Re: Gun Safe
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Henry M</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Patriot safes are rated to1880 degrees with a 2 hour fire rating. Is it almost too good to believe, I don't know. Guys let me know if you have one.
Henry </div></div>
I'd read between the lines to see what they're claiming and what's left out.
Patriot claims <span style="color: #000099">"1800° Pyro-Barrier plus U.L listed x-type fire rated fire board in "combination" give you an hour, up to 90 or 120 minutes of extreme fire protection, depending on which level of fire protection fits your needs."</span>
The specific claim made there is the <span style="font-style: italic">material itself </span>is UL listed. That is different than claiming the safe is UL fire rated. You will note the website doesn't have any lab results on actual fire testing of the safe itself by Underwriter's Laboratories or a lesser-known lab used by other safe companies like Omega Point (Liberty), Mercury (AMSEC's gun safes), or Intertek (Cannon). There is a neat graph, but no citation of where it comes from. Which lab was that from? Why do they record the ramp-up time as part of the fire rating when the UL throws safes in a preheated oven?
Also, you don't get any Google results for a "Pyro-Barrier" fire board material it claims to use.. The name "barrier" also suggests it as a fire barrier, not a fire insulator. There is a huge difference between stopping the spread of fire in a structure through the use of barriers and preventing a space from heating up. The closest thing I can find a match for is a Pyro-Flex® fire barrier material meant for covering expansion joints and gaps in commercial structures to stop the spread of fire, not insulate.
Also they chose not to use an established industry player like LaGard or S&G for UL-rated Group 1 or 2 security locks. They use a non UL-listed "X-2400 lock" which, when Googled, results in only their own products. This leads me to believe it's simply a Chinese electronic lock with a different fascia plate. Companies using LaGard or S&G and a UL lock will proudly use that fact in their marketing. Plenty of Chinese manufacturers offer products like this and depending on volume, will make your own fascia plate and give you a unique part number
http://www.china-safelock.com/p-Safe-Locks-91457/.
The website seems big on advertising but there is actually very little information on the security features of the products. Seriously..."tactical lighting"? You mean interior lights? They go on to make fun of 12ga safe competitors being useful for only keeping out kids while promoting their 10ga. The difference in thickness is seven sheets of printer paper. Everything is labeled as "TOP SECRET CLASSIFIED".