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  2. Safe-cracking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safe-cracking

    Safe-cracking is the process of opening a safe without either the combination or the key. Physical methods. Safes have widely different designs, construction methods ...

  3. Tough as Nails season 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tough_as_Nails_season_2

    Team Challenge: Teams had to search a car recycling plant for replacement parts to a car: a front bumpers, headlights, a hood, two front doors, a sliding door, taillights, a rear bumper, four wheels, four seats, and a battery. The first team to find and install the parts and then drive the car through a wall of boxes would be declared the winner.

  4. Spare part - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spare_part

    A spare part, spare, service part, repair part, or replacement part, is an interchangeable part that is kept in an inventory and used for the repair or refurbishment of defective equipment/units. Spare parts are an important feature of logistics engineering and supply chain management, often comprising dedicated spare parts management systems.

  5. Blowout preventer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blowout_preventer

    On July 10, 2010, BP began operations to install a sealing cap, also known as a capping stack, atop the failed blowout preventer stack. Based on BP's video feeds of the operation the sealing cap assembly, called Top Hat 10, included a stack of three blind shear ram BOPs manufactured by Hydril (a GE Oil & Gas company), one of Cameron's chief ...

  6. 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.

  7. Sentry Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentry_Group

    In 1991, Michael Redman of Virginia brought a product liability suit against Sentry Group after his coin collection was stolen out of his Sentry Supreme Safe, Model #5570. Redman noticed the safe in a Value-Tique advertisement that appeared in the magazine Coin World. The magazine had advertised the safe as a “burglar deterrent”. [2]

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