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Model: Power Door Locks 800109 Key Specifications/Special Features: ? Power: 6V (four-parcel alkaline five-sized battery and one-year endurance) ? Static power consumption: 15,000V ? Door thickness: 36 to 75mm (over 9cm width of convex-concave door edge) ? Size: o Entire lock: 281 x 100 x 70mm o Lock core: 125 x 80 x 20mmModel: Power Door Locks 810014 Key Specifications/Special Features: ? Power: 6V (four-parcel alkaline five-sized battery and one-year endurance) ? Static power consumption: 15,000V ? Door thickness: 36 to 75mm (over 9cm width of convex-concave door edge) ? Size: o Entire lock: 281 x 100 x 70mm o Lock core: 125 x 80 x 20mmTEL: 0086-577-88302830 88305830 88309830 FAX: 0086-577-88309830-87 Email:sales@glasses-locks-manufacturer.com contact person: Ricky huang WEB: www.glasses-locks-manufacturer.c
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For the film, see Panic Room (film).
For walk-in safe, see strongroom.
A safe room or panic room is a fortified room which is installed in a private residence or business to provide a safe hiding place for the inhabitants in the event of a break-in, home invasion, or other threat. Safe rooms usually contain communications equipment, so that law enforcement authorities can be contacted.
Contents
1 Construction techniques
2 Features
3 Other meanings
4 Panic Room
5 Further reading
6 See also
7 References
//
Construction techniques
The simplest safe room is simply a closet with the hollow-core door replaced with an exterior-grade solid-core door that has a deadbolt and longer hinge and lock plate screws.
More expensive safe rooms, such as those constructed for celebrities and executives, have walls and a door reinforced with sheets of steel, Kevlar, or bullet-resistant fiberglass. The hinges and strike plate are often reinforced with long screws. Some safe rooms may also have externally-vented ventilation systems and a separate phone line.
Safe rooms in the basement can be built with concrete walls, a building technique that is normally not possible on the upper floors unless there is substantial structural reinforcement to the building.
Features
Safe rooms may contain communications equipment, such as a cellular telephone, land-line telephone or an amateur radio transceiver, so that law enforcement authorities can be contacted. There may also be a monitor for external security cameras and an alarm system. In basic safe rooms, a peephole in the door may be used for a similar purpose. Safe rooms are typically stocked with basic emergency and survival items such as a flashlight, blankets, a first-aid kit, water, packaged food, self-defense tools, firearms, a gas mask, and a simple portable toilet.
Other meanings
The term “safe room” is also commonly used to describe a fortified basement room used as a refuge in the event of a tornado, hurricane or nuclear event.
A safe room can be quite elaborate or as simple as a corner of the basement. An effective safe room can be constructed from two concrete corner walls, two other sturdy walls and a stout ceiling, preferably thick reinforced concrete like the other basement walls. A stout door, secondary exit and good ventilation are necessary. A room like this could alternatively used as a storage room for things like wine or records. In a new construction, a room like this can be built quite inexpensively. It can be stocked with as many or as few supplies as the homeowner deems necessary.
Panic Room
In the DVD audio commentary for the film Panic Room, screenwriter David Koepp says the idea for the film originated from a New York Times article; in the article and his other research sources the rooms were always referred to as a “safe room”, which was the original title of his screenplay. Realizing it didn’t sound engaging enough to be a thriller, he changed the title and all references in the screenplay to “panic room”.
Further reading
The Secure Home, Joel Skousen, Swift Learning Resources; 3rd ed, 1999 (ISBN 1-56861-055-6)
See also
Blast shelter
Fallout shelter
Storm cellar
Retreat (survivalism)
References
^ Trivia for Panic Room (2002) on IMDB
Categories: Civil defense | Rooms | Security | Shelters
Hidden categories: Articles needing additional references from September 2007(and so on)
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