How full is your safe or deposit box?

Edited to include deposit boxes: I now have two small safes, as well as a deposit box for my more valuable coins. How full are yours?
Edited to add: not really interested in the contents of your safes or deposit boxes, and not looking to case your joints. Just wondering whether every cubic inch tends to be occupied... Does the collection expand to fill every available nook and cranny?
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Buy one that screws into the floor.
Could do that, but that reduces the water and fireproofness
Maybe I will stick them together with a couple of 500 lb rare Earth magnets. Then if someone tries to lift one they'll have to lift both
Didn't you respond "Steal Me" in the coin display thread? Thanks for showing us what to look for -
But @jmlanzaf is correct - get them screwed to the floor or bolted in cement if you have a basement. But even that isn't a big deterrent anymore. You still hear about 800 pound safes being ripped out of people's floors or basements.
"When they can't find anything wrong with you, they create it!"
Can't keep people from stealing my coins, can make it more difficult, so they go somewhere else for easier pickings. And the little bit of gold that I own, I keep in a deposit box at the bank.
OP, you absolutely opened your self up to scrutiny on this one!
I don’t anticipate a whole lot of sharing on this topic.
Meh...I don't see anything worth stealing.
Not exactly the most brilliant post to put up on the forum.
That I show a cheap safe full of cheap coins? Huh...
Somehow I don't feel any less secure than before I posted...
It doesn't have anything to do with the value, it goes well beyond that. Obviously you don't see the other reasons behind it and that is why the post was created.
Might or might not be...
Some of you folks must be paranoid, if you think showing a safe is risky.
I hope nobody who sees my post comes for my 1979 SBAs
completely empty, selling stuff in the store as fast as I get it in
LOL. Let me know if they get it. I've got 5 or 6 of them here that you can purchase.
Here’s an alternate route: insure your collection and keep it wherever you like. If it’s stolen or burns to slush, file a police report, submit your claim, and have fun coin shopping again from scratch.
Actually that last picture needs some cold beer in it then store your albums in a safe -
"When they can't find anything wrong with you, they create it!"
Get a Smith and Wesson insurance policy.
Two wheeled dolly solves the problem of getting them out of a house. My safe weighs 1300 pounds before I put anything in it. It is bolted to the concrete floor with 4 large lag bolts. Between coins and ammo there is another 800 pounds in it. Couple that with a monitored alarm system, it isn’t going anywhere. I have had a couple of sensors fail early on and ended up with a sheriff and Highway Patrol officer in my driveway. They show up quick! My system has its own wireless system so even cutting the phone wires won’t get you in the house without law enforcement showing up. It also has a battery backup system…..
That policy only works if you are home!
Sounds hard core... And costs more than my entire collection, most likely. 😜
To answer your question with a question...which one?
Which safe? I don't know. Here's another question: do you buy more coins to fill your safes, or do you buy more safes to hold all your coins,?
Let's just say I could use another one.

This is my last one that a locksmith ( cough cough) opened for a department store.
The so called locksmith drilled, pryed and cut on it with a sawsall for 3 hours.
Sure he got it open, but they could have laid it on the right side after the combo was entered and it would have opened.
It had a broken weld on the locking bolt bar.
I delivered a new safe and picked up the old one.
Just keep your valuable stuff off site, like a safe deposit box. And just hide the safes you keep at home. I am not impressed by the idea of lag bolts. Just cast them into concrete in your basement floor with a little rebar. With a hazmat sticker on the door.
OINK
You also better have a criminal defense lawyer on retainer. The trouble really begins when you pull the trigger even if you are in the right.
You are correct on that one!
How full is your safe deposit box??
there, I finished the thread title for you.
@Herb_T... Excellent system.... I have a very similar system. As far as having a lawyer on retainer, join the ACLDN (Armed Citizens Legal Defense Network).... great group, tremendous system and provides upfront attorney fees when needed. Cheers, RickO
Just one? I have several.
And I think I would rather be robbed than kill someone.
Good idea! I updated the thread...
Not me. I've lived in Indiana and Michigan, both states have decent self defense and Home defense laws. Someone breaks into my home and I'm there to defend it, their life is forfeit.
Next it will be how safe is your safety deposit box
Good luck getting to it when the banksters are in effect.
You don't use one?
There was a gentleman in the Columbus, Ohio area some years back who had a safe in his house. While he was away someone in a truck hooked a cable to his safe and ripped it out right through the wall. One of the coins was a 1893-S Morgan ms65.
don't have either one
Check out my coins for sale at the link below mid-priced (read carefully)
** https://photos.app.goo.gl/VLi1NBeJuE7UTkCE7**
Quite often it is possible to discern your location if the camera that you used for the pictures has a GPS unit which hasn't been disabled. There are likely a lot of lurkers here and someone might try to dupe you into revealing your location, possibly through an offer to buy or sell.
Full enough, to be specific.
Re: SDB with any bank
Read all the small print on your contract!!!
Surprise, surprise...
You also better have a criminal defense lawyer on retainer. The trouble really begins when you pull the trigger even if you are in the right
That all depends on where you live. Florida has a law described as the "Castle Doctrine" which applies not only to your home but also your vehicle. This law drastically reduced the number of home invasions and carjackings.
Florida Castle Doctrine laws extend to a person's dwelling, residence, or occupied vehicle. If you are a victim of unlawful force or deadly force when you are in a dwelling, your residence, or an occupied vehicle, the law will provide you protection beyond the general rules of self-defense.
Wisdom has been chasing you but, you've always been faster
Anyone who doesn't fear entanglement with the legal system doesn't have any real experience with the legal system. Even successful resolution of a lawsuit or criminal proceedings can consume your emotional, financial, and time resources for years. I've seen the devastation that the threat of jail time and/or meritless lawsuits leave behind.
As for the size of my safe and how much room is in it. That's noneya....... as in noneya business. All the valuable stuff is at the bank anyhow.
There are going to be caveats to any security system, regardless of how much you spend. I've got a 400 lb. fire-lined safe that's kept in a discreet location and is bolted to the floor. But, I'm under no illusion that some enterprising burglar couldn't also locate my angle grinder and cut off wheels to get into it. Even 2000 lb safes can be broken into in this manner... the burglars would just need a little more time.
I own firearms for home defense as well, but their use is predicated on me being home to use them. I also live in a state that doesn't have a castle doctrine law, so a legal process after an encounter where I have used a firearm for self defense is a foregone conclusion... and likely an expensive one.
Be safe...
No pun intended... ;-)
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I’m a little concerned about “fire lined”. To each their own 😂😂
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Not Mine, but looks interesting

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Some good safety tips in this thread, but I'm still curious...
Does the coin collection expand to fill all available storage space?
Unless one is a “hoarder”- No.
I am looking to reduce the size of my accumulation as I’m putting more value on quality over quantity in this later stage of life. It’s difficult storing so much stuff too. Safe deposit boxes get very heavy and have weight limits. Several of them can get expensive, and most are not climate controlled. There are always security concerns- whatever route one chooses for storage.
If one is a stacker, or accumulating hoards, then they may never run out the need for more space.
Different strokes for different folks.
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I've heard it said that when you buy a safe, you should carefully calculate how much room that you'll need and then buy one that's twice as large.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
Depends what state you live in.
Be sure to buy a cheaper fire proof safe and put it in an easily found location. This is your diversion. Load it with a few bricks.
All of this while your real safe is hidden elsewhere.
NLI
https://www.pcgs.com/setregistry/collectors-showcase/date-sets/hashtags-prefect-coin-grading-service-1879/album/7621
It's called a "decoy safe" and it's always a good idea if you have the room for one. A cheap used safe will work for this purpose.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire