Forgot how to dial the combination on that old safe? Think you got the right numbers but the handle is stuck? What safe should you buy? Ask your safe questions here!
Forum rules
You are posting this in This Old Safe, a public area of the forum.
Safe manipulation discussion is allowed, but safe drilling or other destructive entry is only allowed in the Advanced - Safes and Safe Locks area.
If you are a guest of the forum and have a safe you need to open, but you do not have the combination, we cannot tell you how or where to drill it.
by 30HARRY » 29 Nov 2017 15:29
I have drilled this safe due to a defective electronic lock/keypad and I now have a question for a more experienced locksmith. The three hard plates in front of the lock are mounted in a pocket that is welded to the inside of the door and the lock then mounts on this pocket. My question is "are these hard plates replaceable"? Or can they be rotated inside the pocket in order to present a new clean hard surface to the next potential  drilling? The problem is that the "pocket" is welded on all four sides so I can't get to the plates easily to determine what can be done with them. Since my drill point was slightly below and to the left of the center of the plates, assuming the plates can be rotated or "flipped" is to use an angle grinder to grind off the top edge of the "pocket" and then either flip the plates 180 degrees vertically or horizontally and then plug the hole in the door. Any guidance would be greatly appreciated. Harry
-
30HARRY
-
- Posts: 4
- Joined: 29 Nov 2017 15:12
by Squelchtone » 29 Nov 2017 17:26
Hi,
Sounds like you're on the right path with rotating the plates. Would you be able to share a well lit photo of the welds and the pocket construction? (upload them to your favorite online photo hosting site and then copy/paste the link to here)
Thanks Squelchtone
-

Squelchtone
- Site Admin
-
- Posts: 11307
- Joined: 11 May 2006 0:41
- Location: right behind you.
by 30HARRY » 29 Nov 2017 17:44
It looks like I can get the top of the pocket off without too much trouble but the question is, "is it a waste of time/effort"? Here I have the new lock already mounted but I can take it off easily if the plates are removable/replaceable/rotatable. 
-
30HARRY
-
- Posts: 4
- Joined: 29 Nov 2017 15:12
by GWiens2001 » 29 Nov 2017 18:31
Does it look like the drilled hole would be in a different place if the plates were rotated? Am assuming the spindle goes through the hard plate. If so, would you need to re-drill the hardplate for the spindle?
Gordon
Just when you finally think you have learned it all, that is when you learn that you don't know anything yet.
-

GWiens2001
- Site Admin
-
- Posts: 7550
- Joined: 3 Sep 2012 16:24
- Location: Arizona, United States
by billdeserthills » 29 Nov 2017 19:15
Just bash a taper pin into the hole and mount the new lock over the hole if you really want you can cut the taper pin in two and put a ball bearing in the middle
-
billdeserthills
-
- Posts: 3827
- Joined: 19 Mar 2014 21:11
- Location: Arizona
by Raymond » 29 Nov 2017 22:00
Rotating the plates is a legitimate action. So is just plugging the hole and getting away quickly. I do not remember the brand name but one safe I worked on had a screw threaded through the back layer of the pocket that pressed the plates up against the front layer. Loosening the screw allowed the plates to be removed and rotated and replaced and then tightened back down. While the plates are out of the way repair the holes in the case.
I saw one repair where a short, hardened, sheet metal screw was put into the holes of two plates, point facing out, and then the plates were slipped back in. The front was then filled with JB-Weld. (Try drilling onto the point of a screw.)
Your method of repair can 1. Make the next drill easier. 2. Make the next drill harder. 3. Make you wonder why you made the job so difficult if you have to drill it again.
Nothing is foolproof to a talented fool. Wisdom is not just in determining how to do something, but also includes determining whether it should be done at all.
-
Raymond
-
- Posts: 1357
- Joined: 18 Jan 2004 23:34
- Location: Far West Texas
by 30HARRY » 29 Nov 2017 23:19
Raymond wrote:Rotating the plates is a legitimate action. So is just plugging the hole and getting away quickly. I do not remember the brand name but one safe I worked on had a screw threaded through the back layer of the pocket that pressed the plates up against the front layer. Loosening the screw allowed the plates to be removed and rotated and replaced and then tightened back down. While the plates are out of the way repair the holes in the case.
I saw one repair where a short, hardened, sheet metal screw was put into the holes of two plates, point facing out, and then the plates were slipped back in. The front was then filled with JB-Weld. (Try drilling onto the point of a screw.)
Your method of repair can 1. Make the next drill easier. 2. Make the next drill harder. 3. Make you wonder why you made the job so difficult if you have to drill it again.
I guess I'm just overthinking the problem. If I make it too hard to ever drill again, if needed, then the safe could be useless when it is opened. Flipping the plates just seems like the easiest method to put it back in "like new" condition. The easiest way to quit would be just to JB weld a drill bit in there. Drilling into a drill bit would be pretty hard. I may just do this. Have you actually seen the plates removed from a safe? I wonder why Cannon didn't just leave the top off the "pocket" so a person could EASILY flip or rotate the plates after drilling. Doing nothing just leaves the safe that much easier to open in the future with the hole through the door and plates. Thanks for the response. Harry
-
30HARRY
-
- Posts: 4
- Joined: 29 Nov 2017 15:12
by Squelchtone » 30 Nov 2017 0:48
30HARRY wrote: I wonder why Cannon didn't just leave the top off the "pocket" so a person could EASILY flip or rotate the plates after drilling.
If I were a bad guy, and knew this of the construction detail, I could tip the safe over if it isn't bolted down and hopefully spill the plates out, then drill without having to bother to penetrate hardplate, but most bad guys aren't that savvy, they'll use a crowbar on the door or bash on the dial with a hammer or try to cut the hinges off which we know doesn't get you into a safe. Squelchtone
-

Squelchtone
- Site Admin
-
- Posts: 11307
- Joined: 11 May 2006 0:41
- Location: right behind you.
by cledry » 30 Nov 2017 18:07
Squelchtone wrote:30HARRY wrote: I wonder why Cannon didn't just leave the top off the "pocket" so a person could EASILY flip or rotate the plates after drilling.
If I were a bad guy, and knew this of the construction detail, I could tip the safe over if it isn't bolted down and hopefully spill the plates out, then drill without having to bother to penetrate hardplate, but most bad guys aren't that savvy, they'll use a crowbar on the door or bash on the dial with a hammer or try to cut the hinges off which we know doesn't get you into a safe. Squelchtone
The spindle would prevent that though. Even an electronic lock the wire would prevent it.
Jim
-

cledry
-
- Posts: 2836
- Joined: 7 Mar 2009 23:29
- Location: Orlando
-
by Squelchtone » 30 Nov 2017 22:06
cledry wrote:Squelchtone wrote:30HARRY wrote: I wonder why Cannon didn't just leave the top off the "pocket" so a person could EASILY flip or rotate the plates after drilling.
If I were a bad guy, and knew this of the construction detail, I could tip the safe over if it isn't bolted down and hopefully spill the plates out, then drill without having to bother to penetrate hardplate, but most bad guys aren't that savvy, they'll use a crowbar on the door or bash on the dial with a hammer or try to cut the hinges off which we know doesn't get you into a safe. Squelchtone
The spindle would prevent that though. Even an electronic lock the wire would prevent it.
Lol. Foiled my perfect plan!
-

Squelchtone
- Site Admin
-
- Posts: 11307
- Joined: 11 May 2006 0:41
- Location: right behind you.
by 30HARRY » 1 Dec 2017 0:44
The spindle would prevent that though. Even an electronic lock the wire would prevent it. Lol. Foiled my perfect plan!
Let's just face it, you wouldn't make a very good bad guy. 
-
30HARRY
-
- Posts: 4
- Joined: 29 Nov 2017 15:12
Return to This Old Safe
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 3 guests
|