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«-- Letter Re: Total Burden of State Taxes | Main | Notes from JWR: --» The Price of Home Security: You Can Pay a Little Now, or Pay Much More, Later
I'm often amazed to hear some of my relatively wealthy consulting
clients tell me that they don't own a home gun vault
or safe room. I ask why not, and they make excuses like: "I've
been too busy at my job to shop for one" or, "A gun vault
is too heavy to move, and I seem to move every three years", or "vaults
are too expensive." Yes, they are expensive but not nearly as
expensive as having some of your key survival tools stolen. In essence,
you can
pay a little now, or pay much more, later. A built-in basement walk-in safe room is ideal. They can serve multiple functions: As a vault for guns and other valuables, as a storm shelter, as a fallout shelter, and even as a "panic room" for use in the event of a home invasion. In areas with high water tables where a basement is not practical, a safe room/shelter can be built on the ground floor of a newly-constructed "slab" house, or as an addition to an existing house, with a reinforced poured concrete floor, walls and ceiling. Regardless of the design that you choose, it is important to specify a vault door that opens inward, so that it won't be jammed shut by debris in the event of tornado, hurricane, or bomb blast. The folks at Safecastle (one of our most loyal advertisers) can do the engineering and source the vault door for you. I realize that most SurvivalBlog readers cannot afford an elaborate
walk-in safe room, but 95% of you can at least afford a heavy
duty steel gun vault with an Sargent & Greenleaf dial
lock with re-locker. Be sure to bolt your vault securely to the floor,
and if possible build
it into a hidden compartment or hidden room. There are a lot of vault
makers in the U.S. and Canada, so it is a very competitive market.
Do some Internet research and comparison shopping and you can save
a lot of money on your vault purchase. Vaults are quite heavy (typically
around 700 pounds) and shipping them is expensive, so it is generally
best to buy one that is made within 200 miles of where you live. One
exception to that guidance is for folks that move often: The brand
of free-standing gun vault that I highly recommend (and that I own
personally)
is Zanotti
Armor. Zanotti makes vaults that can be taken apart into
six pieces for ease of transport. (They are held together
by large steel pins, inside the vault.) They cost only about $100 more
than comparable vaults that are welded together in the traditional
manner. The nice thing about the Zanotti vaults it that even with their
largest model, no single component weighs more than about 150 pounds.
That makes them much easier to install in a confined space such as
a basement. Assembly is a three man job, since extra hands are needed
to get everything lined up before the pins can be noisily driven into
place. Assembly only takes about a half hour, and disassembly only
takes about ten minutes. Insurance Insurance Records |
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