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January 2nd, 2023, 05:37 PM
#21
Has too much time on their hands
Originally Posted by
Big Tuna
Interesting. I wouldn't have thought of this. That was going to be the plan. Will put a coat of think on this.
Some vapour barrier material and then a custom made 2 to 4 inch tall solid base of some kind.
That's how mine is done. Wood base is 4x4 pressure treated. Still lagged to the floor - just need to use slightly longer anchors. Mine is in a corner as well so also lagged to concrete walls on two sides. Going down the stairs was not really that hard. Good dolly with me, 2 sons and a friend. I picked it up in the truck to save delivery charge. They put it in the truck at the store and we took it from there.
Basement has been finished since than. It is now inside a large closet.
Last edited by Species8472; January 2nd, 2023 at 05:39 PM.
The wilderness is not a stadium where I satisfy my ambition to achieve, it is the cathedral where I worship.
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January 2nd, 2023 05:37 PM
# ADS
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January 2nd, 2023, 05:52 PM
#22
Originally Posted by
sabmgb
my basement is damp and my gun cabinets are rusting on the bottom. I guess if no moisture problem, directly on the floor would be better.
I have a walkout basement and a dehumidifier. So far no rust.
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January 2nd, 2023, 07:03 PM
#23
As much as i was always wondering about what happens with heavy load of a gun safe on a 2x8-2x10 joists and the floor ,i was not less curious why one would place a gun cabinet in any basement?
Maybe walkout seems reasonable-but basements are the lowest point in the house.If one has so much money invested in guns(and an expensive safe)any issue will be going to bite........
Backed up sewage,flood from outside,broken sump pump,neighbours storm water.......you name it.
Dehumidifiers can crap out too,and while in the winter a furnace /stove may help-there is only 6 months of heating season in a year.
I heard on this very Forum,many years ago-that the oldtimers kept their guns in the basement -between joists.That made perfect sense-the warmest(driest)place in the basement, and the highest too.
If there will be ever water up to the joists,the guns stored there will be the least concern.
To each their own.
Last edited by gbk; January 2nd, 2023 at 07:06 PM.
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January 2nd, 2023, 07:33 PM
#24
In the case of my house 3 bedrooms up stairs, kitchen, bathroom and the tv room which has a 6 ft x 4 ft bay window. I would not want anyone to easily see I have a gun safe. In my basement there are many places where I could put it out of site out of mind.
Originally Posted by
gbk
As much as i was always wondering about what happens with heavy load of a gun safe on a 2x8-2x10 joists and the floor ,i was not less curious why one would place a gun cabinet in any basement?
Maybe walkout seems reasonable-but basements are the lowest point in the house.If one has so much money invested in guns(and an expensive safe)any issue will be going to bite........
Backed up sewage,flood from outside,broken sump pump,neighbours storm water.......you name it.
Dehumidifiers can crap out too,and while in the winter a furnace /stove may help-there is only 6 months of heating season in a year.
I heard on this very Forum,many years ago-that the oldtimers kept their guns in the basement -between joists.That made perfect sense-the warmest(driest)place in the basement, and the highest too.
If there will be ever water up to the joists,the guns stored there will be the least concern.
To each their own.
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January 2nd, 2023, 08:12 PM
#25
Originally Posted by
greatwhite
In the case of my house 3 bedrooms up stairs, kitchen, bathroom and the tv room which has a 6 ft x 4 ft bay window. I would not want anyone to easily see I have a gun safe. In my basement there are many places where I could put it out of site out of mind.
Same with me. Lots more room in the basement. Houses come in different shapes and sizes. Sewage back ups aren't a worry for us and should there ever be a flood high enough to threaten my gun safe it will be on the news.
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October 16th, 2024, 04:02 AM
#26
Moving a big gun safe like that is tough, especially since it's heavy and hard to lift. You’d probably need 4-5 strong people to get an 850-pound safe through a door, even with just one step. Make sure to check with Cabela’s if that $300 covers bringing it into your house—usually, they just drop it in your garage or driveway.
Last edited by finsfurfeathers; October 22nd, 2024 at 01:30 PM.
Reason: spam link removed
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October 25th, 2024, 07:26 PM
#27
This^ I know a couple people who live close to me all houses got broken into, the one place none of them went to rob stuff? The basement, people don't associate basements with expensive stuff, if you think about it, people always think to go upstairs to the bedrooms to look for jewelry cash etc.
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