You can read the rest (and see the pics!) here:Liberty Safes, A Review Like No Other…
Posted by Barron
So those that are friends with me on Facebook may be familiar with a recent predicament that had unbelievable timing, and not in the good way. I have a series of lessons that many of you can learn from as well as a detailed experience of the warranty system behind Liberty Safes and S&G locks.
First let me detail what I had and what happened. Here is my safe pre-issues.
(pic)
That is a 50 CF Liberty Presidential safe. It has an S&G Titan Direct Drive lock. I could go into details now about the different security mechanisms but I will get to that a bit later. The way the direct drive works is you punch in the code, a solenoid fires, at which point you can rotate the outer dial unlocking the bolt.
As my wife and I were packing up the house for the first weekend of the big move and she discovered a few items she needed to put in the safe. She went out to the safe and then came and found me a couple of minutes later, “I think I forgot the combo she said.” Interesting, I’ll go and try. I walk out to the safe, punch in the code, no click, nothing, 5 seconds later it beeps as if it relocked. Odd, try it again, same thing. Try leaning on the door, doing everything in the list of stuff to do to get the safe open on their website. No joy, further I know it’s the right code because I punch in a wrong one as a test, I get immediate feedback.
So, we are on a time-table and we figure we’ll call Liberty next week and schedule an appointment with a locksmith and drive back out for it. Well folks, here’s a customer service fail and a lesson for you all if you ever find yourself needing to call Liberty.
First Lesson:
Don’t try to start a support chain by email. I sent an email to their support contact and NEVER heard back. We turned around and called 24 hours later.
Second Lesson:
Have your safe’s serial number on hand. It is on the packet of information that comes with the safe as well as is on the inside of the door. Do NOT count on registering your safe to save you. I figured they could look my safe up as I had registered it, they could not. Pissed barely begins to describe my attitude as I had to drive 5.5 hours back to the redoubt in the wheat field, hoping I could find the packet of safe info with the serial number on it. Did I mention I was in the middle of moving and had packed up a decent chunk of my office? Luckily I had not moved that box yet and was able to find it. I called Liberty and everything quickly went along changing my attitude from pissed off to mildly annoyed. It was Thursday and the locksmith will be out on Saturday.
Getting into the safe:
(pic)
The lock smith arrives Saturday morning and takes one look at the safe and says, “Well shit! That’s not the lock they told me was on there.” We take the dial off and try a new one. We bang on the door with a mallet trying to make sure nothing is stuck. Alas, my thoughts were correct. We get to drill my safe and they gave him the wrong lock type.
This has numerous impacts on things like drill points and design of operation. He calls a buddy of his and gets the info he needs and we set to work.
So behind this steel door are numerous traps and issues that can cause problems for people trying to break into a safe. What kind of traps? Ball bearings are the most notorious of the bunch. What do they do to drill bits I hear you ask?
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