OK so moved in ‘properly’ to my new house and put the gun cabinet in. Problem is it’s a 70’s Barratt house so theres not a straight wall in the thing! :roll: Cabinet is flush with the solid wall its mounted to, but there’s a gap down the back and side;
Now, as anyone with a grasp on reality knows, even if the safe was perfectly flush up to the wall a determined thief could easily hammer a jemmy into the wall to get it behind the cabinet to lever it off. However, we’re dealing with “I’ve read the ‘rule-book’” PSCOs here so what are you suggestions to fill in the gaps? I was thinking of just putting some wooden batons/beading around the outer edge – Suggestions?
Batten/beading round the edge will be easily removed
Remove cabinet from wall, cut a cabinet sized piece of 12mm marine ply sheet with some thin scribed battens behind it and screw to the to the wall with as many screws as you can before squirting some expanding form into the gap. Then fix the cabinet through the board to the wall and also fix to the floor. Possibly add some extra fixings to the back. That would make it even harder to remove.
An alternative - find a local sheet metal company and get some 10 or 12 Gauge stainless steel in a 20x40 right angle, maybe welded together to form a single piece all round cover for the gap but it would need to bend. Fit this with the wall with the flats behind the cabinet so that the countersunk screws cannot be accessed.
"The trouble with quotes on the internet is that it's difficult to discern whether or not they are genuine." - Abraham Lincoln
Why did kamikaze pilots wear helmets?
God loves stupid people, that is why he made so many of them.
Umm, any other suggestions that won't cost £££ and i can do tonight?? :lol:
Thanks for the suggestions but as the wall behind the safe is a simple plasterboard wall it could simply be chopped out.
To be honest i've seen many gun cabinets that are just bolted to an open wall or inside an MDF cabinet that would offer no realistic protection (as this cabinet was previously) so i think i'm worrying about nothing. Any lever put behind the cabinet would tear through the plasterboard before exerting any pressure on the cabinet
EDIT: its fixed from the side BTW and is flush on that wall
Get some 20x20 Stainless steel angle - - 16g or so. Tap part way behind and then squirt in some contact adhesive, gripfill or silicon sealant then tap fully home ensuring it is against the wall.
"The trouble with quotes on the internet is that it's difficult to discern whether or not they are genuine." - Abraham Lincoln
Why did kamikaze pilots wear helmets?
God loves stupid people, that is why he made so many of them.
I need to be able to remove the cabinet without destroying the wall so i think sticking angle iron onto the back of the safe would be the best option so far
Blackstuff wrote:I need to be able to remove the cabinet without destroying the wall so i think sticking angle iron onto the back of the safe would be the best option so far
It will just need a small bead down the internal angle. Find a local sheet metal company and get them to bend it - probably cheaper than a DIY shed.
"The trouble with quotes on the internet is that it's difficult to discern whether or not they are genuine." - Abraham Lincoln
Why did kamikaze pilots wear helmets?
God loves stupid people, that is why he made so many of them.
The standard of fixings already, is the cabinet solid against the wall and floor? If you give it a good tug, does it move? If not, fill the gap with decorators caulk and paint it the same colour as the wall.
In 1978 I was told by my grand dad that the secret to rifle accuracy is, a quality bullet, fired down a quality barrel..... How has that changed?
Guns dont kill people. Dads with pretty Daughters do...!
Yes its 10mm rawl plugged (sleeved bolts*) to the solid wall and is flush against it. There are 10mm screws into the floorboards and i also put in some plugs through the back of the safe into the plasterboard so if someone did try to pry it basically the hold back wall of the room and floor would come down on them! Theres no movement on the cabinet whatsoever