What good is a safe if it can be moved?

BURGLARY: A 55-year-old South Point area man reported Friday someone and stole a fireproof safe valued at $200 and containing $2,500 in old coins from his residence in Fayette Township along with some prescription medication.
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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
bolted to the foundation. If I'm ever robbed hopefully the thieves go for the bait.
Good idea or not?
Will’sProoflikes
Now, assuming they can read (and read English) it may deter the non Professional hoods.
Coins are in a safety deposit box.
Scenario: Burgler or Home invasion/Break-in...Gun to you or spouses head as burgler "nicely" asks you for the combination or to open the safe.
https://www.pcgs.com/SetRegistry/collectors-showcase/world-coins/one-coin-per-year-1600-2017/2422
<< <i>If it can be stolen.. it is obviously not 'safe'... A large safe - 800 - 1000 lbs, bolted to the floor, is a 'safe'.... no matter what you have, the ultimate nightmare scenario can be devised... the degree of 'safeness' is a personal decision. The 'gun to the head' routine will even work with a safety deposit box, so do not give me any of that false bravado (a polite way of saying BS)... If what you have, is highly desireable to someone else - methods can be devised to obtain it. A certain degree of paranoia is necessary for reasonable security. After that, it is just not worth the effort or the worry. Cheers, RickO >>
Boy the tell tale sign of a real deep thinker...maybe too deep...most crooks are opportunists...your scenario is rare...the majority are EXACTLY as I stated. There are many more collector tricks, like coin insurance. How long have you guys been in the hobby? Cheers.
<< <i>fireproof safe valued at $200 >>
It's a crap safe. Safes start getting reliable in the $1000 range. Bolting down to studs with large hardware is essential as well.
<< <i>
<< <i>fireproof safe valued at $200 >>
It's a crap safe. Safes start getting reliable in the $1000 range. Bolting down to studs with large hardware is essential as well. >>
At $200 and portable, it's not a safe (crap or otherwise.) It's a fancy lockbox.
<< <i>I have an interesting safe story, My dad had a 300lb safe in the basement, located under the stairs, before we carried it down there he took a saw and cut though the 8th step on the underside of the board until there was only about 3/8s of an inch of the step un cut, after putting the safe under the step he installed a 4x4 wedged between the cut in the step and the top of the safe, now if someone (2 people) could carry the safe up the stairs, after removing the 4x4 they would be carrying the 300 lb safe back up the stairs with the sawed step, and hopefully finding one or both of them and the safe back down in the basement when we got home, after the step broke in half, sometimes I hoped we would get burglarized.
Man that's funny, you'd probably get sued after they crawl out from under the steps...
This explains why so many forum members seek absolute anonymity. The best protection is to have the coins outside your home. However, if the thief doesn't know that he could still break into your home looking for them. How disappointed would you be if your little fire safe with irreplacable but valueless documents got stolen because some thief was looking for coins?
--Jerry
coins, is Fort Knox. That is, unless Goldfinger
should ever succeed in his dastardly plans.
Camelot
Will’sProoflikes
a key switch before I open it. I was thinking of adding a sprinkler system for that room only which would activate with the alarm. Safe is about 500#.
traps that can injure, kill or mame will get you in prison lightning fast.
I have my coins in a safe deposit box.
<< <i>BURGLARY: A 55-year-old South Point area man reported Friday someone and stole a fireproof safe valued at $200 and containing $2,500 in old coins from his residence in Fayette Township along with some prescription medication. >>
Those sentry firesafes are good for protecting documents and other valuables from fire (short duration fires) for a relatively reasonable price ($200 is reasonable for what you get). However, I don't think they are theft prevention--more like theft deterrents, and even there they are shaky. Same thing with gun safes. There are safes designed to keep the kiddies out, safes designed to withstand fire, floods, and earthquakes, and safes designed to protect the contents from any form of theft. Usually the latter will accomplish all 3. A safe weighing over 200 pounds is a good middle of the road theft deterrent because any burglar will need a device to carry it out the front door. A safe weighing over 500 pounds is even better, because that would require a motorized device to move it. Beyond that, it's just ever increasing degrees of difficulty in removing the safe. The latest thing now is people are stealing ATMs with forklifts--so even a heavy safe is not immune to theft. I'm not a big fan of safe deposit boxes, but it might be wise to diversify some of your stuff into one, along with the best quality home safe you can afford.
They take them out of ATM sites and recondition them . . . then sell in the $700 range delivered. If they are good enough to leave on a streetcorner with $50,000 cash, they are good enough for most people with their Whitman 1941-date circ. wheaties.
Drunner
The stuff I keep in the house I wouldn't even report if it was stolen, the good stuff is kept at the bank (Not that I need a large box
I thought this tidbit was cool and might just do it if I ever have a safe large enough to hold a case or two of rolled cents
<< <i>They take them out of ATM sites and recondition them . . . then sell in the $700 range delivered >>
That is incredibly cheap for that level quality of safe.
<< <i>One other trick you can do is to put a GPS inside of your safe and if it happens to be stolen, then you can track it online to the burglar's house and invite the police over. >>
GPS will have a hard time talking to the Sat. through the steel
Think I read it in one of those old Harrah's Club Nevada history books.
He said you couldn't stop a determined thief from stealing your stuff.
He told me locks were for keeping the honest people honest.
Ray
<< <i>Djord, cool set-up... there is liability there though... strangely enough. You can shoot an intruder in your home... but if you set a trap, court cases (precedents) have said you are guilty. Weird, I know... Cheers, RickO >>
Hopefully I am there when it happens, I would prefer to try out my 50cal desert eagle and then measure the holes with a caliper.
"Everything is on its way to somewhere. Everything." - George Malley, Phenomenon
http://www.american-legacy-coins.com
Sounds like they could sink!
<< <i>Sounds like they could sink! >>
They're floating placidly on a solid pad of concrete...all 9 tons, side by side.
"Everything is on its way to somewhere. Everything." - George Malley, Phenomenon
http://www.american-legacy-coins.com
<< <i>How disappointed would you be if your little fire safe with irreplacable but valueless documents got stolen because some thief was looking for coins? >>
Or if they put the gun to the loved ones head and they don't believe that BS that you don't have any coins here.