



Rottner T05927 Canberra 400 Fire-Resistant Safe with Secure Double-Bit Cylinder Key Lock The Rottner Canberra Safe offers excellent levels of protection for your valuables both in your home or at your business, and unlike many fire-rated safes the Canberra features a premium key-operated cylinder lock instead of standard E-lock. Offering £2,000 cash cover (£20,000 valuables), this is a great value fire-resistant double-walled steel construction safe with superb levels of specification, offering you reassurance that your items will remain safe in the event of a fire without the usual high price tags normally associated with fire safes. Its special fire-resistant filling gives up to 60 minutes protection for paper items stored inside. For added convenience, this model also comes with a removable tray at the top of the safe, handy for storing smaller items of value. Additional Spec: - Colour: Anthracite - Panic Lock (door closes automatically) - Fitting Bolts Supplied (can be secured to the floor) - Cylinder Lock provided with 2 Keys - 1 Year’s Warranty - Available in 1 other size, please contact us to discuss your requirements Dimensions External (H x W x D): 315 x 445 x 425mm. Internal ( H x W x D): 257 x 382 x 296mm. Weight (kg): 38. Please note: Model is not tested for fire protection. Safes under 1000kg have to be fixed.
D**2
A painful experience
I want to share my experience, hopefully it will help someone. Don’t bother with a safe of this range or similar, these safes offer a false sense of security.When the Canberra 400 arrived it looked solid enough but the internal size measurements stated in the product description are wrong, it’s smaller (it was 340 mm wide instead of the stated 382 mm, so a full 4 cm less) and I couldn’t fit in my items. In fairness the seller was helpful and agreed to exchange it for another, similar safe (the Rottner Power Safe 300) where I could fit in laptop, cash, documents etc when I’m away from the office.These safes come with a “S2 Burglary Security Certification according to EN 14450” by ECB-S, the European Certification Body. When I did my research I landed on the ECB website where there is even a video showing the difference between a normal safe (easy to force open, according to them) and a ECB-S certified safe. This video is misleading, makes it look like it’s impossible to open a certified safe…I bolted down the safe hidden inside a walled cupboard, and I thought all was fine. Two months later my office was broken into, and from the CCTV the burglar was in and out of the building in 10 minutes, so it took only a few minutes to crack and remove the safe “double walled” door “made of high-quality steel”, and the police said judging by the marks only a relatively small crowbar was needed, one that fits easily in a rucksack. All my items gone, and my office left a complete mess. I won't go into more details here, but it was bad and I wish I had not bothered with a safe.PS: forgot to mention, the Canberra is fitted with "a top quality key-operated double-bit cylinder lock", the Power Safe 300 has four such cylinder locks, 2 on the side, plus one top and one bottom, and the cylinders were bigger than the Canberra's. It didn't make any difference, the burglar forced the door on all sides, bent the "high-quality steel", bent the cylinders until the whole door came off.PLEASE NOTE: the photos are of the Rottner Power Safe 300, of similar size and built than the Rottner Canberra 400. The seller agreed to swap the Canberra 400 for the Power Safe 300 because the internal size of the Canberra was smaller than the size reported in the listing. From the photos you can see that the product turned out to be utterly disappointing. The door particularly has been left in such a state that I wonder how sturdy the mechanism really was in the first place.
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