And if half the things marketed as gun safes even had a single layer of 14ga steel anywhere but the door we wouldn’t be having this conversation. I agree that a B-rate safe would be fantastic but they sure as hell aren’t less than $2000 new in gun safe size.Wanna know how often residential burglars bring or attempt to use crow bars/pry tools to access a legitimate safe interior?
10 years in LE, I’ve never seen it happen on an actual safe. Only once, and that was on a sheet metal storage locker that wasn’t properly bolted to the floor.
Another response mentioned “5 minutes with a crowbar or 30 seconds with a sawzall…” and that’s bullshit from ANY modern marketed safe for most burglars if it’s properly anchored. The 5 minutes claim is only reasonable if they can flip the safe on it’s back and use body weight/leverage to pry. I’d love to see someone try that on any 14ga or better bodied safe standing upright that is properly anchored where they can’t apply leverage easily.
They don’t have real metal because it’s expensive to manufacture and expensive to ship from China. You might have an 18ga sheet on the outside of gypsum and a 20ga sheet on the inside, neither hardened. You can pry the front away from the boltwork.
Also, if you have tools in your garage… the burglars now have tools. Glad the ones in your area are idiots.