The Locksmith Journal Jan-Feb 2014 - Issue 30 | Page 47

SAFES SPONSORED BY DAVENPORT BURGESS torches, angle grinders, disk cutters, even thermic lances. Means have been found to protect even the most highly sensitive of computer memory media using the very latest technological spin-offs from space exploration. And yet, when did you last read a feature about safes or security cabinets in any trade journals other than this one? How many high grade safes did you see on display when you last visited a major security exhibition? It seems that we are so dazzled by the latest electronic wizardry; so engrossed in the latest legislation affecting the manned guarding sector that we fail to notice the steadfastness and excellence of the modern safe-maker’s art. Ask an insurer when he/ she last had to settle a major claim following an attack on a modern, high grade safe. Certainly there are losses but almost always these are from either ancient safes made more than100 years ago- that could not possibly be expected to resist the modern safe breaker - or cheap, low-grade imports. It takes a highly experienced, immensely skilled cracksman equipped with a wide range of expensive tools to stand any chance at all of penetrating a good quality safe. The downside of this is the growth in the number of armed robberies but even this has been effectively countered by the development of electric safe locking systems incorporating anti hold-up time delay, time locking facilities and remote monitoring, widely recognised as the only really effective deterrent to armed robbery. Few people realise that it was the need to keep valuable ledgers safe from fire that led to the development of the first safes. At the end of the Industrial Revolution so much business was conducted on credit that the loss of these books of account could spell ruin. There was such a market for these early ‘fire-proof’ safes that soon there were scores of Midlands-based safe-makers. Later the emphasis became focused on safes “proof against the tools of thieves and burglars” to quote a line from Chubb’s patent application for the first burglary-resistant safe. Now the pendulum may be swinging the other way. The first computer data safes introduced in the late 1960s were monsters weighing in well over 1 ton. They housed large reels of magnetic tape or giant disk holders shaped like cake stands. They were required to resist furnace temperatures of up to 1,500ºF for two hours, after which the tapes or disks should not only be preserved, but the stored data should remain completely uncorrupted. To read more, visit www.locksmithjournal.co.uk A modern CD is so sensitive to heat that its data could be affected just by leaving it in strong sunlight. Yet, not only do we expect little cabinets no bigger than a microwave oven to provide the same level of protection against heat, humidity, stray electromagnetic fields, soot and fireman’s hoses as the heavyweights of yesteryear, but we expect them to do so at a fraction of the cost. Cash safes, fire resistant document cabinets and data safes have never been such great value. Modern standards for testing and rating safes and cabinets have opened the market to low priced foreign imports, holding down costs for so long that we can now purchase at the same price we were paying 15 years ago. What other product is going to remain in place for so many years, require so little attention and provide such an exceptional level of service? The safe-maker is truly an unsung hero standing quietly in a dark corner of the security industry. Yet when push comes to shove, it is that ‘sixsided box’ that stands alone as the last bastion of defence against the perils of the terrorist, thief and inferno. Contact information: Tel: 07552 590739, Email: info@ mikepalmerconsultancy.co.uk, Web: www. mikepalmerconsultancy.co.uk, www.eurosafeuk.co.uk, www.eurosafe.uu.com/ THE JAN/FEB 2014 ISSUE SPONSORED BY ASSA ABLOY Security Solutions 47