Maggie’s Motivational Pic Thread v2.0 - - New Rules - See Post #1

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… just use a quality key pad with EMP resistance we used S&G.
That is wrong.

I’ve designed comms gear to survive EMP (and related undesired signal ‘events’), and simple solutions won’t work or survive. Quit believing you can change a single component and become bullet proof to something that happens in less than 30 billionths of a second. You can’t.

You have to design the entire safe from the ground up to consider management of undesired signals. Adding on after the fact is very unlikely to prevent badness from happening. (But may lighten your wallet)

Effective “EMP management“ cost $$$$.
One device I’m acquainted with was about the complexity of a desktop computer. That computer would be in the $500-$2000 range.
Adding real protection from EMP would at least add a 0 to the price. Plus millions to test and prove the effective operational performance.
 
You willing bet your life on it?
Yes, and I can get in either way if you haven’t figured out the context clues.

I’m not going to completely remove the security of a safe installing a key override that takes seconds to open, because I actually know about the subject. Just lock them in a closet and save the money on a pretend safe if you use a key.
 
That is wrong.

I’ve designed comms gear to survive EMP (and related undesired signal ‘events’), and simple solutions won’t work or survive. Quit believing you can change a single component and become bullet proof to something that happens in less than 30 billionths of a second. You can’t.

You have to design the entire safe from the ground up to consider management of undesired signals. Adding on after the fact is very unlikely to prevent badness from happening. (But may lighten your wallet)

Effective “EMP management“ cost $$$$.
One device I’m acquainted with was about the complexity of a desktop computer. That computer would be in the $500-$2000 range.
Adding real protection from EMP would at least add a 0 to the price. Plus millions to test and prove the effective operational performance.
I said it’s resistant not “bullet proof”. The meaning of words matters.
 
Yes, and I can get in either way if you haven’t figured out the context clues.

I’m not going to completely remove the security of a safe installing a key override that takes seconds to open, because I actually know about the subject.
I have trouble trusting the electronics. Chinese stuff. I know, my problem.

I could get in my safes if I get locked out but its going to take a while. As far as standard dial combo I had one go south on me and what it did was shift all the combo numbers one number off. I got into it and replaced it with a new set.

I have an old safe built in the early 1900's 4 numbers combo and it works slick never had any trouble with it.