heated developed in a building fire.
The older safes utilized free moisture retained in the cement and water mixture used for insulation. This water evaporated over the years and with it went the potential steam protection. This free water also made damp safe interiors, musty papers and rust. Newer formulas and treatments produce a safe insulation with the water retained in permanent crystalline form. As the heat increases during a fire, these crystals turn to water and then to steam which blankets and cools the interior of the safe.
The insulating element of the safe can be made in either one of two methods. It may be cast in a one-piece, oven-dried monolith, then the metal shell built around it. The second method is to form the metal shell first, then pour the insulation mixture into the shell.
Sudden heat changes during the course of a fire sometimes cause safe to explode. The explosion is caused by an accumulation of hydrogen. In the manufacture of a modern quality safe, provisions are made to eliminate this hazard.
Remember the Date, 1917
It was not until 1917 that safes were given any reasonable tests for protection against fire hazards. The results of the first standardized tests proved that many of the old theories about adequate protection were false. After the test, manufacturers changed construction methods radically.
A massive, heavy safe looks like it can give plenty of protection. But, if it is old, it probably lost all of the fire-protective properties it ever had. If it was made before 1917, it never had some of the protection we consider necessary today!
Most safes made before 1917 we insulated with plain water and cement. When the free water evaporated, there was none left to make the steam blanket which protects the records from heat.
Older safes depended on supporting strength on their outer shells alone or on heavy bands at the front and back. At the comparatively low temperature of 1,000 degrees, this supporting metal lost as much as 70% of its strength. With the support weakened, the safe would warp and allow the heat to enter. Any drop during the course of the fire, of course, would burst the safe and open the contents to flames.
Safe construction methods have changed radically since the test on safes have been conducted scientifically. In the older safes, the heat was rapidly transmitted to the interior of the safe by its metal hinges, spindles and handles. Openings between the door and frame often permitted direct access for the heat of a fire. Solid steel fittings in the door and jamb conducted the heat quickly.
Doors are now tongue and grooved in a design that impedes the path of the heat. Casings for the insulation are of light material and assembly methods are engineered so that there is a minimum of heat penetration to the interior of the safe.
Relocking Devices
Knocking off the combination lock and driving out the spindle was a favorite method of opening a safe at one time. Safes can now be equipped with a relocking device, however, which foils this practice. The relocking mechanism is very sensitive to any tampering with the combination lock and any pounding will immediately deadlock the bolt work of the safe.
This is an INSULATED VAULT door.
It gives similar protection to that of a fire safe but is somewhat limited in it’s degree of burglary protection.
VAULTS
Underwriters Laboratories assigns one of four ratings to vault doors and modular vault panels based on expert burglary attack with cutting torches, fluxing rods, portable electric power tools, portable hydraulic tools and common mechanical tools for a specific time period. UL labels are mounted on the vault door and individual modular vault panels. When the UL rating for the door and panels are different, the overall vault rating is determined by the least burglary resistive component.
The ratings are:
Class
Attack time
M 15 minutes attack time
I 30 minutes attack time
II 60 minutes attack time
III 120 minutes attack time
Vault construction
Vault doors that are not UL-listed are evaluated based on the construction and thickness of the steel incorporated in the door. For non-UL listed vaults or panels, construction of the vault floor, ceiling, and walls is evaluated in terms of their thickness, and construction (steel, masonry, cinder block, filled cinder block, or reinforced concrete). Vaults constructed of poured concrete with reinforcing rods must meet the standards of construction established by the American Society of Testing and Materials to assure appropriate burglary resistant protection, but are not rated by U.L.
Doors and vault construction that are not burglary resistant may be listed as fire resistant and containers with these components should be used for storage of records and other valuable papers. Vaults constructed with masonry block, brick, or steel are not typically acceptable for burglary protection, except when values are low and other burglary protection compensates for the deficiency.
When the electricity fails and phones are out, your safe or vault is your last defense against a burglar
Many business people take their record keeping for granted. It is a necessary nuisance. It is not that they think records are not important but too many business people fail to realize that their business records are what keep them in business.
For over 40 centuries, humans have been protecting their personal and valuable possessions in strong boxes. It has been a relentless challenge for the designers and manufacturers of safes to outwit the safe crackers and burglars of the world.
Today, the science of safe and vault makers can provide protection against virtually any conceivable hazard â save perhaps a direct hit from an atomic bomb.
Despite the remarkable advances in the design and production of protection equipment, it is estimated that more than 75% of the equipment in use by businesses today are incapable of protecting the valuables inside the safe. An additional mountain of vital business records has no protection whatsoever!
When Is a Safe NOT a Safe?
There is confusion of terms in the use of fire and theft resisting equipment. This confusion in terms leads many users to believe that they have more protection than they really have. It is natural for customers who have a âsafeâ to believe that anything they put into it will be âsafe.â Our job is to be sure that our customer recognizes the type of protection they are getting with the equipment they purchase.
A safe having an Underwritersâ Laboratories labeled relocking devise is eligible, under certain conditions, for a reduction in burglary insurance.
There are occasions within the business office where the combination of the safe is known only by one or a few persons, yet a number of employees are required to work with the contents of the safe.
An older method of dealing with this problem is the use of a separate key-locked inner door. Authorized employees are issued keys to the inner door but do not know the combination to the safe. The inner door has dropped in popularity, but it is still available on some safes.
The modern approach to the same problem is locked interior compartments. Employees are issued keys to the compartments they are entitled to enter. An alternative method used on some safe models is a separate key lock in the bolt work of the safe. After the combination is worked, the safe can be opened with a key. Turning the combination dial makes the key inoperative.
If you’re conscious about home security then you’ve more or less thought about getting an safe to protect your items. Many people will think about purchasing a safe but most will put it off until its too late. Some people think that a safe is so important that everyone should have one installed in their homes by law. This would not only protect everyone items but would also stop home robberies dead in their tracks. Having under floor safes installed in our homes would be such a deterrent for any criminal that crime would take a massive hit. There is some truth to this, just think about it for a moment, if criminals make their living form robbing homes and they spend the money they make form robbing on drugs and firearms then all of this criminal industry would stop. So as you can see its really important that you not only protect your items but its just as important that you keep these items out of the criminal network.
The only really way to protect your valuable items is to put them into a good branded safe. Your valuables will be more or less completely safe from any burglar as most will not be able to break into these modern safes. To make it even harder for the criminal, you should think about under floor safes as your main option. Installing a safe under the floor is a lot of hassle and can also take some time but it is the best option is you’re serious about keeping your goods away from criminal hands.
Encasing your safe in concrete ensures that the burglar has absolutely no way of removing your safe from the house unless they brought drilling equipment with them which is not going to be the case so there’s no way of removing the safe. If a burglar gets lucky enough to find your under floor safe & then sees that its embedded in concrete, he’s going to know that there’s no way he can take the safe with him so he can try to open it later. So, he either just gives up right there and then and leaves or he tries to break into the safe. Most burglars will try to guess the combination password but this is almost impossible as most safes these days have over one million different combination’s.
Some of these safes will only allow for three attempts at entering a password and will then shut down so there’s no way of getting in via guessing the password. Once the burglar figures out that he cant guess the combination, he’ll try to break into it but this is futile as there’s no real way anyone can break into a modern safe. If you invest in a good brand safe like the fire safe brand then you’ll be safe in the knowledge that you items are well protected with these under floor safes. This brand is one of the best on the market and will protect against fire as well as burglary so your most valuable possessions will be protected.
ARMANDO BHASKAR, BUNDALL, QLD
More articles on Gun cabinets for sale used can be found here.
AMS Small Safes http://SMALLSAFE.INFO
January 18th, 2012 — Uncategorized
Many business people take their record keeping for granted. It is a necessary nuisance. It is not that they think records are not important but too many business people fail to realize that their business records are what keep them in business.
For over 40 centuries, humans have been protecting their personal and valuable possessions in strong boxes. It has been a relentless challenge for the designers and manufacturers of safes to outwit the safe crackers and burglars of the world.
Today, the science of safe and vault makers can provide protection against virtually any conceivable hazard â save perhaps a direct hit from an atomic bomb.
Despite the remarkable advances in the design and production of protection equipment, it is estimated that more than 75% of the equipment in use by businesses today are incapable of protecting the valuables inside the safe. An additional mountain of vital business records has no protection whatsoever!
When Is a Safe NOT a Safe?
There is confusion of terms in the use of fire and theft resisting equipment. This confusion in terms leads many users to believe that they have more protection than they really have. It is natural for customers who have a âsafeâ to believe that anything they put into it will be âsafe.â Our job is to be sure that our customer recognizes the type of protection they are getting with the equipment they purchase.
A safe having an Underwritersâ Laboratories labeled relocking devise is eligible, under certain conditions, for a reduction in burglary insurance.
There are occasions within the business office where the combination of the safe is known only by one or a few persons, yet a number of employees are required to work with the contents of the safe.
An older method of dealing with this problem is the use of a separate key-locked inner door. Authorized employees are issued keys to the inner door but do not know the combination to the safe. The inner door has dropped in popularity, but it is still available on some safes.
The modern approach to the same problem is locked interior compartments. Employees are issued keys to the compartments they are entitled to enter. An alternative method used on some safe models is a separate key lock in the bolt work of the safe. After the combination is worked, the safe can be opened with a key. Turning the combination dial makes the key inoperative.
If you’re conscious about home security then you’ve more or less thought about getting an safe to protect your items. Many people will think about purchasing a safe but most will put it off until its too late. Some people think that a safe is so important that everyone should have one installed in their homes by law. This would not only protect everyone items but would also stop home robberies dead in their tracks. Having under floor safes installed in our homes would be such a deterrent for any criminal that crime would take a massive hit. There is some truth to this, just think about it for a moment, if criminals make their living form robbing homes and they spend the money they make form robbing on drugs and firearms then all of this criminal industry would stop. So as you can see its really important that you not only protect your items but its just as important that you keep these items out of the criminal network.
The only really way to protect your valuable items is to put them into a good branded safe. Your valuables will be more or less completely safe from any burglar as most will not be able to break into these modern safes. To make it even harder for the criminal, you should think about under floor safes as your main option. Installing a safe under the floor is a lot of hassle and can also take some time but it is the best option is you’re serious about keeping your goods away from criminal hands.
Encasing your safe in concrete ensures that the burglar has absolutely no way of removing your safe from the house unless they brought drilling equipment with them which is not going to be the case so there’s no way of removing the safe. If a burglar gets lucky enough to find your under floor safe & then sees that its embedded in concrete, he’s going to know that there’s no way he can take the safe with him so he can try to open it later. So, he either just gives up right there and then and leaves or he tries to break into the safe. Most burglars will try to guess the combination password but this is almost impossible as most safes these days have over one million different combination’s.
Some of these safes will only allow for three attempts at entering a password and will then shut down so there’s no way of getting in via guessing the password. Once the burglar figures out that he cant guess the combination, he’ll try to break into it but this is futile as there’s no real way anyone can break into a modern safe. If you invest in a good brand safe like the fire safe brand then you’ll be safe in the knowledge that you items are well protected with these under floor safes. This brand is one of the best on the market and will protect against fire as well as burglary so your most valuable possessions will be protected.
The modern fire safe depends on a blanket of steam to protect the documents within it. The common insulation elements like glass wool, shiny fooils and the others used in refrigerators, stoves, and home construction give little protection against the intense and prolonged heated developed in a building fire.
The older safes utilized free moisture retained in the cement and water mixture used for insulation. This water evaporated over the years and with it went the potential steam protection. This free water also made damp safe interiors, musty papers and rust. Newer formulas and treatments produce a safe insulation with the water retained in permanent crystalline form. As the heat increases during a fire, these crystals turn to water and then to steam which blankets and cools the interior of the safe.
The insulating element of the safe can be made in either one of two methods. It may be cast in a one-piece, oven-dried monolith, then the metal shell built around it. The second method is to form the metal shell first, then pour the insulation mixture into the shell.
Sudden heat changes during the course of a fire sometimes cause safe to explode. The explosion is caused by an accumulation of hydrogen. In the manufacture of a modern quality safe, provisions are made to eliminate this hazard.
Remember the Date, 1917
It was not until 1917 that safes were given any reasonable tests for protection against fire hazards. The results of the first standardized tests proved that many of the old theories about adequate protection were false. After the test, manufacturers changed construction methods radically.
A massive, heavy safe looks like it can give plenty of protection. But, if it is old, it probably lost all of the fire-protective properties it ever had. If it was made before 1917, it never had some of the protection we consider necessary today!
Most safes made before 1917 we insulated with plain water and cement. When the free water evaporated, there was none left to make the steam blanket which protects the records from heat.
Older safes depended on supporting strength on their outer shells alone or on heavy bands at the front and back. At the comparatively low temperature of 1,000 degrees, this supporting metal lost as much as 70% of its strength. With the support weakened, the safe would warp and allow the heat to enter. Any drop during the course of the fire, of course, would burst the safe and open the contents to flames.
Safe construction methods have changed radically since the test on safes have been conducted scientifically. In the older safes, the heat was rapidly transmitted to the interior of the safe by its metal hinges, spindles and handles. Openings between the door and frame often permitted direct access for the heat of a fire. Solid steel fittings in the door and jamb conducted the heat quickly.
Doors are now tongue and grooved in a design that impedes the path of the heat. Casings for the insulation are of light material and assembly methods are engineered so that there is a minimum of heat penetration to the interior of the safe.
Relocking Devices
Knocking off the combination lock and driving out the spindle was a favorite method of opening a safe at one time. Safes can now be equipped with a relocking device, however, which foils this practice. The relocking mechanism is very sensitive to any tampering with the combination lock and any pounding will immediately deadlock the bolt work of the safe.
In centuries past, humankind worshiped fire because they feared it. They saw it ravage palaces and dwellings with devastating results. So much of the written records of early human civilization are gone because of the lack of protection of these documents.
Through the ages, humankind has sought to protect their possessions from the terror of fire. The Egyptians buried their scrolls deep in the pyramids. The Assyrians buried duplicates of important documents at separate locations. The Greeks carved their important records on ivory slabs.
When no record material proved suitable for protection against the destruction by fire, they turned their talents to the development of protective devices to house records. Julius Caesar filed his records in strong, iron boxes but found that the metal readily conducted the heat of a fire. Feudal lords build underground vaults and stationed trusted guards for their protection. Merchants of the 15th Century developed the treasure chest of pirate story fame, made of oak and banded with iron.
After 1830 came the iron âsafesâ with inner walls of stone, plaster, wood, cement, brick, asbestos, mica, alum, chalk, clay, or simply dead-air space.
The first standardized tests for the adequacy of safe protection were not made until 1917, however. These tests caused radical changes in safe construction because they proved many of the old theories of protection to be false. Safe equipment today, thanks to technological progress and thorough testing, can provide modern business with record protection like never before known in the history of civilization.
Selecting the Right Safe is an Important Decision!
The selection of a safe is a more serious obligation than the selection of other types of office equipment. If a chair, desk, or printer does not do what it was supposed to do for the customer, an adjustment is easily made. A replacement or an alteration can be made and the only harm done is a little delay and some annoyance.
But what happens when the selected safe fails to perform satisfactorily? It can only be tested by fire! After the fire, unfortunately, it is too late to make replacements and adjustments. Statistics show that the chances are almost 50-50 that a business will survive a fire!
Any Safe is Safe â Sometimes
Every safe, regardless of whether it has a specific rating or not, and regardless of its age or condition will resist some type of exposure to fire and will protect its contents.
Ordinary steel files will come through some fires satisfactorily. In fact, unprotected records on a shelf or on top of a desk could survive an office fire. The important factors — how hot a fire and for how long â are the important issues.
Safes Have Certified Security
No firm can afford to test its own safe equipment in an office fire. Consequently, new models of safe are given extensive tests by manufacturers and by private testing laboratories before they are put on the market. Established safe models are also taken off the regular assembly line periodically and given tests to see that they still conform to their ratings.
The Underwriters Laboratories, sponsored by the National Board of Fire Underwriters, is the primary testing agency. It is chartered as a nonprofit organization for the examination and testing of devices, systems, and materials for safety.
Underwriters Laboratories test the safes supplied to them by manufacturers and authorize the use of a series of labels according to the types of test which the equipment has successfully passed.
This is an INSULATED VAULT door.
It gives similar protection to that of a fire safe but is somewhat limited in it’s degree of burglary protection.
VAULTS
Underwriters Laboratories assigns one of four ratings to vault doors and modular vault panels based on expert burglary attack with cutting torches, fluxing rods, portable electric power tools, portable hydraulic tools and common mechanical tools for a specific time period. UL labels are mounted on the vault door and individual modular vault panels. When the UL rating for the door and panels are different, the overall vault rating is determined by the least burglary resistive component.
The ratings are:
Class
Attack time
M 15 minutes attack time
I 30 minutes attack time
II 60 minutes attack time
III 120 minutes attack time
Vault construction
Vault doors that are not UL-listed are evaluated based on the construction and thickness of the steel incorporated in the door. For non-UL listed vaults or panels, construction of the vault floor, ceiling, and walls is evaluated in terms of their thickness, and construction (steel, masonry, cinder block, filled cinder block, or reinforced concrete). Vaults constructed of poured concrete with reinforcing rods must meet the standards of construction established by the American Society of Testing and Materials to assure appropriate burglary resistant protection, but are not rated by U.L.
Doors and vault construction that are not burglary resistant may be listed as fire resistant and containers with these components should be used for storage of records and other valuable papers. Vaults constructed with masonry block, brick, or steel are not typically acceptable for burglary protection, except when values are low and other burglary protection compensates for the deficiency.
When the electricity fails and phones are out, your safe or vault is your last defense against a burglar
KIRBY FUSON, APPLE TREE FLAT, NSW
More articles on used gun safes can be found here.
AMS Small Safes http://SMALLSAFE.INFO
January 18th, 2012 — Uncategorized
Many business people take their record keeping for granted. It is a necessary nuisance. It is not that they think records are not important but too many business people fail to realize that their business records are what keep them in business.
For over 40 centuries, humans have been protecting their personal and valuable possessions in strong boxes. It has been a relentless challenge for the designers and manufacturers of safes to outwit the safe crackers and burglars of the world.
Today, the science of safe and vault makers can provide protection against virtually any conceivable hazard â save perhaps a direct hit from an atomic bomb.
Despite the remarkable advances in the design and production of protection equipment, it is estimated that more than 75% of the equipment in use by businesses today are incapable of protecting the valuables inside the safe. An additional mountain of vital business records has no protection whatsoever!
When Is a Safe NOT a Safe?
There is confusion of terms in the use of fire and theft resisting equipment. This confusion in terms leads many users to believe that they have more protection than they really have. It is natural for customers who have a âsafeâ to believe that anything they put into it will be âsafe.â Our job is to be sure that our customer recognizes the type of protection they are getting with the equipment they purchase.
A safe having an Underwritersâ Laboratories labeled relocking devise is eligible, under certain conditions, for a reduction in burglary insurance.
There are occasions within the business office where the combination of the safe is known only by one or a few persons, yet a number of employees are required to work with the contents of the safe.
An older method of dealing with this problem is the use of a separate key-locked inner door. Authorized employees are issued keys to the inner door but do not know the combination to the safe. The inner door has dropped in popularity, but it is still available on some safes.
The modern approach to the same problem is locked interior compartments. Employees are issued keys to the compartments they are entitled to enter. An alternative method used on some safe models is a separate key lock in the bolt work of the safe. After the combination is worked, the safe can be opened with a key. Turning the combination dial makes the key inoperative.
The modern fire safe depends on a blanket of steam to protect the documents within it. The common insulation elements like glass wool, shiny fooils and the others used in refrigerators, stoves, and home construction give little protection against the intense and prolonged heated developed in a building fire.
The older safes utilized free moisture retained in the cement and water mixture used for insulation. This water evaporated over the years and with it went the potential steam protection. This free water also made damp safe interiors, musty papers and rust. Newer formulas and treatments produce a safe insulation with the water retained in permanent crystalline form. As the heat increases during a fire, these crystals turn to water and then to steam which blankets and cools the interior of the safe.
The insulating element of the safe can be made in either one of two methods. It may be cast in a one-piece, oven-dried monolith, then the metal shell built around it. The second method is to form the metal shell first, then pour the insulation mixture into the shell.
Sudden heat changes during the course of a fire sometimes cause safe to explode. The explosion is caused by an accumulation of hydrogen. In the manufacture of a modern quality safe, provisions are made to eliminate this hazard.
Remember the Date, 1917
It was not until 1917 that safes were given any reasonable tests for protection against fire hazards. The results of the first standardized tests proved that many of the old theories about adequate protection were false. After the test, manufacturers changed construction methods radically.
A massive, heavy safe looks like it can give plenty of protection. But, if it is old, it probably lost all of the fire-protective properties it ever had. If it was made before 1917, it never had some of the protection we consider necessary today!
Most safes made before 1917 we insulated with plain water and cement. When the free water evaporated, there was none left to make the steam blanket which protects the records from heat.
Older safes depended on supporting strength on their outer shells alone or on heavy bands at the front and back. At the comparatively low temperature of 1,000 degrees, this supporting metal lost as much as 70% of its strength. With the support weakened, the safe would warp and allow the heat to enter. Any drop during the course of the fire, of course, would burst the safe and open the contents to flames.
Safe construction methods have changed radically since the test on safes have been conducted scientifically. In the older safes, the heat was rapidly transmitted to the interior of the safe by its metal hinges, spindles and handles. Openings between the door and frame often permitted direct access for the heat of a fire. Solid steel fittings in the door and jamb conducted the heat quickly.
Doors are now tongue and grooved in a design that impedes the path of the heat. Casings for the insulation are of light material and assembly methods are engineered so that there is a minimum of heat penetration to the interior of the safe.
Relocking Devices
Knocking off the combination lock and driving out the spindle was a favorite method of opening a safe at one time. Safes can now be equipped with a relocking device, however, which foils this practice. The relocking mechanism is very sensitive to any tampering with the combination lock and any pounding will immediately deadlock the bolt work of the safe.
If you’re conscious about home security then you’ve more or less thought about getting an safe to protect your items. Many people will think about purchasing a safe but most will put it off until its too late. Some people think that a safe is so important that everyone should have one installed in their homes by law. This would not only protect everyone items but would also stop home robberies dead in their tracks. Having under floor safes installed in our homes would be such a deterrent for any criminal that crime would take a massive hit. There is some truth to this, just think about it for a moment, if criminals make their living form robbing homes and they spend the money they make form robbing on drugs and firearms then all of this criminal industry would stop. So as you can see its really important that you not only protect your items but its just as important that you keep these items out of the criminal network.
The only really way to protect your valuable items is to put them into a good branded safe. Your valuables will be more or less completely safe from any burglar as most will not be able to break into these modern safes. To make it even harder for the criminal, you should think about under floor safes as your main option. Installing a safe under the floor is a lot of hassle and can also take some time but it is the best option is you’re serious about keeping your goods away from criminal hands.
Encasing your safe in concrete ensures that the burglar has absolutely no way of removing your safe from the house unless they brought drilling equipment with them which is not going to be the case so there’s no way of removing the safe. If a burglar gets lucky enough to find your under floor safe & then sees that its embedded in concrete, he’s going to know that there’s no way he can take the safe with him so he can try to open it later. So, he either just gives up right there and then and leaves or he tries to break into the safe. Most burglars will try to guess the combination password but this is almost impossible as most safes these days have over one million different combination’s.
Some of these safes will only allow for three attempts at entering a password and will then shut down so there’s no way of getting in via guessing the password. Once the burglar figures out that he cant guess the combination, he’ll try to break into it but this is futile as there’s no real way anyone can break into a modern safe. If you invest in a good brand safe like the fire safe brand then you’ll be safe in the knowledge that you items are well protected with these under floor safes. This brand is one of the best on the market and will protect against fire as well as burglary so your most valuable possessions will be protected.
This is an INSULATED VAULT door.
It gives similar protection to that of a fire safe but is somewhat limited in it’s degree of burglary protection.
VAULTS
Underwriters Laboratories assigns one of four ratings to vault doors and modular vault panels based on expert burglary attack with cutting torches, fluxing rods, portable electric power tools, portable hydraulic tools and common mechanical tools for a specific time period. UL labels are mounted on the vault door and individual modular vault panels. When the UL rating for the door and panels are different, the overall vault rating is determined by the least burglary resistive component.
The ratings are:
Class
Attack time
M 15 minutes attack time
I 30 minutes attack time
II 60 minutes attack time
III 120 minutes attack time
Vault construction
Vault doors that are not UL-listed are evaluated based on the construction and thickness of the steel incorporated in the door. For non-UL listed vaults or panels, construction of the vault floor, ceiling, and walls is evaluated in terms of their thickness, and construction (steel, masonry, cinder block, filled cinder block, or reinforced concrete). Vaults constructed of poured concrete with reinforcing rods must meet the standards of construction established by the American Society of Testing and Materials to assure appropriate burglary resistant protection, but are not rated by U.L.
Doors and vault construction that are not burglary resistant may be listed as fire resistant and containers with these components should be used for storage of records and other valuable papers. Vaults constructed with masonry block, brick, or steel are not typically acceptable for burglary protection, except when values are low and other burglary protection compensates for the deficiency.
When the electricity fails and phones are out, your safe or vault is your last defense against a burglar
In centuries past, humankind worshiped fire because they feared it. They saw it ravage palaces and dwellings with devastating results. So much of the written records of early human civilization are gone because of the lack of protection of these documents.
Through the ages, humankind has sought to protect their possessions from the terror of fire. The Egyptians buried their scrolls deep in the pyramids. The Assyrians buried duplicates of important documents at separate locations. The Greeks carved their important records on ivory slabs.
When no record material proved suitable for protection against the destruction by fire, they turned their talents to the development of protective devices to house records. Julius Caesar filed his records in strong, iron boxes but found that the metal readily conducted the heat of a fire. Feudal lords build underground vaults and stationed trusted guards for their protection. Merchants of the 15th Century developed the treasure chest of pirate story fame, made of oak and banded with iron.
After 1830 came the iron âsafesâ with inner walls of stone, plaster, wood, cement, brick, asbestos, mica, alum, chalk, clay, or simply dead-air space.
The first standardized tests for the adequacy of safe protection were not made until 1917, however. These tests caused radical changes in safe construction because they proved many of the old theories of protection to be false. Safe equipment today, thanks to technological progress and thorough testing, can provide modern business with record protection like never before known in the history of civilization.
Selecting the Right Safe is an Important Decision!
The selection of a safe is a more serious obligation than the selection of other types of office equipment. If a chair, desk, or printer does not do what it was supposed to do for the customer, an adjustment is easily made. A replacement or an alteration can be made and the only harm done is a little delay and some annoyance.
But what happens when the selected safe fails to perform satisfactorily? It can only be tested by fire! After the fire, unfortunately, it is too late to make replacements and adjustments. Statistics show that the chances are almost 50-50 that a business will survive a fire!
Any Safe is Safe â Sometimes
Every safe, regardless of whether it has a specific rating or not, and regardless of its age or condition will resist some type of exposure to fire and will protect its contents.
Ordinary steel files will come through some fires satisfactorily. In fact, unprotected records on a shelf or on top of a desk could survive an office fire. The important factors — how hot a fire and for how long â are the important issues.
Safes Have Certified Security
No firm can afford to test its own safe equipment in an office fire. Consequently, new models of safe are given extensive tests by manufacturers and by private testing laboratories before they are put on the market. Established safe models are also taken off the regular assembly line periodically and given tests to see that they still conform to their ratings.
The Underwriters Laboratories, sponsored by the National Board of Fire Underwriters, is the primary testing agency. It is chartered as a nonprofit organization for the examination and testing of devices, systems, and materials for safety.
Underwriters Laboratories test the safes supplied to them by manufacturers and authorize the use of a series of labels according to the types of test which the equipment has successfully passed.
KASEY THEW, THE ROCK, NSW
More articles on used gun safes can be found here.
AMS Small Safes http://SMALLSAFE.INFO
December 31st, 2011 — Uncategorized
Underwriters Laboratories test the safes supplied to them by manufacturers and authorize the use of a series of labels according to the types of test which the equipment has successfully passed. Having under floor safes installed in our homes would be such a deterrent for any criminal that crime would take a massive hit. Openings between the door and frame often permitted direct Honeywell Biometric Safe access for the heat of a fire. This free water also made damp safe interiors, The wall safes musty papers and rust. Older safes depended on supporting strength on their outer shells alone or on heavy bands at the front and back. For non-UL listed vaults or panels, construction of the vault floor, ceiling, and walls is evaluated in terms of their thickness, and construction (steel, masonry, cinder block, filled cinder block, or reinforced concrete). If it was made before 1917, it never had some of the protection we consider necessary today!
Most safes made before 1917 we insulated with plain water and cement. There are occasions within the business office where the combination of the safe is known only by one or a few persons, yet a number of employees are required to work with the contents of the safe. Julius Caesar filed his records in strong, iron boxes but found that the metal readily conducted the heat of a fire. The first standardized tests for the adequacy of safe protection were not made until 1917, however. Many business people take their record keeping for granted. â Our job is to be sure that our customer recognizes the type of protection they are getting with the equipment they Fire Safe Gun Safe purchase. The Underwriters Laboratories, sponsored by the National Board of Fire Underwriters, is the primary testing agency. Despite the remarkable advances in the design and production of protection equipment, it is estimated that more than 75% of the equipment in use by businesses today are incapable of protecting the valuables inside the safe. This water evaporated over the years and with it went the potential steam protection. It has been a relentless challenge for the designers and manufacturers of safes to outwit the safe crackers and burglars of the world.
DEE MAGLIOCCA, LAKELANDS, WA
More articles on gun safes can be found here.
AMS Small Safes http://SMALLSAFE.INFO
December 16th, 2011 — Uncategorized
Authorized employees are issued keys to the inner door but do not know the combination to the safe. This confusion in terms leads many users to believe that they have more protection than they really have. Safe equipment today, thanks to technological progress and thorough testing, can provide modern business with record protection like never before known in the history of civilization. For over 40 centuries, Discount gun boxes humans have been protecting their personal and valuable possessions in strong boxes. Today, the science of safe and vault makers can provide protection against virtually any conceivable hazard â save perhaps a direct hit from an atomic bomb. Once the burglar figures out that he cant guess the combination, Fireproof safe gun he’ll try to break into it but this is futile as there’s no real way anyone can break into a modern safe. Vaults constructed of poured concrete with reinforcing rods must meet the standards of construction established by the American Society of Testing and Materials to assure appropriate burglary resistant protection, but are not rated by U. The inner door has dropped in popularity, but it is still available on some safes. If a burglar gets lucky enough to find your under floor safe & then sees that its embedded in concrete, he’s going to know that there’s no way he can take the safe with him so he can try to open it later. After the test, manufacturers changed construction methods radically. The modern fire safe depends on a blanket of steam to protect the documents within it. It is a necessary nuisance. Solid steel fittings in the Wholesale safe gun door and jamb conducted the heat quickly. The relocking mechanism is very sensitive to any tampering with the combination lock and any pounding will immediately deadlock the bolt work of the safe. It may be cast in a one-piece, oven-dried monolith, then the metal shell built around it. At the comparatively low temperature of 1,000 degrees, this supporting metal lost as much as 70% of its strength. Vaults constructed with masonry block, brick, or steel are not typically acceptable for burglary protection, except when values are low and other burglary protection compensates for the deficiency.
BEN RENFROW, STAFFORDSHIRE REEF, VIC
More articles on Safe for long weapons can be found here.
AMS Small Safes http://SMALLSAFE.INFO
November 29th, 2011 — Uncategorized
Some people think that a safe is so important that everyone should have one installed in their homes by law. Julius Caesar filed his records in strong, iron boxes but found that the metal readily conducted the heat of a fire. These tests caused radical changes in safe construction because they proved many of the old theories of protection to be false. It is chartered as a nonprofit organization for the examination and testing of devices, systems, and materials for safety. The older safes utilized free moisture retained in the cement and water mixture used for insulation. This is an INSULATED VAULT door. In fact, unprotected records on a shelf or on top of a desk could survive an office fire. Ordinary steel files will come through Safes Biometric Fingerprint some fires satisfactorily. A replacement or an alteration can be made and the only harm done is a little delay and some annoyance. Through the ages, humankind has sought to protect their possessions from the terror of fire. A massive, Gun Electronic Lock Security heavy safe looks like it can give plenty of protection. Newer formulas and treatments produce a safe insulation with the water retained in permanent crystalline form. The Underwriters Laboratories, sponsored by the National Board of Fire Underwriters, is the primary testing agency. Turning the combination dial makes the key inoperative. It is a necessary nuisance. For non-UL listed vaults or panels, Fireproof safe biometric construction of the vault floor, ceiling, and walls is evaluated in terms of their thickness, and construction (steel, masonry, cinder block, filled cinder block, or reinforced concrete). The modern fire safe depends on a blanket of steam to protect the documents within it. Doors and vault construction that are not burglary resistant may be listed as fire resistant and containers with these components should be used for storage of records and other valuable papers. Safe equipment today, thanks to technological progress and thorough testing, can provide modern business with record protection like never before known in the history of civilization. Sudden heat changes during the course of a fire sometimes cause safe to explode.
ELWOOD BEG, MCMAHONS REEF, NSW
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November 15th, 2011 — Uncategorized
In centuries past, humankind worshiped fire because they feared it. Doors and vault construction that are not burglary resistant may be listed as fire resistant and containers with these components should be used for storage of records and other valuable papers. This water evaporated over the years and with it went the potential steam protection. It is not that they think records are not important but too many business people fail to realize that their business records are what keep them in business. But, if it is old, it probably lost all of the fire-protective properties it ever had. This free water also made damp safe interiors, musty papers and rust. An additional mountain of vital business records has no protection whatsoever!
When Is a Safe NOT a Safe?
There is confusion of terms in the use of fire and theft resisting equipment. When the electricity fails and phones are out, your safe or vault is your last defense against a burglar
Many business people take their record keeping for granted. Through the ages, humankind has sought to protect their possessions from the terror of fire. The Egyptians buried their Browning gun safes scrolls deep in the pyramids. It is natural for customers who have a âsafeâ to believe that anything they put into it will be âsafe. Merchants of the 15th Century developed the treasure chest of pirate story fame, Gun safety rating made of oak and banded with iron. Safes can now be equipped with a relocking device, however, which foils this practice. Safe construction methods have changed radically since the test on safes have been conducted scientifically. Despite the remarkable advances in the design and production of protection equipment, Biometric Gun Safe it is estimated that more than 75% of the equipment in use by businesses today are incapable of protecting the valuables inside the safe. The insulating element of the safe can be made in either one of two methods. When the UL rating for the door and panels are different, the overall vault rating is determined by the least burglary resistive component. In the manufacture of a modern quality safe, provisions are made to eliminate this hazard.
PHILIP THEESFELD, TUCKURIMBA, NSW
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November 3rd, 2011 — Uncategorized
The relocking mechanism is very sensitive to any tampering with the combination lock and any pounding will immediately deadlock Biometric security locks the bolt work of the safe. After the combination is worked, the safe can be opened with a key. Encasing your safe in concrete ensures that the burglar has absolutely no way of removing your safe from the house unless they brought drilling equipment with them which is not going to be the case so there’s no way of removing the safe. Most burglars will try to guess the combination password but this is almost impossible as most safes these days have over one million different combination’s. Many people Safes for home will think about purchasing a safe but most will put it off until its too late. A safe having an Underwritersâ Laboratories labeled relocking devise is eligible, In-wall safe under certain conditions, for a reduction in burglary insurance. With the support weakened, the safe would warp and allow the heat to enter. Installing a safe under the floor is a lot of hassle and can also take some time but it is the best option is you’re serious about keeping your goods away from criminal hands. Newer formulas and treatments produce a safe insulation with the water retained in permanent crystalline form. The modern fire safe depends on a blanket of steam to protect the documents within it. Openings between the door and frame often permitted direct access for the heat of a fire. Authorized employees are issued keys to the inner door but do not know the combination to the safe. The Egyptians buried their scrolls deep in the pyramids. VAULTS
Underwriters Laboratories assigns one of four ratings to vault doors and modular vault panels based on expert burglary attack with cutting torches, fluxing rods, portable electric power tools, portable hydraulic tools and common mechanical tools for a specific time period. It has been a relentless challenge for the designers and manufacturers of safes to outwit the safe crackers and burglars of the world. Despite the remarkable advances in the design and production of protection equipment, it is estimated that more than 75% of the equipment in use by businesses today are incapable of protecting the valuables inside the safe.
DANILO MELTON, FIERY FLAT, VIC
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