If you’re in the market to buy a vault door for your safe room, there are a lot of options and features to consider. What are the most important features you're looking for?
- Ease of access
- Security
- Fire protection
- Price
If you asked an expert, you might get the following list of the four most important features you need to look for when buying an effective vault door. We are going to break it down for you to help you make sure you purchase the perfect option for you and the protection of your firearms.
Let’s take a closer look at each of these in turn, and discuss why you should consider Liberty Safe’s vault doors for your home.
Table of Contents
- The importance of thick steel construction in your vault or safe door.
- Must haves: Heavy-duty, hardened steel locking bolts, and bars.
- Why solid fire protection is vital for a vault door.
- The innovative (and potentially lifesaving) internal lockout mechanism.
- Liberty Safe has the right vault door for you.
- Other factors to consider for a home safe room or vault.
The importance of thick steel construction in your vault or safe door
The entire point of installing a vault door is you need your stuff protected and secure behind a barrier that is extremely difficult and time-consuming to penetrate. In this sense, vault doors are like sumo wrestlers—the heavier, the better.
That’s because a heavier door means thicker steel and the last thing you want in a moment of crisis is a vault door made of thin, flimsy steel. If you’re buying a door with an internal lockout mechanism to create a panic room, the thickness of the steel is especially important. You want something that’s better able to stop an attack. Don’t even consider any vault door that isn’t constructed from at least a quarter-inch thick steel plate. But again… the thicker the better.
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Of course, nothing is completely impenetrable. With enough time and the right tools, a determined attacker will be able to defeat any safe or vault door. But if a thief or attacker decides to take the time to try to drill or burn or pound through your vault door, you want to make it as difficult and as time-consuming as possible. The longer it takes, the better chance you have of the attacker getting frustrated, giving up, and leaving, or being caught in the act by law enforcement because it’s taking so long (and making so much noise) for those trying to get through your door.
If you’re going through the trouble and expense of having a vault door installed, now is not the time to skimp on the thickness and quality of the steel. Get the best and thickest steel available.
Must haves: Heavy-duty, hardened steel locking bolts, and bars
We’ve talked about why thick doors are a must, but even the thickest of doors are only as good as the bolts or bars that keep it shut. That makes sense, right? If you have a 2-foot-thick steel door but it can be pried open using a 2x4 because your locking bolts are flimsy, the thickness of the steel really didn’t matter, did it?
You need locking bars/bolts made from the thickest, heaviest, strongest steel construction. Traditional locking bolts are only 1 inch diameter, but you’ll want better protection than that. At Liberty Safe, our doors are made using our exclusive military-style locking bars. These solid bars are made from a single piece of steel, rather than being riveted to an angle bar like traditional bolts (which are easily defeated by determined pry or impact attacks).
As a result of thick steel doors combined with our hardened, military-style locking bars, Liberty Safe vault doors are virtually impossible to pry open.
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Liberty Safes Military Style Locking Bars
Why solid fire protection is vital for a vault door
You may be surprised to learn that not every safe room is designed with fire protection in mind. However, this is a huge oversight, even if your safe/vault room is constructed of hardened, reinforced concrete (see below). If you want to protect your valuable possessions from roasting like marshmallows in an intense house fire, you’ll need a safe room that’s more than just sheetrock and studs. The same goes for your vault door—it needs serious fire protection because it’s the first line of defense when it comes to protecting your vault room’s contents from fire and heat.
There are three key factors in a vault door’s fire protection: the insulation, the steel, and the seal. We’ve already covered how thicker steel is better when it comes to a vault door, and the same principle applies here. The thicker the steel and the thicker the door, the longer it takes for the intense heat of a house fire to make its way through.
This brings us to the second vital factor of an effective fire-resistant vault door: insulation.
The insulation layer/s in a vault door (ideally fire-rated gypsum board, known as fireboard) helps prevent heat from entering the room by resisting both conduction and convection.
Third, a good vault door should also come with a strip of fire seal that runs around the edge. A good fire seal expands several times its size when exposed to extreme heat, filling the door jamb and sealing it shut. This helps keep both heat and smoke out. And as anyone who has dealt with a house fire knows, the smoke can be as deadly and damaging to valuable as the actual fire.
So, if you pick a door that has several layers of industry-rated fireboard and a quality fire seal (such as a Palusol seal), you’ll dramatically improve your safe room’s fire resistance.
To be clear: we’re talking here about keeping your valuables safe in a fire. You should never try to shelter in your safe room during a fire. You should get everyone out of the building as soon as possible.
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The innovative (and potentially lifesaving) Internal Lockout Mechanism
Our final must-have feature for your vault door is something that you may not have even considered or known existed: an internal lockout mechanism. This is a key feature for the vault or safe rooms that you intend to use as a potential “panic room.” A lockout mechanism allows you to make it impossible to open the vault door from the outside.
It works like this—you enter your safe room, close the door and lock it, then pull a lever or engage a mechanism that disables the external dial or keypad. This internal lockout mechanism makes it impossible to unlock the door from the outside.
With this feature on your vault door, even someone who knows the combination to the door will be unable to unlock it from the outside.
How to Create a Safe Room With Your Vault Door
Liberty Safe has the right vault door for you
So there you have it, the top four features of quality vault doors. (We’ll go over some other factors you should consider below.) Liberty Safe has a wide selection of USA-made vault doors for every budget and every need. Click to check out Liberty Safe’s vault doors.
Other factors to consider for a home safe room or vault
As we mentioned above, the actual door is just one aspect of a safe and effective vault room. The area around the door and the construction of the room itself is equally important. Here are some factors you should consider when designing your home’s vault, safe room, or panic room.
Hardened, reinforced concrete walls are a solid choice
There are other materials suitable for vault construction, but the most practical is likely to have your home’s vault room constructed/poured during your initial home construction, with walls, floor, and ceiling made as thick as possible from hardened, steel-reinforced concrete. This is within the realm of most construction contractors and makes for a very secure space when paired with a proper vault door.
Yes, with enough time and the right tools, you can get through hardened, steel-reinforced concrete, but the process will be noisy and difficult, and time-consuming, and that’s the point. You want to make it so difficult and time-consuming that bad actors will choose somewhere else to go.
Humidity control and drainage considerations for your vault room
If you know anything about enclosed concrete spaces in parts of the world where there’s a lot of humidity in the air, you know about mold, mildew, and moisture damage. All gun safes should be humidity-controlled, and your home’s vault room is no exception.
It would be tragic for you to store all of your most valuable possessions in your vault room, only to return after a few weeks or months to find them irreparably damaged by the effects of humidity.
So make sure you have a plan for dealing with moisture in the air, such as a dehumidifier with a redundant power supply, and a way for dealing with water that may result from flooding (or from the dehumidifier itself), such as a proper drain system and sump pump if necessary. It’s also a good idea to keep any valuables up off of the floor in case of some flooding.
Do you need an emergency exit from your vault room?
This is an area where your individual considerations will need to take precedence, but if you plan on using your vault as a panic room, you should consult with a specialist and make sure you have all the safety and technical aspects of the panic room worked out fully.
There may be situations where you might consider installing a hidden emergency exit portal or ladder out of your vault, but remember, any way out is also a potential way in, so be extra careful about the security and be careful who you let know about your panic room.
Again, this is something about which you should consult with a licensed and knowledgeable professional.
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