Yeah, like the rest of us.Or grow a pair and TELL her where it’s going...............Like me!![]()
Yeah, like the rest of us.Or grow a pair and TELL her where it’s going...............Like me!![]()
Or grow a pair and TELL her where it’s going.
Or grow a pair and TELL her where it’s going...............Like me!![]()
Now single.Or grow a pair and TELL her where it’s going...............Like me!![]()
Everyone here has been bang on target that a cabinet in the loft is an invitation to decide to leave a gun out if it's late or it's needed early next morning and etc., etc.. And all are correct. So is there no way that you might also purchase a single gun cabinet that could be installed where it can be easily accessed to which a gun or rifle can be "decanted" to as it were in anticipation of an early start or put there after a late return?

Actually quite a good location if you had a swinging down access ladder and reasonable headroom. Lofts make good man cavesUnfortunately between a carboard house and fussy girlfriend its literally the only option![]()
FEO"s tend to love lofts as they are rarely the target of burglarsI’d ring your soon-to-be FEO first to see if they’re happy. Ultimately they’ll be the ones to decide yes or no so it wouldn’t hurt to be proactive initially and gauge their thoughts.
It's bad enough just having a cabinet upstairs. I always managed to **** the scope or the muzzle against something going down the stairs and if there's a moderator on it's carnage.I will add it was a pain in the arse after a while though, easy access considering it was in the loft but nowhere near as easy as opening the cupboard door![]()
A larger patress of 25mm marine ply on a stud wall where you can fix to the studs (ie 600mm wide-ish to catch the centres) and then the cabinet coach bolted to it and the floor was acceptable in our previous house. The 25mm depth of the ply also ‘packs out’ the cabinet the distance of most skirting allowing it to sit flush against the patress and also on the floor, if that makes sense.
From experience, a cabinet in the loft becomes a pita after time.
Going up the ladder is a pain but having a few cabinets bolted to joists and laying flat means its easier to pile them full of guns!I will add it was a pain in the arse after a while though, easy access considering it was in the loft but nowhere near as easy as opening the cupboard door![]()
Mine too - not quite a loft as in my new 3-storey house there is no proper loft but there are side-eaves storage spaces fitted with lockable removable steel panel doors. FEO was quite impressed! Only downside was that I had to install a gas ram on the cabinet door to offset the weight with the cabinet being on its back - works well though. Need to watch temperature extremes - gets really hot in Summer and it’s effectively “outside” in Winter.My first cabinet was in the loft and bolted into the joists was fine for my FEO when they checked it over