(muted crash) (mechanical whir) - So, anything you buy in Home Depot, or anything, any safe, in
Walmart, Costco, Staples, Canadian Tire, it's all crap. We can open them in less
than ten seconds, some of it. What I'm showing you
right now is what we did on Ross McLaughlin CTV On Your Side. We actually went to Staples, we filmed us buying the safe, we picked it up, we did it, and you'll see how quick we did it. On my YouTube channel, as Mr. LockSmith on YouTube, in 2015 we had two million
plus minutes viewed on my channel. That's my public videos,
not my traning videos, my public stuff, and that's thirty four
thousand hours watched on my YouTube channel. I sell training videos all over the world on how to open things. This one I put up because they said -- the second company told
me I was full of it. We actually brought in 2
friends from the states who are heavily involved in
training government people how to open stuff. They came up here, saw it, and then the thirty million dollar lawsuit sort of disappeared really quick. I've been threatened twice now
with some nice, big lawsuits. Actually, we have lawsuit parties now if somebody's gonna threaten me. (laughs) 'Cause it's kinda fun,
especially if you're right. If you're wrong, that's
a little different story. That's why we replicate
it, everything we do. So, I picked this up
today at Staples, $250. It's a safe -- they say right on there, SentrySafe fire safe,
biggest safe manufacturer in North America. This is their brand new version. We've been opening them for the last -- they changed a piece
to a super cheap piece, and I couldn't believe
it when I looked at it. I thought, "This is garbage." And we opened it, shocked everybody. So this is -- I put in the batteries. So 6-8.. (safe beeps) 9-2-7. And, you know, it all
works solid, it's a safe. It's not too heavy and you
bolt it down if you want to. So, it's locked. There's different methods, or what we call methods of attack. It's actually based on the
CIA was defense against methods of entry. It really wasn't defense
against, it was how to open anything and everything. My grandad did this fifty years ago. This is a Rare Earth Magnet. It's very, very dangerous,
it can really hurt you badly. You gotta make sure you have no -- it'll wreck your phone in half a second. We put it in a sock, 'cause
there's a reason for it. So what it is, this will open up -- different types of magnets
will open up most hotel rooms, most inexpensive safes, and
most apartment buildings. There's very little security. We sell stuff.. Our job is to secure our customers, so we don't sell the garbage, we sell good quality stuff. This deadbolt, which is on my house... Mike has it on his house, we have them there. I teach police forces how to open stuff. We can't teach them how to
open this 'cause there's no known non-destructive
method of entry on that. Other stuff, we have a free
for all and everything. This safe stuff -- or, we
shouldn't get into that. (laughs) But it's different, it's-- (female audience member
speaking indistinctly) Yeah, it's commercial grade. There will be signs of entry on -- the banks know, they're smart. They have you all listed
commercial grade tested. This stuff is a safe, so it's
locked, y'all saw it locked. There's a flaw in the system. It has a nickel piece from China, not that everything from China's bad.. - [Female Audience Member] I hope not. - I put it on there. Oh, now watch it, not gonna open. There we go. (lock clicks) (audience ooh's) We did it on TV, 1.63 seconds. And then Ross McLaughlin
opened it in 3 seconds. We put the sock on it
so I can pull it off. If I put this on a hunk of metal, you wanna lock it again? - So these things.. - This is the bolts.
They lock into here... - They lock in there, okay. And then when you put that in there, it pushes all of those things away? - Yep, and knocking the
hinges off won't work because there's a secondary
hinge on the inside. Oh, this doesn't have that. (laughs) It's worse than I thought. (laughs) That's even worse. - It does look really strong
with 4 of these bolts here. - Yeah. - And yet, one little thing
will trigger them back. - Yep, they took a nickel solenoid. Which, once they apply electricity to it, it sort of magnetizes the
solenoid and causes it to close. And think of how much out
there works on that principal. - [Male Audience Member] That's
why you have your family. - So, we know where the solenoid is. We think we do. (audience member laughs) If we have to drill it, we drill a quarter inch hole in this. There we go. This will open up every single SentrySafe, electronic safe on the
market can be opened. The old way, they replaced
the piece 'cause what we used to do was bounce it, and it would open. Now, they fixed it... (laughs) and made it easier for
us to open with a magnet. I hope you enjoyed watching this video. Subscribe to my channel, also visit my website and
you can see what online locksmith training I have for beginners, intermediate, and advanced, and as well as my covert methods of entry, and my non-destructive methods of entry.
If you fancy skipping to the really exciting part, where all the action and build up leads up to, from 3:40 is when he opens the safe.
It's an exhilarating 5 second experience, I highly suggest you all sit down first for your own safety.
[Piper liked that]
I posted this video in r/lockpicking just a few days ago in response to a person asking how to open a sentry safe.
It shows the internal mechanics and what the magnet does.
He skims over the fact a bit, but those are usually marketed as a firesafe and a deterrent. Yes, they should NOT be that easy to open regardless of its intention, but that's going to stop most thefts and protect your shit from most fires. I seriously doubt many burglars go into homes with large rare earth magnets looking for safes, and if you've bolted it to the floor they aren't going to come away with it easily either to do it at their own leisure.
It is pretty sad how easy these are to open (and the cheap locks like the other poster linked which also were mentioned in a popular video a few days ago).
Less than 5 seconds, 6 minute video.
Now I want to know what kind of deadbolt it is he's referencing.
To all you saying "Burglars aren't that complicated," imagine if a 'friend' knew you had something valuable in your safe, and with a google search they can figure out how to open it in an extremely simple manner.
Still more secure than a master lock. Seriously don't buy a MasterLock.
Who are you? And how did you get in here?