Locked gun cabinet removal

stick of dynamite, one blast and jobs done πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚ or pour a couple of kg of reloading powder through the key hole ignite it the pressure will blow the bloody door off πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚ what could possibly go wrong 😊

 
Once you have a quotation from a locksmith you will know the most economical way forward.

Personally I would us a jigsaw with a metal blade after drilling a starter hole with a drill, that should cause less stress domestically.
 
I have done a couple, easiest way is with a 9" angle grinder with a thin steel cutting disc..

I have tried the 4/5" angle grinders yet some lock bolts are further back, and usually, and are made from a higher carbon steel, which cant be cut with a jig saw.

The other way I did it was buy using a hole saw, and then a using a good pair of tin snips, and peeled it open like a can of beans, this was by far the easiest way with know mess!!
 
I have done a couple, easiest way is with a 9" angle grinder with a thin steel cutting disc..

I have tried the 4/5" angle grinders yet some lock bolts are further back, and usually, and are made from a higher carbon steel, which cant be cut with a jig saw.

The other way I did it was buy using a hole saw, and then a using a good pair of tin snips, and peeled it open like a can of beans, this was by far the easiest way with know mess!!
The other destructive way is good recp saw metal blade and a cone (or step) drill bang 4 holes in and cut the corner out.
All this fannying around some must work for the council pothole dept lol :doh:
 
Hi All

Any advice on best way to access/remove a locked gun cabinet with no keys present?

Cheers
MD
Not sure if you have the tools or if you have the space to get in.
Could you try getting a recip saw with a long blade behind it cutting the raw bolts then grind or gas axe it outside
 
Can you actually see the hinge pin in the top left corner?

Wondering if you can, as it is obviously an old cabinet, as it was already installed and locked when you bought the house 10 years ago.

Surely not?.....
Can see the pin on mine, would be pointless cutting it though as there’s a return fold inside that would prevent the door opening from the hinge side.
 
My own approach would be
Option 1. Lever off the wall with a crow bar. Easier than you would think and you can fill the holes with resin for the new cabinet if the holes line up.
Option 2. 75mm bimetallic hole saw on the cordless, noisy but no sparks. Then assess if you can get a ratchet to the fixing bolts or lock fixture.
Option 3. Grinder of your chosen size with a slitting disc, sparks noise dust etc but will be a few mins work at most.
 
Not sure if you have the tools or if you have the space to get in.
Could you try getting a recip saw with a long blade behind it cutting the raw bolts then grind or gas axe it outside
That is what I suggested.
Another way is to drill a hole 1mm larger than a 12mm socket at the approximate position of say the top left fixing in the front door. Then use an led high intensity torch to see where the bolt head is located relative to the hole then using the say 12mm socket with a longer extension (borrow one?) unscrew the bolt you will then see where the top right bolt is and drill another hole in the door at its location and unscrew that bolt. The rest you know.
 
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As requested.
I've got a couple of similar looking cabinets around the property.
Happy to give you an idea of measurements of lock fixings so you can try to drill out the locks. Personally I would say if you don't have the equipment (decent drill, hole saw, grinder etc. ) to have given it a go already, probably Cheaper to get s locksmith in rather than buy the kit?

Pm me if interested as I am not posting on an open forum how to break into a gunsafe πŸ˜€
 
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