Concrete reinforcement, from the inside of the bank vault. Hinges on the outside. The entire weight of the door rests on the top hinge. Outer door plate covering the mechanism, fastened with a few screws.
Beware the crook with a wrench or a socket set. It will keep the stupid crooks out for sure. What happens if the lock fails? Can you just on bolt the lock and install a new one? Or would you need to cut it off and weld a new one on? You won’t be calling this factory for a drill point.
Agreed. 20 minutes with a 14mm ratchet on a drill would have that front panel off, revealing all the internals. And the shiny handles are all just screwed on… Add five more minutes…
Seems their safes and vault doors are made primarily from unhardened mild steel, at one point being cut with hammer and chisel. One just needs a catering tin opener to do the job! 🤣
The welds on the flat front and back are not structural. If he got proper penetration, you could grind them flat with no problems. No welding is the least of their problems. I love how he production welds everything THEN measures for opening and square. That's like putting on the condom after you fuck. Also, the metal looks like they found it in a scrap yard. Where is this Kurkgoatfuckistan?
This video would make more sense if it were titled "Amazing Manufacturing Process of Panic Room Door". It only makes sense if the intruders are approaching from the direction of the rebar/concrete - not from the lock side. Surely no bank would purchase this for a vault. A socket wrench gives access to the locks.
Aw c'mon guys ... this is the INSIDE of the vault. A small guy lives insides and operates the door from the inside when ordered by the bank president who slides him the two keys through a secret hole ... Yeah !
@@oldmanofsacramento Actually it does. Undo the bolts holding the front plate and you have access to the two pieces of angle that the side bolts are attached to and the two plates connecting them to the locks. Cut those pieces or bust the welds and just pull the side bolts out. Or just disassemble the center mechanism with an allen wrench.
28:30 Click on one, nothing on two, slight core turn on three.... Not that it really matters since all you have to do is remove those bolts on the outside and the whole lock and locking bar assembly is right there underneath it. They built the thing backwards. The lock and locking bars are suppose to be behind the concrete and the bolted on plate is suppose to be on the inside of the vault.
Crazy stuff. Should be titled "How Bank Vault Door Facsimiles Are Made" Reminds me of the natives on an island making facsimiles of airplanes out of bamboo.
It's me oh, but if the last steel plate is removed, which is only held with those small screws, there is access to the mechanism, I don't understand...
I too noticed this glaring omission, and couldn't believe that this was how they designed and manufactured it! To have such a critical design fault is bad enough, but to then make and broadcast a video showing this critical weakness and the entire construction of the door utterly beggars belief! In short, they've produced a video showing the critical weakness in the door and exactly how to overcome it! This cannot be an insurance rated security door! Clearly, standards and expectations vary from those in the West...
The door is made back to front. It can be unbolted to access the lock mechanism! I spotted the clever use of copper sheet inside the door to slow down attack using a gas torch but everything is back to front lol.
I spotted that to Jack so I can only assume that the comments are generally wrong and that the plane side goes to the outside. If that’s the case the pins are still vulnerable to cutting but the crooks don’t have access to the mechanism. The locks may go to the inside to stop unauthorised opening of the door. Cheers Stuart 🇦🇺
Didn't they.. didn't they just put the massive, multiple layered and cemented side inside and exposed the one sheetmetal layered side to the outside (key side). So unless someone wants to lock himself inside the door, to open it you just need do unscrew the hexbolts and dismantle the locking mechanism behind? No grinder needed, just an wrench and 17 nut.
This door is more security theatre than real security. Five minutes with a spanner would take off the outer skin on the door, revealing the weaknesses within that can be quickly bypassed with an angle grinder.
@@nicolek4076 , I have to admit I was wrong. I posted my comment WITHOUT watching the entire video (I just don't have time to watch everything in its entirety). I saw your comment, and assumed that you must have got it wrong, as fixing the outer sheet with bolts would be a pure idiocy... Well, guess what... ;-) (And, frankly, I'm baffled.)
@@nicolek4076 Glad to hear that : ) But I'm not the "entire humanity", and yes, all those "keyboard warriors" out there are not exactly well tempered personas... Well, such is life. Cheers!
I think that those doors are made with all possible security mistakes which allows to open it using brute force in many ways. It is kind to let you bring tools you currently owe to open the bank deposit ☺️
Это просто - прекрасно!!! Самое лучшее изделие которое я видел, сколько труда и сил вложено только в то, что бы сделать для других , удобство - доступа!!!
These dudes must get so much arc flash. Looking at the weld is no joke. It sun burns your eyes. And how funny is it to even bother wearing a dust mask while painting.
I believe I recognize this as the same shop that made a small strong box in another video. It was also lacking in security but would maybe be okay for home use or small mom and pop type store. But as others have said, it is difficult to picture this being used as the door to the safe in a bank. It is severely lacking in many security features that are common in modern banks. But beyond that, more pride in craftsmanship would be nice. Full welds instead of just tack welds. Add some grease or other lubricant to the moving parts. Actually bother removing the rust from the metal and painting or coating the parts you can't see to prevent premature rust. When your "fit and finish" is achieved via bondo / filler material and spray paint that is a big clue. I like seeing most of these videos but as a bank door this thing is pretty cringe.
That door is meant for a "strong room", not a safe. There are plenty of small "bank outlets" in rural areas, which do not hold any tremendous amount of money, and where would-be burglars have just crowbars and pickaxes at their disposal. Still, you have to "secure" those pennies somehow, so here you get what's sometimes referred to as "value for money" ;-) You wouldn't buy a $200 high-end bicycle lock to secure your battered 15 yrs old six-speed $50 "grocery bike" bought years ago at some garage sale, would you? Same principle applies here. Bondo? Hey, look sells... gotta look nice, that's what customer sees first.
Also, _Full welds instead of just tack welds_ - I'm not sure what welds exactly you're referring to, but if you weld a metal sheet to some frame you don't want to make continuous welds as it may easily lead to warping of the sheet. Instead you make INTERRUPTED weld, so any warping will stay between, or will be spread between those short welds.
@@MrKotBonifacy I get that but it wasn't all sheet metal. My impression watching the build was the deciding factor was, "We'll save a couple of bucks if we use as little welding rod as possible".
@@MrKotBonifacy Yes, looks sell. But a superior crafting / welding job wouldn't need the bondo. I do agree it is only suited for less valuable contents and low level threats.
Very laborious job, finishing is also good! But why the cement reinforcement in the inside and the bolted plate on the outside? Anyone can open the bolts, remove the big plate and dis engage the locks from outside if he can get some times! In that case the inside reinforcement will be useless!
It's obviously designed that way so that if there is ever an issue with the locks or the locking mechanism, they are easily accessed to repair/replace. They thought of everything :)
My dad used to work for a bank equipment company and I've had the opportunity to see many a bank vault door setups exposed but I've never seen one where the hardening is on the inside of the lock mechanism, a cutting torch would have this open in five minutes and my dad or the LockPickingLawyer could open the locks in less than a minute.
Hi, could you please ask your dad for some reference Bank Door manufacturers? I mean the best cos I`m working in the central bank project in my country and we need to propose the highest security doors like bank vault.
Overall, this is a highly informative and enjoyable video for anyone interested in engineering. It showcases your talent . I look forward to watching more of your content in the future 👍👍👍
I don't know if I am missing something But with the 30 odd bolts around the outside (not the inside) of the door, Wouldn't it be easy to unscrew the bolts to get access to the doors inner workings. It seems with all the rebar and the concrete on the inside of the door you are trying to stop people breaking out of the vault and not in to the vault? i know the concrete helps with the fire resistance as well. But apart from this it is a fantastic job and a very strong and sound door!
Two keys for two separate people so they both have to agree to unlock the safety door exposing everyone inside to what ever they are hiding behind that door to begin with. Cheers from Jacksonville Florida 🌞
@@makcrog2853 There must be a second door on the other side of the room for entrance. The rear door is for transferring money to an armored car. It can only be opened when it is safe to do so I think.
That appears to be an ordinary MILD STEEL that they are using, soft and easily cut using hand tools. I think I could be in there rather quickly and without a lot of sweat being spilt.
was this a joke listing? I am amazed at the other videos of yours, but I would have not one shred of confidence or credibility with that quality of build and locking system. Would like to see more videos, too.
Thank you for sharing this video. I thoroughly appreciated the skills that went into constructing the bank vault door. Please consider using larger high strength stainless steel screw bolts to secure the panels into the frame. The screw bolts used are small and made from low strength alloy. They do not have strength to last the time as the heavy door frames will be opened and closed every day several times in the bank. If you don't believe me then test the bolt for strength compared to larger stainless units. Hope it helps you. Thank you.
Bank vault doors are usually opened once a day and closed at night (not “several times a day”) as you state. It’s amazing that you have a calibrated eyeball and can tell the size and material of the bolts just by looking at a fair quality video? They look stainless steel to me? Size is unknown.
Jefe, lo siento he perdido la llave de la puerta nueva... No pasa nada, suelta los tornillos y ya la podrás abrir. En serio la construyeron del revés, con razón la llave queda tan fuera... Por favor, que nos digan en que bancos u oficinas han instalado esas puertas de "seguridad" para hacerles una visita rápida cuando estén cerrados...
Safety door for Bank of Pakistan!! Great build for Pakistan because the bank does not need much safety!! There isn't much cash inside 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂, but hats off to the workers they are doing great job.
I think people are criticising and saying it’s backwards without considering what it’s final installation might be. It’s obvious the plane side of the door is the armoured side with a sheet of mild steel, a sheet of copper to stop attack from a gas axe and then reinforced concrete and finally another sheet of mild steel. That also puts the pins towards the back of the frame making it harder to reach them to cut or pull the door out of the frame. My suggestion is it could be a door allowing the strong room to be accessed from outside the bank or whatever the institution is. This maybe more convenient when bulk money is being added or removed via armoured car ect. In that case the way this door has been built would be suitable because from the outside you see nothing but a blank door and from inside you have the security of needing the people with the keys to open it. This would also prevent the hinges from attack. While certainly not a high security door by western standards it’s probably up to the job in its intended location. Just something to think about.
какое-то супер засекреченное предприятие!))))) Сейв из швеллера - нанотехнологии...двутавра - это вообще космос!! Пока делали...сколько интересно людей там погибло на производстве?)))
I build custom hidden doors with 5/16 steel plate, with a copper sheet, hard polyethylene rubber and 1/4" bitumen layer sandwich backer. The door and frame are filled with high density 8000 psi bridge mix concrete. The locking bars are 1-1/4" steel rod, that are heat treated and hard chrome plated after cutting, machining and tapping. None of the above be done after hard chroming. They aren't built like an old Diebold bank vault, but the locking mechanism uses a combination dial, star wheel crank and a glass relocking mechanism, as well as dual safety deposit box keys for added security. The keys AND the combination has to be used to open AND lock the door. It can be opened from the inside, for use as a safe room door, too. Unlike the doors in this video, which I guarantee I could open in less than FIVE minutes.....TEN minutes, if I took my time. Considering where these are being made, they are for hiding yourself, not anymore great value. The welds themselves are pathetic, not to mention the thickness of the metal renders the concrete and poorly welded "rebar" cage inside the concrete. The banging on the concrete and the heat from stick welding probably rendered the already dry mix mortar into power. What a joke. I doubt anyone who buys this is hiding any pallets of money from the Taliban. The bolts on the front... laughable. Even Grade 8 bolt heads could be sheared off with a cold chisel and 2lb sledge. As for my doors, not one has ever been compromised and are hidden in such a way, they are undetectable from the outside... meaning being in the room, they can't be recognized.
شغل متقن من اخوانا الباكستانيين لكن ينقصهم بعض الأعمال النهائيه وهو عملية العزل للحديد فهذا الحديد غير مقاوم للصدأ فكان يجب عليهم وضع الاساس بعد الانتهاء من كل عملية...وفقكم الله
I'm a safe & vault technician and a locksmith, This has traumatised me. I need someone to talk to. NOTHING that I've seen before in my entire career has offended me so much as watching this video. Think of Danny Torrance (The Shining), in the hallway way with the twins. That's my face. ALL THE WAY THROUGH!. It was horrifying.
I think part of any apprenticeship program in the trades (pipefitter, Ironworker, boilermaker, etc.) should include working with these guys for a couple three months. Maybe the rookie wouldn't learn much, but I guarantee he won't be wasting rod when he gets back.
@@felixcat9318 Don' t agree with him when everything he says is wrong, that is a safe room door that locks from the inside and as you can see the bolts are protected as well as the rest , maybe if clickbait had a higher IQ he would have understood this (but he assumed he was smarter than probably 30 people going from the people building this door, to the ones designing it to the manager, buisness owner, seller, and people that buy it).
@@Zodliness Surprising that after spending such a big amount of your life doing that job you can't even tell apart a safe room/panic room door from a vault door. You are so humble that you thought you were smarter than the factory owner, than the person that designed the door, than the person or company that sells the doors, than the buyers and their clients, you are so humble that you thought you were smarter than probably a coupe hundred people you never met. Don't criticise because you "assume" "think", it doesn't give of a good image of you. If I were you I would erase those comments as they are shameful.
@@Victor-ze3sd Going on the information provided by the channel whom documented the entire process, this is indeed a bank strongroom door! Ridiculing others for correctly pointing out faults and describing the door as something other than what the documentary maker describes it as, and we must assume that he described it as what he was told it was by those he recorded making it, and what it was for is completely disengenuous! If the channel owner states that the manufacturer has verified that it was the door to a safe room, then so be it, but until such time I accept that it is whst it is stated as being, a bank strongroom door.
Люди на видео настолько не понимают, что они делают, что я не мог удержаться и досмотреть до конца. Они видимо, до этого делали входные двери, поэтому вся защита и доступ к замкам - со стороны замков. Если грабителю жаль сил на взлом обычным ломом, можно потратить 15 минут времени, чтобы открутить болты по периметру и получить доступ к замкам.
Uhmm- I give Ethan Hunt about 37 seconds to breach that amazingly manufactured bank strongroom door... BTW- Are pole barns up to spec to hinge doors that heavy?
why build a security product...then go show how its made. this defeats the object as we all know how it was put together. so can easily take it apart to get inside..
Did i miss something or was the reinforced concrete layer behind the locking mechanism? Almost like it was ment to keep people locked in vs locked out.
So, a half inch spanner is all you really need to get into this. Undo the bolts on the from plate and you have direct access to the whole locking mechanism
No fibres in cement hermal resistance compounds? No clamps to retain sqaurness of door or frame when welding as it could warp with heat buildup No locking bolts top or bottom of door? Any anti pry protection? I assume they painted bottom edge of door too lol With basic tools not the worst ever door made not bad but I wouldn't trust it to protect owt really of value
Concrete reinforcement, from the inside of the bank vault.
Hinges on the outside.
The entire weight of the door rests on the top hinge.
Outer door plate covering the mechanism, fastened with a few screws.
Fiendishly clever.
Beware the crook with a wrench or a socket set. It will keep the stupid crooks out for sure. What happens if the lock fails? Can you just on bolt the lock and install a new one? Or would you need to cut it off and weld a new one on?
You won’t be calling this factory for a drill point.
Dude this safety door is made in Pakistan!! There they don't have money in banks hence they don't require much safety you see ?? 😂😂😂😂👌👌👌👍👍👍👍
BE FAIR IT IS 7 CENTURY WORKMANSHIP. ALL PRAISE TO MUHAMMAD. BUT NOT FOR AL LAH . 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Vault door is build to prevent somebody locked in to get outside the vault...maybe thats why is build like that...🤣🤣🤣
А ни кого не смущает что механизм отпирания под передним тонким листом, а задняя стенка бронирована, или я чего то не понимаю?
Под тонким листом который на болтах... :-)
Может это дверь в хранилище,и охранник закрывается изнутри?
За 30 минут отболгарю.
@@Григорий-б5ж У швеллера 20го или 18го,стенка от 5мм.....
@@АлександрФиля-н5у кто сказал, что нужно резать швеллер?
am I missing something or why are the screws on the outside of the door?
Excetly ... what i thought..
It's to confuse the would be robbers
Its just in case, you lost the key. So you can still open the door
Agreed. 20 minutes with a 14mm ratchet on a drill would have that front panel off, revealing all the internals. And the shiny handles are all just screwed on… Add five more minutes…
This is what happens when u hire uneducated engineers to safeguard ua bank 😅
The only reason there are not many bank robbers in India trying to open those kind of doors is because their tools are also made India.
Seems their safes and vault doors are made primarily from unhardened mild steel, at one point being cut with hammer and chisel. One just needs a catering tin opener to do the job! 🤣
I think this is from Pakistan. Just see 29:18
😂😂😂😂😂
😂🤣😁
Why . The Frontcover is only screwed .
I think the blue Bondo is the strongest part of those tack welds!
That dude ground off 99% of the weld. I’m surprised it hasn’t fallen apart and killed somebody.
The welds on the flat front and back are not structural. If he got proper penetration, you could grind them flat with no problems. No welding is the least of their problems. I love how he production welds everything THEN measures for opening and square. That's like putting on the condom after you fuck. Also, the metal looks like they found it in a scrap yard. Where is this Kurkgoatfuckistan?
@@65_roses_jku7 And what he didn't grind off, he beat to death with the hammer!!!
🤣🤣🤣🤣
This video would make more sense if it were titled "Amazing Manufacturing Process of Panic Room Door". It only makes sense if the intruders are approaching from the direction of the rebar/concrete - not from the lock side. Surely no bank would purchase this for a vault. A socket wrench gives access to the locks.
And if it is a panic room, not much point having deadlocks on the inside either.
Aw c'mon guys ... this is the INSIDE of the vault. A small guy lives insides and operates the door from the inside when ordered by the bank president who slides him the two keys through a secret hole ... Yeah !
"A socket wrench gives access to the locks". Actually it doesn't ... at least not until the two keys were used and the door was unlocked 😎
@@oldmanofsacramento Actually it does. Undo the bolts holding the front plate and you have access to the two pieces of angle that the side bolts are attached to and the two plates connecting them to the locks. Cut those pieces or bust the welds and just pull the side bolts out. Or just disassemble the center mechanism with an allen wrench.
@@scaletownmodels alrightee then, all I need to know now is the bank where it is installed. Don't worry KH, we split 🤫
28:30 Click on one, nothing on two, slight core turn on three....
Not that it really matters since all you have to do is remove those bolts on the outside and the whole lock and locking bar assembly is right there underneath it. They built the thing backwards. The lock and locking bars are suppose to be behind the concrete and the bolted on plate is suppose to be on the inside of the vault.
Well now they have a backup plan in case this business fails.
And one more time to show that wasn't a fluke. Aol, The Lock Picking Lawyer needs to do a video on this!
Im agree with you
Crazy stuff. Should be titled "How Bank Vault Door Facsimiles Are Made" Reminds me of the natives on an island making facsimiles of airplanes out of bamboo.
At least it is heavy. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Cargo cult is what you have seen.
It's me oh, but if the last steel plate is removed, which is only held with those small screws, there is access to the mechanism, I don't understand...
nothing to understand, this is garbage.
I too noticed this glaring omission, and couldn't believe that this was how they designed and manufactured it!
To have such a critical design fault is bad enough, but to then make and broadcast a video showing this critical weakness and the entire construction of the door utterly beggars belief!
In short, they've produced a video showing the critical weakness in the door and exactly how to overcome it!
This cannot be an insurance rated security door!
Clearly, standards and expectations vary from those in the West...
that plate is in the internal side of the door vault, as the hinge, so if you want unscrew those small screw you have to open the door.
It's not hinge that safeguard one side of door when locked....if door is locked you can remove hinges and door will be still locked
I mean, this is India or whatever. They’ve not yet figured out toilets, so I imagine these ‘security flaws’ aren’t an issue there either.
To open it, just unscrew the screws
имея ключик на 13 дверь будет вскрыта ))). а так молодцы, трудолюбивые .
Только что написал подобный коммент. И кстати дверь изнутри вся ржавая
@@likeme8791 так же ))
Я понял, это дверь открывается изнутри. Тогда и петли, и болты объяснимы. То есть это для запирания персонала в помещении банка.
Цыгане шумною толпою толкали жопой паровоз
Полностью согласен. Нужно было или на сварку или заклепки на горячую.
The door is made back to front. It can be unbolted to access the lock mechanism!
I spotted the clever use of copper sheet inside the door to slow down attack using a gas torch but everything is back to front lol.
I spotted that to Jack so I can only assume that the comments are generally wrong and that the plane side goes to the outside. If that’s the case the pins are still vulnerable to cutting but the crooks don’t have access to the mechanism. The locks may go to the inside to stop unauthorised opening of the door. Cheers Stuart 🇦🇺
Thank you, i didnt know what the copper sheet was for.
@@scroungasworkshop4663 Who needs locks on the inside, the latch lever is enough if the door is for a panicroom.
Could be like an access door for loading or something, not the main entry door to the strong room.That copper will be on the intended outside.
Didn't they.. didn't they just put the massive, multiple layered and cemented side inside and exposed the one sheetmetal layered side to the outside (key side). So unless someone wants to lock himself inside the door, to open it you just need do unscrew the hexbolts and dismantle the locking mechanism behind? No grinder needed, just an wrench and 17 nut.
I think so :/
Пакистанцы режут швеллер маленькой болгаркой, а шлифуют большой.Вот что значит другая вера.
Николай,ваш комментарий поднял моё настроение.
А другие концессии используют для резки ленточную,или на худой край маятниковую пилу .
You would think with all of their fabricating skills they would have built some tables to work on instead of being on the floor.
This door is more security theatre than real security. Five minutes with a spanner would take off the outer skin on the door, revealing the weaknesses within that can be quickly bypassed with an angle grinder.
_"Five minutes with a spanner would take off the outer skin on the door"_ - *INNER* skin. To get there you'd need to open that door first...
@@MrKotBonifacy If that's the inner skin, why are the key holes on that side of the door? Is it intended for people to lock themselves inside?
@@nicolek4076 , I have to admit I was wrong. I posted my comment WITHOUT watching the entire video (I just don't have time to watch everything in its entirety). I saw your comment, and assumed that you must have got it wrong, as fixing the outer sheet with bolts would be a pure idiocy... Well, guess what... ;-)
(And, frankly, I'm baffled.)
@@MrKotBonifacy You're one of the politest people I've encountered in these pages. Thank you for your honesty - you restore my faith in humanity.
@@nicolek4076 Glad to hear that : ) But I'm not the "entire humanity", and yes, all those "keyboard warriors" out there are not exactly well tempered personas... Well, such is life. Cheers!
I don't think that the shareholders or customers of any bank would be reassured by a strongroom door like this.
the important thing is that they had fun building it.
@@ryanbarker5217and made friends along the way
Я думал болты через один закрутили и срывных хотя бы закрутят, а нет - докрутили обычными... гениально! Такие двери только под видос на ютуб собирать)
Strong on the inside, weak on the outside... How is this amazing?
How else do you keep the convicts on the inside?
@@theonlybuzz1969 hahaha
Agree
Получается, весь механизм с замками спрятан под накладкой которая прикручена винтами. И эти винты находятся снаружи. Гениально
Это ты так думаешь, для остальных это просто дизайн такой)
It's a good thing that the ships that get scrapped have the right steel.
I think that those doors are made with all possible security mistakes which allows to open it using brute force in many ways. It is kind to let you bring tools you currently owe to open the bank deposit ☺️
Why brute force when you only need a screwdriver to open it? 😜🤣🔓🔓
@@irgendwer420 It's OK, I'm sure he put some Loctite on them!
Should not the bolted sheet of metal be on the inside of the door and completely sealed on the outside?
Cheer~~~a room, typically one in a bank, designed to protect valuable items against fire and theft.😊
Это просто - прекрасно!!! Самое лучшее изделие которое я видел, сколько труда и сил вложено только в то, что бы сделать для других , удобство - доступа!!!
Il ne connaissent pas les vis fraisees
These dudes must get so much arc flash. Looking at the weld is no joke. It sun burns your eyes. And how funny is it to even bother wearing a dust mask while painting.
I guess I am not the only one who noticed that this is not safe door. This is just a super heavy door.other then that, nice fabrication video.
this hands down has to be the cleanst most organized factory i have seen from that part of the world which if im not mistaken either India or Pakistan
I believe I recognize this as the same shop that made a small strong box in another video.
It was also lacking in security but would maybe be okay for home use or small mom and pop type store.
But as others have said, it is difficult to picture this being used as the door to the safe in a bank. It is severely lacking in many security features that are common in modern banks.
But beyond that, more pride in craftsmanship would be nice. Full welds instead of just tack welds. Add some grease or other lubricant to the moving parts. Actually bother removing the rust from the metal and painting or coating the parts you can't see to prevent premature rust.
When your "fit and finish" is achieved via bondo / filler material and spray paint that is a big clue.
I like seeing most of these videos but as a bank door this thing is pretty cringe.
I know now watching this it would be easy getting into one.... ;)
That door is meant for a "strong room", not a safe. There are plenty of small "bank outlets" in rural areas, which do not hold any tremendous amount of money, and where would-be burglars have just crowbars and pickaxes at their disposal. Still, you have to "secure" those pennies somehow, so here you get what's sometimes referred to as "value for money" ;-)
You wouldn't buy a $200 high-end bicycle lock to secure your battered 15 yrs old six-speed $50 "grocery bike" bought years ago at some garage sale, would you? Same principle applies here.
Bondo? Hey, look sells... gotta look nice, that's what customer sees first.
Also, _Full welds instead of just tack welds_ - I'm not sure what welds exactly you're referring to, but if you weld a metal sheet to some frame you don't want to make continuous welds as it may easily lead to warping of the sheet. Instead you make INTERRUPTED weld, so any warping will stay between, or will be spread between those short welds.
@@MrKotBonifacy I get that but it wasn't all sheet metal. My impression watching the build was the deciding factor was, "We'll save a couple of bucks if we use as little welding rod as possible".
@@MrKotBonifacy Yes, looks sell. But a superior crafting / welding job wouldn't need the bondo.
I do agree it is only suited for less valuable contents and low level threats.
The definition of polishing a turd couldn't be more real🤙
i'm confused. why the lock side has all the easy accessable bolts and the inner side is smooth? so it's just a better fire door
Safety for someone locked inside is unimportant.
Very laborious job, finishing is also good! But why the cement reinforcement in the inside and the bolted plate on the outside? Anyone can open the bolts, remove the big plate and dis engage the locks from outside if he can get some times! In that case the inside reinforcement will be useless!
It's obviously designed that way so that if there is ever an issue with the locks or the locking mechanism, they are easily accessed to repair/replace. They thought of everything :)
My dad used to work for a bank equipment company and I've had the opportunity to see many a bank vault door setups exposed but I've never seen one where the hardening is on the inside of the lock mechanism, a cutting torch would have this open in five minutes and my dad or the LockPickingLawyer could open the locks in less than a minute.
Hi, could you please ask your dad for some reference Bank Door manufacturers? I mean the best cos I`m working in the central bank project in my country and we need to propose the highest security doors like bank vault.
@@minamodares3379 Good one
Looks pretty easy to open it, got too many weak spots.
Not very secure, but in the same time not too much value to store XD
Overall, this is a highly informative and enjoyable video for anyone interested in engineering. It showcases your talent . I look forward to watching more of your content in the future 👍👍👍
The first piece of equipment or kit that I would get before working there is steel toe boots.
They got steel toed sandals. It’s ok
Flip flops are best 😂
Love how they paint in the open air in the same room someone else is welding and hammering..
You did a nice job.
I believe if you use 3 layers of fuel tanker sheets, you'll achieve tougher doors.
I don't know if I am missing something But with the 30 odd bolts around the outside (not the inside) of the door, Wouldn't it be easy to unscrew the bolts to get access to the doors inner workings. It seems with all the rebar and the concrete on the inside of the door you are trying to stop people breaking out of the vault and not in to the vault? i know the concrete helps with the fire resistance as well. But apart from this it is a fantastic job and a very strong and sound door!
I think this door is for a second access to a building. The concrete side is outside, and it's designed to be opened only from inside.
Then it makes sense, but as a safe is useless, but why then two keys that would not release from inside??? this is strange.
Two keys for two separate people so they both have to agree to unlock the safety door exposing everyone inside to what ever they are hiding behind that door to begin with. Cheers from Jacksonville Florida 🌞
@@makcrog2853 There must be a second door on the other side of the room for entrance.
The rear door is for transferring money to an armored car. It can only be opened when it is safe to do so I think.
I got it ....... this was the vault door used by FTX to hold their crypto-currency! Lol!
Lube !!! the rust is the lube. Looks like a benkrobers dream lol.
That appears to be an ordinary MILD STEEL that they are using, soft and easily cut using hand tools. I think I could be in there rather quickly and without a lot of sweat being spilt.
Why even cut when you can just unscrew the bolts.
was this a joke listing? I am amazed at the other videos of yours, but I would have not one shred of confidence or credibility with that quality of build and locking system. Would like to see more videos, too.
Gotta love the worker safety.......
Cry more
Nice finishing touch to hammer the only shiny part look like a used railroad nail.
Thank you for sharing this video. I thoroughly appreciated the skills that went into constructing the bank vault door. Please consider using larger high strength stainless steel screw bolts to secure the panels into the frame. The screw bolts used are small and made from low strength alloy. They do not have strength to last the time as the heavy door frames will be opened and closed every day several times in the bank. If you don't believe me then test the bolt for strength compared to larger stainless units. Hope it helps you. Thank you.
Bank vault doors are usually opened once a day and closed at night (not “several times a day”) as you state. It’s amazing that you have a calibrated eyeball and can tell the size and material of the bolts just by looking at a fair quality video? They look stainless steel to me? Size is unknown.
Ihr solltet bei der Arbeit die Schlafanzüge ausziehen.😂😂😂😂😂 Viele Grüße aus Germany
Und die Schrauben für den Zugang zum Schließmechanismus auf der Innenseite der Tresortüre anbringen
Jefe, lo siento he perdido la llave de la puerta nueva...
No pasa nada, suelta los tornillos y ya la podrás abrir.
En serio la construyeron del revés, con razón la llave queda tan fuera...
Por favor, que nos digan en que bancos u oficinas han instalado esas puertas de "seguridad" para hacerles una visita rápida cuando estén cerrados...
You wouldn't want to do that, the only thing behind this store would be a goat.
No te olvides la llavecita de 11 para q tu visita sea rapida
Мужикииии!!! Глазок забыли поставить!!!😁👍
Great metal working skills, but horrendous work safety.
What safety!? Kinda sad people trying to make a living.
Safety door for Bank of Pakistan!! Great build for Pakistan because the bank does not need much safety!! There isn't much cash inside 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂, but hats off to the workers they are doing great job.
27:59 ….They can’t possibly be happy with that as a finished product.
Wait… cant you just unbolt the front panel?
I think people are criticising and saying it’s backwards without considering what it’s final installation might be. It’s obvious the plane side of the door is the armoured side with a sheet of mild steel, a sheet of copper to stop attack from a gas axe and then reinforced concrete and finally another sheet of mild steel. That also puts the pins towards the back of the frame making it harder to reach them to cut or pull the door out of the frame. My suggestion is it could be a door allowing the strong room to be accessed from outside the bank or whatever the institution is. This maybe more convenient when bulk money is being added or removed via armoured car ect. In that case the way this door has been built would be suitable because from the outside you see nothing but a blank door and from inside you have the security of needing the people with the keys to open it. This would also prevent the hinges from attack. While certainly not a high security door by western standards it’s probably up to the job in its intended location. Just something to think about.
something dosenot make any sense rubbers can undo the bolts and open the door ....is this for panic room or what it dosent add up for me
You guys need to build a nice fabrication table so you don’t have to work on the floor all day.
This is a cultural aspect in this part of the world, virtuall all trades work this way.
@@felixcat9318 Well I'm glad I don't have to work and live their because I'd be building tables and wearing proper welding hood..
@@indianahoosier7113 You and me both!
@@felixcat9318 no doubt it is a 'cultural aspect' to throw away the disc guards all grinders come with too 🤣
It’s Pakistan, the employees are generally considered to be disposable 🤷♂️.
Goldfinger's nightmare! Amazing Job!
a magnificent job! very skilled people and thanks for showing us. cheers NZ
ahahha your comment is a joke or sarcasm, right? LOL
@@FabiFletcher no not sarcasm ,I meant what I said
@@davechapman7735 ... That is not a safe door. All you need is a spanner and an angle grinder to open that door. 30 minutes max.
@@dexterford8094 it will keep the honest people out. are you a professional burglar?
@@davechapman7735 ... If people were honest there would be no need for locked doors. No, I am not a burglar.
какое-то супер засекреченное предприятие!))))) Сейв из швеллера - нанотехнологии...двутавра - это вообще космос!! Пока делали...сколько интересно людей там погибло на производстве?)))
да кто их там считает, маляры уж точно раз в год меняются )
I build custom hidden doors with 5/16 steel plate, with a copper sheet, hard polyethylene rubber and 1/4" bitumen layer sandwich backer. The door and frame are filled with high density 8000 psi bridge mix concrete.
The locking bars are 1-1/4" steel rod, that are heat treated and hard chrome plated after cutting, machining and tapping. None of the above be done after hard chroming.
They aren't built like an old Diebold bank vault, but the locking mechanism uses a combination dial, star wheel crank and a glass relocking mechanism, as well as dual safety deposit box keys for added security. The keys AND the combination has to be used to open AND lock the door. It can be opened from the inside, for use as a safe room door, too.
Unlike the doors in this video, which I guarantee I could open in less than FIVE minutes.....TEN minutes, if I took my time. Considering where these are being made, they are for hiding yourself, not anymore great value. The welds themselves are pathetic, not to mention the thickness of the metal renders the concrete and poorly welded "rebar" cage inside the concrete. The banging on the concrete and the heat from stick welding probably rendered the already dry mix mortar into power.
What a joke. I doubt anyone who buys this is hiding any pallets of money from the Taliban. The bolts on the front... laughable. Even Grade 8 bolt heads could be sheared off with a cold chisel and 2lb sledge.
As for my doors, not one has ever been compromised and are hidden in such a way, they are undetectable from the outside... meaning being in the room, they can't be recognized.
Why do they put a copper sheet in the door?
@@Neontrifle I think copper sheet hinders from gas cutting torch to penetrate from the outside...
شغل متقن من اخوانا الباكستانيين لكن ينقصهم بعض الأعمال النهائيه وهو عملية العزل للحديد فهذا الحديد غير مقاوم للصدأ فكان يجب عليهم وضع الاساس بعد الانتهاء من كل عملية...وفقكم الله
I'm a safe & vault technician and a locksmith, This has traumatised me. I need someone to talk to. NOTHING that I've seen before in my entire career has offended me so much as watching this video.
Think of Danny Torrance (The Shining), in the hallway way with the twins. That's my face. ALL THE WAY THROUGH!. It was horrifying.
Not an AED in sight.
Is that going to be a problem sealing up wet cement? Seems drying and getting the moister out would be a priority.
I had an office safe that used a cement filling. The moisture escaped and condensed all over the stuff I had inside - moldy mess.
Для чего такая дверь, чтобы деньги из хранилища не сбежали что ли? Она же снаружи открывается обычным гаечным ключом.
да они тупые!20 болтов открутить и снять обшивку вот и замок!это у них понты...
translation; Why such a door so that the money from the vault does not escape or what? It opens from the outside with an ordinary wrench. 😀
@@poxren1 умный как ты только умеют болтать.... Лучше покажи как нужно если ты не болабол
I think part of any apprenticeship program in the trades (pipefitter, Ironworker, boilermaker, etc.) should include working with these guys for a couple three months. Maybe the rookie wouldn't learn much, but I guarantee he won't be wasting rod when he gets back.
Awesome work! I am a welder and fabricator in the US, love to have these guys come and work with me!
And you lose your job in a second.😁😁😁
@@Zodliness I agree with all the points you made about this.
@@felixcat9318 Don' t agree with him when everything he says is wrong, that is a safe room door that locks from the inside and as you can see the bolts are protected as well as the rest , maybe if clickbait had a higher IQ he would have understood this (but he assumed he was smarter than probably 30 people going from the people building this door, to the ones designing it to the manager, buisness owner, seller, and people that buy it).
@@Zodliness Surprising that after spending such a big amount of your life doing that job you can't even tell apart a safe room/panic room door from a vault door. You are so humble that you thought you were smarter than the factory owner, than the person that designed the door, than the person or company that sells the doors, than the buyers and their clients, you are so humble that you thought you were smarter than probably a coupe hundred people you never met. Don't criticise because you "assume" "think", it doesn't give of a good image of you. If I were you I would erase those comments as they are shameful.
@@Victor-ze3sd Going on the information provided by the channel whom documented the entire process, this is indeed a bank strongroom door!
Ridiculing others for correctly pointing out faults and describing the door as something other than what the documentary maker describes it as, and we must assume that he described it as what he was told it was by those he recorded making it, and what it was for is completely disengenuous!
If the channel owner states that the manufacturer has verified that it was the door to a safe room, then so be it, but until such time I accept that it is whst it is stated as being, a bank strongroom door.
With the current state of the US (2022), I need videos like this to make me appreciate what we do have here. Thanks for that!!
Just slightly better, but yeah better than this 😊
Классно 👍👍👍
Our Punjabi Brothers of West Punjab are very hard working and Skillful !!!!
Well done, I really enjoyed your build. I’m sure your client will be very happy.
Люди на видео настолько не понимают, что они делают, что я не мог удержаться и досмотреть до конца. Они видимо, до этого делали входные двери, поэтому вся защита и доступ к замкам - со стороны замков. Если грабителю жаль сил на взлом обычным ломом, можно потратить 15 минут времени, чтобы открутить болты по периметру и получить доступ к замкам.
Simple mechanism. Big door , no security system
And what about that safety flip-flops?
Сначала не чë не поняла а когда электрод загнутый увидела, ну тут стало сразу всё понятно!
Amazing ! In Pakistan all production make it hand Made not modern Machinery... I like this country
Интересный канал, пророческий, возможное будущее Европы!
I would have thought that you should wait til the concrete cures before finishing.
Wow only one worker in slippers this is great progress.
I wouldn't put my communion money in that safe!
i could say a lot but at least they aren't working on a dirt floor for a change. that's a positive step forward.
nice work and good job 👍🏻👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Grande bel lavoro, meriterebbero avere a disposizione attrezzature migliori per la realizzazione! Bravissimo il Mastro realizzatore.
Oui a coup de marteau pour enfoncer poignée d ouverture
Watching this after from curtis CEE..
Is miles away.
Uhmm- I give Ethan Hunt about 37 seconds to breach that amazingly manufactured bank strongroom door...
BTW- Are pole barns up to spec to hinge doors that heavy?
why build a security product...then go show how its made. this defeats the object as we all know how it was put together. so can easily take it apart to get inside..
Why the copper inserts?
I Like the Vintage Style of the building Progress and the Produkt. Go India, you are not like 50 years behind, you can be a superpower.
Did i miss something or was the reinforced concrete layer behind the locking mechanism? Almost like it was ment to keep people locked in vs locked out.
Well considering money is basically digital...and the workshop this door was made then yes, Amazing indeed. 😁
Great Work !!
I think they make it on the wrong mechanism, the outer mechanism should be inside the valut.
Or it may be the exit door of valut 🤣🤣
So, a half inch spanner is all you really need to get into this. Undo the bolts on the from plate and you have direct access to the whole locking mechanism
I know there's quality crafts men when I see safety pyjamas
No fibres in cement hermal resistance compounds?
No clamps to retain sqaurness of door or frame when welding as it could warp with heat buildup
No locking bolts top or bottom of door? Any anti pry protection?
I assume they painted bottom edge of door too lol
With basic tools not the worst ever door made not bad but I wouldn't trust it to protect owt really of value
Please correct me if I am wrong, but I would gather most of the steel y'all reuse is from salvaged ships?
seriously the bank which has this door is on at serious high security Risk 😂
The whole things just tacked together 😂
Good thing they're using their safety squints, glasses get in the way. As well, works boots are a pain too.
Gotta love a good safety toe slipper!