Mine installed in the new house one wall is a firewall so alas mr copper according to Nz building regs Nothing is to be permanently fixed to it . still both bolted together and secured to house foundatio 6 xhigh tensile anchor bolts through both . My security is multilevel the most deadly of all being the dulcet tones of wife or daughter enquiring as to what flowers the fancy on their coffin and telling we have an undertaker on speed dial.anyone in our street whose up to mischeif inevitably gets a visit by the boys in blue pronto -we dont fuck round and the CCTV surveillance would shock many.
@kotuku:
Wow, your gun safe setup sounds like it’s straight out of an action movie! I’m impressed by the multi-tiered security—especially the part about the “dulcet tones” of the family interrogations. Maybe add a secret trapdoor or a hidden laser grid for extra flair?
And those high tensile anchor bolts through both the firewall and house foundation? Next-level stuff! Maybe throw in a moat with alligators for good measure.
Love the mention of the “boys in blue” and CCTV surveillance—nothing says security like a friendly neighborhood watch team ready to swoop in pronto!
Thanks for the inspo! I might just take some notes and turn my gun safe installation into a full-fledged fortress.
Stay safe and keep those undertakers on speed dial (just in case)!
[ I ♥ NZHS ] >
Mate had an inspector for his FAL renewal checked his 8mm big gunsafe with 6 huge inner dyna bolts to concrete floor. Told it was non complying because not bolted to frame of building. So when I had my Eclass with 5 semi's in it for over 20 years it was not ok? Tell you what. I will undo the dyna bolts .If you and 2 blokes can lift it out of my shed and onto the back of a truck I will give up my FAL. He is still arguing the point. Wonder when common sense will prevail.
My brother (mechanic) was sent on a call out to repair a security wagon / armoured truck. When he arrived the two guards opened the back and gave him access to the engine hatch. Bro asked "You're trusting, letting any old mechanic into the back...is it empty?" Reply was "No, there is a crate with $500k in coin in it...But if you can lift it, you can keep it...... we aren't strong enough to stop you......" My last job we had to move $40k in $2 coins on a regular basis and I can tell you, even on a trolley its heavy to move....
Intelligence has its limits, but it appears that Stupidity knows no bounds......
actually because im feeling benevolent this ASap has joined my ignore list
Just one thing further to add to bolting safes into timber framing, at about 37mm into the stud (+/- some 12mm depending on how fussy the electrician was), there may be cables.
Two power outlets fed from the same breaker in the same wall, either side of the safe would be a red flag, as would a light switch nearby. Stud finders usually have an indication that there are cables in the wall, but they aren't a guarantee that there isn't.
Another indication is to climb in the roof and look at the top plate of the wall and see if there are cables going down into the wall in the vicinity of where the safe will go, knowing that they may hook sideways at some point. Same for going underneath the house if you have cables under the floor.
What I did was positioned the safe where I wanted it in a large cupboard. Marked around it and cut away the gib. Re framed the area of the safe for correct hole spacings, and slotted the safe into the gap in the gib. Then put a coving around the safe to tidy up and also make it harder for someone to get bar between safe and wall.
Unsophisticated... AF!
I dedicated a cupboard to the gun safes.
We got flooded in that huge storm 3 years ago so the gib had to come off anyway.
I ripped off the gib, used a nail gun (nail guns are fun) to add timber to the height of the safes and then replaced the gib with two 20mm sheets of cheap plywood (40mm thick). I used lots of glue between the timber frame, the sheets and the between each sheet.
I painted it all white and it looks mint plus I can screw into that wall anywhere. It also kept the re-licensing guys happy.
For my brother I just slid his safe left and right in his wardrobe until the holes lined up with the one of the studs in the wardrobe. You can also drill new holes in a safe.
I have contemplated a concrete post through other side of wall,two coach bolts through post,wall and into safe. Takes two people to shift a post in open space...once in wardrobe it would be absolute mindfook to try and get it out.hard to cut,hard to smash. Will ponder it some.
75/15/10 black powder matters
The only documents you need to comply with are the Arms Act and Arms Regulations. There is nothing in either that state the safe needs to be bolted to two surface or that there cannot be an air gap behind it. The FSA guidance document is not guidance issued under the Act or the Regulations. In fact, the guidance itself states: "Steel Cabinets, Containers, or Receptacles For steel cabinets, Police recommends the following". i.e., it is only a recommendation. You do not have to comply with the guidance so long as you comply with the Act and Regulations. Happy to be proven wrong though.
Last edited by bang; Yesterday at 08:59 PM. Reason: clarification
Its unfortunate that there is no standardisation in the interpretation of the Law by the people who come and inspect your facility. As soon as their is "opinion" involved you get un-needed confusion.
Some inspection personnel are helpful , others are power trippers. Consistancy across the country would solve a lot of that.
Also - attempting to exceed the minimum standard is always good .
The Police prioritising burglaries and putting offenders in front of Courts that take it seriously would solve it at source.
That said, I welded up a 6mm rifle safe to B cat levels just because it makes it a smidgen harder - or did, before cordless grinders were a thing.
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