Quality Pistol Safes are Hard to “Crack”
January 27, 2010 by Guest
Filed under Gun Safety
A safe can be compromised in mere seconds with a good ear, steady hands or by using a sophisticated set of explosives. While cracking a safe isn’t as easy it may appear, expert safecrackers can “crack” a safe with the right tools, skills, and some patience. That is why it’s important to have a quality safe.
While safes are designed to be “safe” they do have a shortcoming, they must be accessible to a locksmith or others in case of a lock-out or malfunction. That is why we need safecrackers, and consequently thieves do take advantage of this vulnerability.
Methods of Safecracking:
Take it and Go
If a thief can steal something, they will find a way to do it. A popular method of cracking a safe is to simply steal the safe and move it to a place where the safecracker has time to take the safe apart and remove the contents. But there are other ways that a safe can be cracked without physically removing it.
Sight, Sound, and Touch
The lock of a safe can be compromised to obtain the combination without damaging the safe. Sounds and/or feel may be used to determine the combination on some simple rotary locks.
Combination Hunting
Many manufactured safes come with a manufacturer-set combination designed to allow the owner initial access to the safe so that they can then set a new secure combo. These default combinations can be found by doing a little homework. Owners of the safe need to be sure to change the combination to a hard to guess combination promptly.
Easy Clues
The combination to a lock may be discovered through taking a few guesses. The owner of the safe may unintentionally compromise the security of the safe by selecting an easy combination such as a birthday or a driver’s license number. Many people also record the combination near the safe or actually on the safe itself; searching the room may lead a burglar to find the numbers he or she is looking for. A lock may also be opened by attempting every possible combination.
Drilling
Although most are difficult to open, some safes are vulnerable to drilling or other invasive techniques. Drill-point diagrams for specific models of safes are produced by manufacturers; however, these should not be accessible as they are safely guarded by both manufacturers and locksmiths. Drilling is commonly used by locksmiths to open safes. It’s also commonly used during burglaries as well as for malfunctioning or damaged lock.
Educate yourself prior to your purchase. Choose a safe that has been designed with the least amount of volnerability possible. Avoid safes with a rotary dial, keep your combination in your head, and keep your safe in an unlikely place. Choose features such as a thumb print reader or touch keypad. If you have the need to secure your valuables, cash money, credit cards, passports, or guns we would highly recommend the GunVault brand like the GunVault MultiVault Deluxe



