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  1. #1

    Default Make your gun worthless if stolen

    Not sure if this is the right place for this or not but..........................

    I've been lucky and have never had a gun stolen YET!!!

    Where I store my guns I DO NOT store them with ANY clips and NO bolts, or the cylinder in the revolvers!

    I know this can be a pain in the a$$ but why make the firearm useful to the thief!

    Jim

  2. Default

    I have a friend who does the same thing, I think it is a good idea but you have to have a secure place to store the bolts and mags also... and you run the risk of someone stealing only your bolts and such...with out your guns... and that would also be the ****s... B2B

  3. #3

    Default

    As a young man living in an apartment I was too poor to afford a safe and too mean to just let a thief take my guns. I had my rifles lined up in a closet and only one box of ammo on the self next to them. This box of 30-06 was loaded with oversize bullets (.311) and a case full of bullseye powder. My hope was if the thief took the guns, they'd take the ammo and maybe have a chance to test fire. I wouldn't get the guns back, but I sure would enjoy the newspaper story about an exploding gun.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Colo. Spgs., Colorado
    Posts
    2,568

    Default

    I wonder what ever happened to that box of ammo. It could be at a gun show somewhere. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm! ! !
    "A generation which ignores history has no past and no future." - Jean Boden

    "In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: It goes on."
    -- Robert Frost

  5. #5

    Default

    That box of ammo is long gone. Sanity finally arrived along with a good wife and kids. It was the advent of kids that prompted the purchase of a good gun safe. Now I rely on the safes, alarms, dogs, motion lights, and the armed home owner to protect me from thieves.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Seatac, WA
    Posts
    216

    Default

    Those who store guns without bolts in them is why I can sell bolts on Gunbroker for so much money. Many times when someone dies the family has no idea whre the bolts are or sometimes the wife throws them out not knowing what they are. So if you store a gun without bolts make sure someone in the family knowns where the bolts are and treat them as very valuable.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    mid Missouri
    Posts
    10,141

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by DRB View Post
    Those who store guns without bolts in them is why I can sell bolts on Gunbroker for so much money. Many times when someone dies the family has no idea whre the bolts are or sometimes the wife throws them out not knowing what they are. So if you store a gun without bolts make sure someone in the family knowns where the bolts are and treat them as very valuable.
    well said. Also, you might make up a list of your guns, including model & serial # & their approximate value to leave for your wife & family in case something happens to you. We have two lists, one stored with the guns & 1 in another place. This might keep your wife or heirs from getting ripped off when they are sold after you pass.
    be safe, enjoy life, journey well
    da gimp
    OFC, Mo. Chapter

  8. Default

    Quote Originally Posted by da gimp View Post
    well said. Also, you might make up a list of your guns, including model & serial # & their approximate value to leave for your wife & family in case something happens to you. We have two lists, one stored with the guns & 1 in another place. This might keep your wife or heirs from getting ripped off when they are sold after you pass.
    Very good advice, I have a computer list of guns, price paid (or an estimate where I don't have documents) and "current" what I would sell for if I was selling & wanted to get rid of the thing. KEEP PRINT OUT SOMEWHERE SAFE!!!!! Regarding bolts - use a sharpie to put the "matching" SN on the thing if you have more than one of the same kind.

    TF

  9. #9

    Default

    Not a bad idea to photograph each of your guns with close ups of the serial numbers. Then mail the prints and negatives to yourself registered mail. Don't open the envelope when you have to sign for the package but keep in a safe place. That way if a guns are stolen you can prove that you possessed the firearms on the date of the letter to the insurance company. Myself i would have an attorney deal with the insurance company on a large loss.

    Insurance Companies make money collecting money from you and are very nice when things are going their way. Then on a big theft claim you will find out what kind of company you are dealing with.

  10. #10

    Default

    anyone that owns more then 3 weapons, should invest in a safe..record your serial numbers., take good pictures, and store the pictures and log someplace other then your safe, maybe have a family member store them or have a safe deposit box.
    a thief good enough to take a safe, is good enough to take all the stuff in it.
    FYI, Harbor Frieght doesnt sell safes, or Hobart, lunch boxes mabye, Cannon, Liberty, Browning ect...even a good used fire rated safe shouldnt set you back more then 800.00
    best insurance a person can have.
    Last edited by chuckindenver; 04-01-2013 at 07:04.
    if it aint broke...fix it till it finally is.

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