Would like to see MORE video on the manufacturing process of your safes. I've had one of your safes for close to 5 years and have NEVER regretted the purchase. But would like to see more of the manufacturing and product choices. I'm needing another safe and want to put you safe at the top of my list when I decide to 'pull the trigger' and make the purchase.
Doesn't matter how hard to break in they are, if they give back door keys to a owners safe, like Liberty did. Be nice to see a statement response on this subject from Rhino on how they would fight to protect the customer, or it is simply not a safe but a compromisable box.
@@Hill_Billy_Without_A_Hill I would too. Maybe it’s better they don’t call attention to themselves so the Corrupt FBI ATF Criminals don’t get any ideas & start hassling all the Safe Manufacturers. Abolish ATF. Defund & FIRE Upper Echelons of the FBI including the Entire 7th Floor Star Chamber. If the rest want to keep their jobs then the FBI needs to be broken up into sections of specialized departments & spread out to other states instead of hiding & never having civilian oversight.
It doesn’t matter what safe company you buy from. You need to go with a reputable mechanical dial lock. Had the electronic keypad lock in my Liberty replaced. There fore removing any chance of a back door .Will never have another electronic keypad lock on anything.
Believe most of theirs are 12. More than enough for pry and fire resistance. 11 and higher won’t stop a skilled cutting crew. 12 will keep most tweekers out. Layer security, stick with 12 gauge save a shit ton and spend savings on a camera system with battery backup
I’ve never seen a safe laying on its back in the floor while someone is trying to break into it, they’re made to be bolted to the floor and is part of their structural integrity. Also I noticed your people who were doing the test had to sit on your safe a lot more making me think it’s a LOT lighter. Maybe you should have UL rate your safes and show their videos
All of the safes tested are made from the same metal thickness and with the same fire rating so all would weigh very close to the same! We do make safes out of heavier material that are UL rated but any 12 ga UL rated safe would work the same.
Just plain goofy. Alot of people would use a cutting torch. Besides who breaks into a safe while lying on its back. This should be in a Bugs Bunny & Elmer Fudd cartoon.
Do you give codes to FBI?
Never seen a crackhead carrying pry tools around.
Would like to see MORE video on the manufacturing process of your safes. I've had one of your safes for close to 5 years and have NEVER regretted the purchase.
But would like to see more of the manufacturing and product choices.
I'm needing another safe and want to put you safe at the top of my list when I decide to 'pull the trigger' and make the purchase.
Doesn't matter how hard to break in they are, if they give back door keys to a owners safe, like Liberty did. Be nice to see a statement response on this subject from Rhino on how they would fight to protect the customer, or it is simply not a safe but a compromisable box.
@@Hill_Billy_Without_A_Hill
I would too. Maybe it’s better they don’t call attention to themselves so the Corrupt FBI ATF Criminals don’t get any ideas & start hassling all the Safe Manufacturers. Abolish ATF. Defund & FIRE Upper Echelons of the FBI including the Entire 7th Floor Star Chamber. If the rest want to keep their jobs then the FBI needs to be broken up into sections of specialized departments & spread out to other states instead of hiding & never having civilian oversight.
It doesn’t matter what safe company you buy from. You need to go with a reputable mechanical dial lock. Had the electronic keypad lock in my Liberty replaced. There fore removing any chance of a back door .Will never have another electronic keypad lock on anything.
@@StevenSmith-pt8rz Was thinking, the lib safe this is all about was a dial kind.
Is the Rhino safe 14 gauge or 12 gauge?
My 2014 rhino is 12 gage .105" with 1/4" door. The rhino big horns are 14 gage with composite door,
Believe most of theirs are 12. More than enough for pry and fire resistance. 11 and higher won’t stop a skilled cutting crew. 12 will keep most tweekers out.
Layer security, stick with 12 gauge save a shit ton and spend savings on a camera system with battery backup
@@alphasheepdog9683 14ga with SafeX retention system > 12ga traditional with bolt/bar.
Not apples to Apples
Yeah, that's kind of the point.
safeX is bighorn brand, right?
Our newest Bighorn models, yes!
@@RhinoMetalsi trust u. trust new tech bolt lock
@@RhinoMetalswhy i can not see bighorn list safe. can u share me link
I’ve never seen a safe laying on its back in the floor while someone is trying to break into it, they’re made to be bolted to the floor and is part of their structural integrity. Also I noticed your people who were doing the test had to sit on your safe a lot more making me think it’s a LOT lighter. Maybe you should have UL rate your safes and show their videos
All of the safes tested are made from the same metal thickness and with the same fire rating so all would weigh very close to the same! We do make safes out of heavier material that are UL rated but any 12 ga UL rated safe would work the same.
You could always just look the weight up
if any 12 ga safe works the same should i just go out and buy the cheapest one made?
@@jimeubank1110
Just plain goofy. Alot of people would use a cutting torch. Besides who breaks into a safe while lying on its back. This should be in a Bugs Bunny & Elmer Fudd cartoon.
Is that what you use?
@@Louwebster0798 Yep, been doing it for 37+ years and it NEVER fails! Easier to carry small torch and bottles to get the job done quicker.
Cutting torch? Who do you think is breaking into your house? The Ocean's Eleven gang?