PDA

View Full Version : Hornady Rapid Safe



Hunter
01-15-2015, 11:24 PM
http://i1282.photobucket.com/albums/a535/rangehotdotcom/Hornady%20Rapid%20Safe/HornadyRapidSafe-12_zps4faa8969.jpg (http://s1282.photobucket.com/user/rangehotdotcom/media/Hornady%20Rapid%20Safe/HornadyRapidSafe-12_zps4faa8969.jpg.html)

I have published my review of the Hornady Rapid Safe. In my opinion it is a cool concept that serves a purposes I would love to get your opinions.

http://rangehot.com/hornady-rapid-safe-secured-accessible/

Rick Hodges
01-16-2015, 11:38 AM
Interesting. I have a finger pad "safe" that is only closed when little ones are around. It has mysteriously lost programming on a couple of occasions with a good battery in it. When that happens you need to look for the key and open it that way. I would hate to depend on that thing working when I needed it. I see nothing about Hornady's product that would make me trust the reliability any more than on my "Gunvault"

44man
01-16-2015, 12:40 PM
I never worried about my kids, they were taught early and I had no safe back then so guns were everywhere. Never was a gun touched. They shot when very young and safety was the drill.
I think a parent has a responsibility over hiding or locking up guns. Lock up is for a break in but they will just take the little safe.
My kids friends would come over to play and they were told by my kids, "don't touch." None were loaded but my kids still were responsible. Takes a huge amount of worry away.
I started mine when they could walk, they are smart little people after all.
My daughter could break a bottle at 75 yards off hand with a flintlock she could barely hold up. She went on to out shoot all the men in the Marine Corp. I would give her a 20 ga and she would break every clay until I was out of shells so I gave her a 12 ga and after one miss, she would run all clays until out of ammo.
Your child might need a gun to save themselves or the family. It is up to you.
The good old days are gone when I would take paper route money to the store and buy a gun or get one in the mail. I taught myself, my dad did nothing for fun. But I was free to do what I wanted. Mom never said a word when I walked in with a .300 Weatherby on store credit, no interest. Paid off fast and go buy another gun. I dealt with Avon Hardware and Gun in Ohio, could get anything I wanted. Then Hart Arms in Cleveland. Got my first .44 Flat top from Kleins Sporting Goods in the mail, $96. I think I was 15 or 16 when I started to buy on my own. No bull, the store knew I would pay. I bought dies, molds, powder and primers before a gun showed up.
I might have been blessed with such wonderful people, can you imagine a kid today buying a gun in Cleveland?
If you worry about your children you are doing wrong.