Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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I have a new constuction house in the Village of Lake Denham. I am hoping to bolt down a small Sentry safe in the one of the bedrooms using something like Red Hat fastners or Tapicon bolts. In researching, I ran across a couple of questions I am hoping someone will have insight on.
Does anyone know if the Villages uses normal rebar based concrete slabs, or have they gone to Post Tensioned Concrete? Clearly it would be a disaster to drill into an Pre Tensioned cable, so am very concerned there. I would only need to drill at most 1.5 to 2 inches deep, so not too worried about plumbing etc that should be deeper, but from research it looks like tension cables can be any depth. For anyone that has installed a safe, any insights on where and how you intstalled yours? I tried searching, but using the word "safe" got me anything from AEDs, golf cars, restaurants, etc. Thanks in advance. |
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#2
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As I recall, the only rebar is in the footers generally around the perimeter of the house, but possibly also in the location of any load bearing interior walls. The floor has a steel grid imbedded. Now if you want the exact details, you should be able to get your actual house plans from the local building department these have all of the details on the house. I was able to get the complete set for our house (16 pages) from Sumter County at no cost several years ago.
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Pennsylvania, for 60+ years, most recently, Allentown, now TV. ![]() |
#3
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Would a metal detector tell you what is down there?
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#4
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Possibly, but it would not know the difference between metal screening (6" by 6" or so) from 1/2 inch rebar, and I doubt it would be accurate enough. In any case since the op mentioned screws less than 2 inches they will probably not hit anything.
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Pennsylvania, for 60+ years, most recently, Allentown, now TV. ![]() |
#5
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No screen and minimal rebar in the floors, they typically pour a single slab, including the garage floor, on top of plastic sitting on a layer of clay.
The concrete includes granite aggregate which is much stronger than limestone and allows then to start building block walls a couple of days after pouring the slab. A hammer drill and concrete lag bolts can be used secure the safe. There are water and sewer lines under the slab so don't drill more than 4" deep. Last edited by Altavia; 03-31-2024 at 09:01 PM. |
#6
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I stand corrected, I pulled up my house plans (I was sure there was steel mesh in the floor), there is NO steel mesh in the floor, minimum floor thickness is 4 inches, 3000PSI concrete, and apparently just some additional attachments for load bearing interior walls.
So to the OP, go ahead and drill away for your safe.
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Pennsylvania, for 60+ years, most recently, Allentown, now TV. ![]() |
#7
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No rebar in floors.
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Identifying as Mr. Helpful |
#8
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Safes meant for valuables like jewelry generally aren’t much help in fires or floods. Often unattached safes can be lifted into a vehicle and opened in privacy elsewhere, even sizable gun safes. A small safe screwed into a concrete slab with a couple bolts can often be broken loose in a few seconds with a hundred dollar hammer drill from Harbor Freight or a six foot pry par and a sledge hammer. However, any of these might offer some security against a snatch-and-grab sneak thief who doesn’t carry any tools except maybe a small crow bar and wants to be in and out in five minutes. |
#9
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#10
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Not the smartest move, Sentry ( they are not safes ) can be opened with a can opener === I sold them for years in my Locksmith shop
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#11
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Why not just use epoxy glue if it is a small safe in the closet. Also installs a wireless alarm system like Simply Safe or one of the others! The Villages is a fairly safe place to live. If someone does break in they are looking for a quick grab and exit. I don’t know of anyone who has had their safe broken into of stolen.
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#12
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So y'all sold junk ?
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#13
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Get a larger heavy real safe and that way you have longer fire protection as well as storage for papers, valuables, cash, etc. It would take at least 3 strong men and a large dolly to remove it. Better yet get a good monitored security system or a bank lock box.
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#14
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meh, if the safe is for papers, scan them and store them in several places, including your kids, if you have them, or the future executor of your estate from your legal paperwork, including your heirs.
If there are physical items, and they just sit in the safe, the better answer is to pre-decease give them to your estate heirs now, and let them enjoy them, saving costs, security, and peace of mind that they got to their final destination properly. Makes life easier and since you can't take them with you anyway. . . . but that is just me, who after my dad passed away, i realized that he had accumulated a lot of nice to him stuff, memories of 50-100 years ago, but they have little to zero meaning to me. I am not from that era and doesn't fit into lifestyle and house style. A piece or two I will retain, but even my son and daughter have zero interest in most stuff which is old, after the antique market has collapsed for the most part. My two brothers only want a few pieces. . . Best wishes for success in your plans |
#15
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Take a ride to Shady Brook and look at the foundations being poured today? That will be the same methods as what was done in a Lake Denham house (with Tilt Wall?). Any other experiences will not be with the newest construction methods in place.
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Closed Thread |
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