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Mark is a GREAT guy to deal with.. can't beat his delivery fee either.. FREE to the curb or $100 inside.. which.. with only having to watch him sweat was pretty damn awesome..
As far as prices go.. I paid substantially less than what I had 'built' on the internet..
I also have a Liberty safe and am quite happy with it..bought it at our local Big R store.
Any love for either Big Horn or Steelwater safes?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltK-b...eature=related
One of the senior managers at my office had his home go up in Waldo Canyon flames. I heard through the grapevine that his 2 hr fire rated safe did not make it. I'm trying to find out the brand/model.
You get what you pay for. There are a lot of good safes. Both mine are Ft. Knox. When I get another one it will be Ft. Knox. I almost bought a Liberty, but the Ft. Knox dealer came around in final negociations.
Ive got a Liberty fatboy Jr and am about to get another as I am out of room.
In regards to the Waldo Canyon Fire: One of my co-workers lost his shed and privacy fence to the fire, but the firefighters saved his house. Every day he drives to work past the ghosts that used to be homes and as he described it to me: the foundations are still intact but weak. One home had a brick arch that is still standing, but only because the wind hasn't blown it over yet. On a home at the edge of the fire line, he could make out what he thinks was a refrigerator, next to an oven... both of them barely more than a shapeless pile of reforged metal. He did not see a single gun safe on his street, and since he volunteered that he did not have the heart to look at the other 300+ burned homes, I didn't ask. If the wildfire was hot enough to turn 99% of a home into ash, I have no doubt in my mind that no commercially available gun safe in the world would have survived the several hours of 3000+ degrees and the residual days of 800+ degree ashes. My co-worker thought that he had lost his home and in his words: "Replaceable or not, it's just stuff. Remember your priorities."
Wow, that has to be a wierd, eerie feeling. Living in the middle of burned-out Hell, with your place OK and everybody else's gone.Quote:
Every day he drives to work past the ghosts that used to be homes
Beats the alternative, I suppose...