And I'm still waiting for any Amsec video of any attack on their safe. Oh that's right I forgot, they've got better things to do, like sell safes.
In business almost 70 years, 60,000 safes a year, 150,000 square feet worth of manufacturing facility, 400 employees, 9 different UL certifications, 1,200 dealers nationwide, sales of between $100,000,000 and $500,000,000 (a year), and 0 videos of how to burglarize a safe.
I wouldn't hold your breath, I don't think it's going to happen.
It was a "private" video for members of this forum. I'm not worried that you, or any other member of this forum is going to try to break into anyone's safe. Of course execpt of A1abdj.
Except anybody with the ability to use Google can find this site, this discussion, and that link. They also mentioned putting a newer and improved video directly on their website.
Are you saying four Amsecs haven't been attacked or in a fire??? Perhaps Amsec doesn't want to broadcast to the whole how their safes faired when put to the test?
I can only tell you what I have seen, and what I can find. I haven't seen any, and I can't find any. Doesn't mean it doesn't happen, but surely one would think that somebody that suffered a bad experience would mention it somewhere online.
Look at all the effort you make to disparage their safes, and you don't even own one. Surely somebody who suffered an actual loss would mention it somewhere.
Well a thought comes to mind, maybe that's why the AMSEC BF is so willing to pay all costs to replace their safes in a burglary or fire. Maybe it's to get them out of view as quickly as possible so photos don't start floating around that their safes aren't performing as advertised.
AMSEC only started doing this because every other gun safe manufacturer already was.
why wouldn't they pay for other mechanical defects in their safe after a year?
Because the industry standard when it comes to safe warranties is 1 year, and any mechanical defect will appear long before then.
It depends, if you are below the yield strength then you are relying on metal fatigue so in that case 100,000 cycles maybe? I'm not saying it will in this case, that welder could swing a fire ax pretty hard.
So I would have to hit 7 gauge steel with a fire axe 100,000 times to get it to puncture?
I think you need to recheck your math.