2.5 Cubic Foot Capacity U.L. 1700-Degree1-Hour Fire and Impact Rated.
A fire is a devastating, traumatic, life altering event. A life time of
memories, and personal records can be destroyed in an instants.
Replacing many of these items can prove to be a long, difficult if not
impossible process. When you want to protect the things you can't
afford to loose there's only one name to trust,.....Fire Fyter.
Features
- Bank vault quality combination & key lock
- Full suspension pull out file drawer holds hanging file folders
- Key organizer
- In door document holder
- Heavy duty adjustable steel shelf
- Solid steel live action locking bolts on all four sides of door
- Heavy duty all steel mega hinge
- Easy bolt to the floor hardware included.
Specifications
- Exterior Dimensions - 17.25" W X 21" H X 24.25" D
- Interior Dimensions - 13.5" W X 16.25" H X 19.75" D
- Capacity - 2.5 cu. ft.
- Weight - 175 lbs
- An independent, nationally recognize laboratory, Underwriter's Laboratory (UL) certified the Fire rating of our safes
- All Fire Fyter products have been certified to withstand 1700 degrees for 1 hour and an impact rating of 30 feet.
- What this means to the consumer is that during a tragic fire, our safes
will withstand 1700 degrees for one hour. The interior of the safe will
not exceed 350 degrees.
- A normal house fire burns at 1250 degrees and is usually controlled within15 minutes.
- The impact protection certification was completed so that the
consumer knows that should your safe drop from a level that is 30 feet
or less, the safe will maintain its structural integrity and protection.
Think it
can't happen to you? Review these statistics from the United States Fire
Administration
- There
were 1,584,500 fires in the united states in 2003
- Fires
resulted in 3,925 deaths, 18,125 injuries, and $12.3 billion in damages
- Residential fire
represented 25.4% of all fires and 77.4% of structural fires
- 80% of
civilian fire fatalities occurred in the home
Our
intention is not to strike fear in the hearts of our customers, but to educated
them about the very real threat of fire, and the importance of fire
protection.