When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: bighorn safes 6039

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Biometric gun safes recalled after 12-year-old's death

    www.aol.com/biometric-gun-safes-recalled-12...

    The Consumer Product Safety Commission announced a recall of 61,000 biometric gun safes made by Fortress after the safes reportedly failed to keep guns locked and out of the hands of children.

  3. Grand Trunk Western 6039 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Trunk_Western_6039

    Grand Trunk Western No. 6039 is a preserved class "U-1-c" 4-8-2 "Mountain type" steam locomotive built in June 1925 by Baldwin. [1] It served the Grand Trunk Western Railroad by pulling fast passenger and freight trains throughout the Lower Peninsula of Michigan, until the railroad decided to dieselize their locomotive fleet.

  4. Gun safe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_safe

    An example (open and closed) of a typical gun safe. A gun safe is a safe designed for storing one or more firearms and/or ammunitions.Gun safes are primarily used to prevent access by unauthorized or unqualified persons (such as children), for burglary protection and, in more capable safes, to protect the contents from damage by flood, fire or other natural disasters.

  5. Safe-cracking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safe-cracking

    Safe-cracking is the process of opening a safe without either the combination or the key. Physical methods. Safes have widely different designs, construction methods ...

  6. Vesta case - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vesta_case

    In America the more prosaic yet more descriptive term match safe was chosen. There are three main forms of vesta cases: pocket vestas, table or standing vestas and “go to bed” vestas. Pocket vesta cases were the most popular form, and were often made to be suspended from a fob chain or an Albert chain .

  7. Sentry Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentry_Group

    In 1991, Michael Redman of Virginia brought a product liability suit against Sentry Group after his coin collection was stolen out of his Sentry Supreme Safe, Model #5570. Redman noticed the safe in a Value-Tique advertisement that appeared in the magazine Coin World. The magazine had advertised the safe as a “burglar deterrent”. [2]