How to Remove Your Safe Door - Dye the Safe Guy

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  • čas přidán 2. 03. 2017
  • Here is a tutorial on how to remove your safe door from Dye the Safe Guy. Check our more safe tutorials on our website:
    www.safeandvaultstore.com
    Hi, Dye, The Safe Guy here today to talk to you about how to remove a door from safe. Why would you want to do that? We have a lot of do it yourself customers, and generally speaking, on a safe that's up to 500 pounds, maybe a little more, six, seven, 800 pounds, if you're a person that has some friends with strong backs, you could probably do the delivery inside of your house, after the safe is delivered to the curbside.
    This here is a Hayman safe that weighs about 230 pounds. General rule of thumb on safe doors, is they weigh one third of the safe weight. So this door is approximately 65 pounds. I'm 66 years old, I can still get the door off by myself.
    Safe doors are made in two parts. The top hinge is welded to the door. The bottom hinge is welded to the body. There's a pin that fills in between here, where they have machine holes that holds each hinge on, and then these bolts of course go behind the mainframe. So if they do cut the hinges off, they can't get the door open.
    So in order to remove a door from a 230 pounds safe or even a larger safe, you have to just move it to a 90 degree angle and then you lift it straight up. As you see here, it comes out and there's the pin. You see that pin? Okay, there's one on the bottom. And when you're done, you put the door back on.
    Now why is this a good thing to do? You lighten the load by one third. You set the door aside and then you and your buddy, hopefully you have rented a dolly at U-Haul or Home Depot, then you take the body, which weighs at this time about 140 pounds or 150 pounds, and you can handle that much easier.
    In just a minute here, I'm going to show you how to do it with say, a 900 pound safe. Okay, so here is a much larger safe, about four times heavier. This is an American Security CSC4520. It weighs right at 900 pounds, just below a half ton. As you can see, the hinges are two piece hinges, as they are on all burglar, fire safes with external hinges. There's a top and a bottom hinge, part of the hinge, as you can see.
    So again, we open the door to 90 degrees, and we're going to lift it straight up. This door is 300 pounds, the body is 600 pounds. For our do it yourself friends, we recommend that you rent from a national rental company, a commercial rental firm like United Rentals, a jib, this is called a jib. There's another bar that I don't have here, it's similar, it's called a Johnson bar.
    The purpose of these is you put a two by four or a four by four on them, whatever it takes, and you use this, you and your two buddies, use this with fulcrum leverage. Basically, one guy pulls up on it, it lifts it off, separates the two halves. Two guys are standing, one here, one there, they're holding the 300-pound door, 150 pounds per guy. And then they take it off and set it aside.
    Then you can move the body, which is the remaining 600 pounds. So our DIY friends, we love the people that buy from us, we sell over 6000 safes a year, and a lot of people want to do it themselves, but we want to tell you, we recommend that you hire a professional safe installation company. Sure, it's going to cost three, four, 500 bucks. I understand that DIY as a way to save money, but we want to recommend still that you hire a professional.
    However, if you want to do it yourself, we hope this video has been informative. Any other questions, give us a call at 800-207-2259. This is Dye, The Safe Guy saying thanks for viewing.

Komentáře • 27

  • @ggeiser3
    @ggeiser3 Před 3 lety +4

    Good vid. Thanks. Getting a Hayman 525 lbs.

  • @ggeiser3
    @ggeiser3 Před 3 lety +3

    Got my Hayman moved. It went surprisingly easy partially thanks to your video! Rented a trailer, plus a power stair lift dolly. Raised the door with a six foot 2x4 and off it came. Easy peasy. Then the 350 pound safe box was very manageable and it is sitting next to my desk now. Job done!

  • @NSPowerlifter
    @NSPowerlifter Před 2 lety

    Thank you ! Just the info I needed

  • @alo300wsmsako7
    @alo300wsmsako7 Před 2 lety +1

    yup agree I learned the hard way. Next time I buy a safe or move out I rather hire a professional it was no easy task moving an 800 lb safe

  • @Whateva67
    @Whateva67 Před 6 lety +2

    Love the old cannon ball safe in the backroom,would like to find one some day

    • @ggeiser3
      @ggeiser3 Před 3 lety

      Are you talking about a money chest? Has round door not rectangular like a safe. Real thick door and heavy as a rock. I have a small money chest which is 350 pounds. Rock solid and close to impossible to break in. They place large money chests inside some bank vaults where high value items are kept. The big ones are all rounded with no corners. Nothing to pry open that way. Really big ones require a hand crank to open the door after working the combination.

  • @CScottWeatherly
    @CScottWeatherly Před 2 lety

    Thank you!!

  • @prometheus33759
    @prometheus33759 Před rokem

    I have a floor safe with LaGard digital lock which is embedded in the slab in my home in Florida. Over the years of floods in my area, the contents of my safe have been soaked and ruined by water penetration from a continuous high water table level, and the safe itself has become somewhat rusted. I quit using the safe for about 6 years after removing the batteries. Now when I need to retrieve something from the safe, the keypad no longer responds after installing new batteries. What is the best way to destroy and remove the door, to gain entry? I have pictures, if that helps.

  • @likejury
    @likejury Před 5 měsíci +1

    What about safes with internal hinges?

  • @mcef9117
    @mcef9117 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you!!!!

  • @ZZTful
    @ZZTful Před 4 měsíci

    what about a floor jack for cars for the door

  • @romeoquik
    @romeoquik Před 5 lety

    Can the door still be open if you cut the hinges and the corners of the safe where the I side hinges are?

  • @Cage12F20
    @Cage12F20 Před 4 lety +2

    Good video, however instead of only talking, I'd like to have seen the door lifted and everything that would have come after; loss of grip or balance and then compensating. Slowly lowering it down. Then putting it back up & back on. Yet, good video, still.

  • @willhudson6220
    @willhudson6220 Před 5 lety

    I’m having trouble getting the door back on

    • @LiveFreeR_Die
      @LiveFreeR_Die Před 3 lety

      Watch other video. Another victim of CZcams

  • @LiveFreeR_Die
    @LiveFreeR_Die Před 3 lety

    I m New Jersey, if someone wants a safe. I want to get rid of it?

  • @sefakram
    @sefakram Před 4 lety +1

    Any idea we're I can buy the tool to remove the door and the safe? Cheers.

    • @rogelioharog
      @rogelioharog Před 4 lety +3

      You can use a regular dolly to remove de door. I have a amsec safe 800 pounds, and that’s how I remove the door few times.

    • @sefakram
      @sefakram Před 4 lety

      @@rogelioharog thank you for your reply.

    • @rogelioharog
      @rogelioharog Před 4 lety

      sefakram 👍🏽

  • @brettcall6
    @brettcall6 Před 4 lety +5

    My race car jack would work better.

  • @rushrider800
    @rushrider800 Před 3 lety +1

    Didn't show me much

  • @tommyt8798
    @tommyt8798 Před 2 lety

    General rule of thumb Dye is not a good one. I own a Gardall 1818-2. Weighs 392. As for the door and rule of thumb try 48 pounds for door. This is not even remotely close to 1/3 of safe weight.