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  2. These Expert-Recommended Fireproof Safes Will Keep Your ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/expert-recommended-fireproof-safes...

    Heavier fireproof home security safes (upwards of 75 pounds and designed to deter thieves) usually specify and provide hardware for floor mounting. Waterproof or Water-Resistant

  3. Time-delay combination locks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time-delay_combination_locks

    This will allow the safe to be opened when the batteries are changed after the pre-set time if the correct code is entered. Some electronic combination locks with a time-delay feature require the code to be entered twice: once to start the timer, and a second to unlock and open the safe entered after the delay period has expired.

  4. Sentry Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentry_Group

    A SentrySafe safe; requires a combination and a four-way key. SentrySafe is a brand of safes manufactured in Rochester, New York.It is owned by the Master Lock Company. [1] It markets safes designed for home, business, and gun storage.

  5. VingCard Elsafe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VingCard_Elsafe

    VingCard Elsafe, whose origin was in Moss, Norway, is an international producer of hotel locking systems, electronic in-room safes and energy management systems.After inventing the first mechanical hole card operated lock in 1976, VingCard was acquired in 1994 by ASSA ABLOY, and merged with the electronic safe producer Elsafe [2] to form VingCard Elsafe in 2006.

  6. Safe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safe

    Safe-cracking is opening a safe without a combination or key. There are many methods of safe-cracking ranging from brute force methods to guessing the combination. The easiest method that can be used on many safes is "safe bouncing", which involves hitting the safe on top; this may cause the locking pin to budge, opening the safe [citation needed].

  7. Safe-cracking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safe-cracking

    Safe-crackers can use what are known as jam shots to blow off the safe's doors. Most modern safes are fitted with 'relockers' (like the one described above) which are triggered by excessive force and will then lock the safe semi-permanently (a safe whose relocker has tripped must then be forced, as the combination or key alone will no longer ...

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