@@cryptopimp5855 Fair question. Not the same leather as the 1878, no. Honestly, it comes down to American made vs overseas made. As most customers say “you can just feel the difference.”
@@PortugueseDiesel They absolutely can stay on. They’re basically the “pallet”, but we’ve had plenty of customers request we leave them on. They simply unscrew if you don’t want them.
@@aaronhewitt8803 Great question. As a rule of understanding heat rises. Fire is fueled by oxygen, so it’s constantly reaching up to gather more. The holes are typically drilled/cut roughly 7” off the floor, so there not a lot of oxygen to fuel a fire in that area and a closed safe doesn’t offer much oxygen inside. As a fire surrounds the safe gets hotter and it wants to expand, if anything it begins to expel the pressure. While pushing pressure out air can’t come in.
Give the AMSEC RF series an episode!
@@NorCalSlotgunner Noted! Thanks for watching.
Is it the same leather that the 1878 has? I notice both are 11 gauge steel...why is 1878 so much more money.
@@cryptopimp5855 Fair question. Not the same leather as the 1878, no. Honestly, it comes down to American made vs overseas made. As most customers say “you can just feel the difference.”
@A1LocksmithofTexas ohhh so rawhide is not american made? Cause whatever I decide on...i want american made
@@cryptopimp5855 That’s correct. I get that and for others it’s not as important as budget. Hence so many safe model options.
@@A1LocksmithofTexas very cool. I like your style
@@cryptopimp5855 Appreciate you watching!
Do/can those pedestals stay on the safe one you have it home?
@@PortugueseDiesel They absolutely can stay on. They’re basically the “pallet”, but we’ve had plenty of customers request we leave them on. They simply unscrew if you don’t want them.
Thanks!
@@A1LocksmithofTexaswouldn’t the holes on them and the back of safe affect the fire part of it?
@@aaronhewitt8803 Great question. As a rule of understanding heat rises. Fire is fueled by oxygen, so it’s constantly reaching up to gather more. The holes are typically drilled/cut roughly 7” off the floor, so there not a lot of oxygen to fuel a fire in that area and a closed safe doesn’t offer much oxygen inside. As a fire surrounds the safe gets hotter and it wants to expand, if anything it begins to expel the pressure. While pushing pressure out air can’t come in.
@@A1LocksmithofTexas ah makes sense. Appreciate it
Whoa... I'm a clean safe shopper.. ok? 😂
@@UnityRipz Haha, understood