Beeping Safes

LDSGJA

New member
So, last night there was a loud crash, 99% chance it was my cat (and it was); but nevertheless I got over to the safe:

SAFE: BEEP, BEEP, BEEP, BEEP, BEEP.
WIFE (Sleepy): what are you doing? What's going on? "What happened?"

So after this noisy and fumbling failure, I decided to fix the beeping!

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My safe was only $140 shipped, so this might be harder on expensive fire safes
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^^^^Pliers bending off the speaker
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^^^^^Removed Speaker
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Back to normal, but silent buttons!

A lot of forum members don't keep their HD weapon in a safe, but I do for my own reasons and now I can get to it without the loud beeping found on almost every digital safe.
 

Shootin Chef

New member
While reading and seeing only the first picture, I figured you fixed it by just leaving it open. Silly me :D

It is kinda a design flaw to put key tones on a gun safe though, although I guess it might let you know if the kids are playing with it.
 

Theophilus

New member
A lot of the small safes allow you to choose whether you want the buttons to beep or not. Which is good, because I doubt I could have figured out the electronics involved in what you just did. I bought a Stack-On ps-514 and just programmed the beeps away!
 

The Great Mahoo

New member
Did you de-solder the piezo or just rip it off with those pliers? Just curious.


I ought to remove mine, but I guess I'm just too lazy. Its a short combination, and I figure I can get it open before anyone can respond to unidentified beeps.
 

Jeff F

New member
Probably a dumb question, I don't own a digital safe. I can understand not wanting it to beep when pressing the buttons but isn't it also supposed to beep when the battery gets low. Is the battery on the outside or is there a way to open it if the keypad dies.
 

C Philip

New member
I did the same thing with mine. You just have to rip off the piezo, no need to solder anything. I twisted it back and forth gently with pliers until it came off, no damage. My safe flashes a led when the battery is low, so no need for an audible warning too. A lot of digital safes also have a back up key for if the battery dies.
 

a1abdj

New member
A little super glue in that little hole will also reduce the noise a lot. You also don't have to worry about damaging the circuit board.

The beeping is actually useful. Lets you know that a button has been pressed and accepted as input, lets you know when the batteries are running low, and other important aspects of diagnosing the lock in the event of a lock out.
 

jhenry

New member
I need to add another safe. It's not that I have too many guns (heaven forbid the thought), it is just that I do not currently have enough safe. I would also like to know where to obtain a safe like that one for 140 dollars. PM me if you like please.
 

LDSGJA

New member
Looking at my receipt I actually paid $149.99 with free shipping, but the price has increased to $160 now, still a good deal.

Just keep in mind its not a super-strong fire safe or anything so make sure your homeowners insurance protects your valuables.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000GB0KA8

Like said, I just ripped the little speaker out. There is a key hole hidden underneath a little plastic circle on the handle that can be used for if the batteries die. B/C of the flashing LEDs on the keypad, beeps really aren't needed in this case - although I can see the usefulness.
 

ethan95

New member
To the fellas above, you can get some pretty nice safes for a decent price used. Check around your area for some safe stores.

My liberty safe with an electronic lock beeps as well, I think there's a way to turn it of though. Thanks for posting this thread, having a very loud buzzer on a safe isn't very "stealthy".
 
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