Modular Gunsafes — the Bolt-Together Zanotti Safe
We bolt together bridges and pre-fab houses, so why not gunsafes? It fact there is a modular safe the ships in pieces and bolts together on site. Modular design allows a big, full-size safe to be transported much more easily than a conventional safe (that might weigh 1200 pounds or more). The Zanotti modular safe arrives in sections, none weighing more than 170 pounds. It is assembled in place, then can be dis-assembled when you need to move. The Zanotti is also well-suited for a gun-owner who lives in an apartment up many flights of stairs.
Zanotti Armor safes are ideal for gun owners who need to move frequently or who live in a location where it is difficult to position a conventional safe. Zanotti safes arrive in three or four discrete shipping boxes. The safe is assembled by the owner, on site, in six steps. The heaviest component is the door, weighing 110 pounds in the 16-gun ZAI safe, and 175 pounds in the largest 52-gun ZAIII model. Five safe models are offered, ranging from 350 to 925 pounds assembled weight, without interior. Zanotti safes are popular with military personnel and others whose jobs force them to re-locate often. The safe can be assembled in under 30 minutes with no tools other than a hammer, and all you need is a hand dolly to move any component.
Guns Magazine reports: “The panels are interlocked by 3/8 inch, nickel-plated steel “L” shaped pins that slip into steel tubing sections welded to the interior surfaces of the panels. The slip fit is held to a tolerance of .003 inch, and the safes are completely assembled and hand-fitted at the factory to insure the panels will align properly. The body is made from 1/8 inch and 3/16 inch steel; the door from 3/16 inch steel; the locking bolts are 3/4 inch steel.” This is heavier gauge steel than you’ll find on most conventional gun safes.
Zanotti offers many deluxe interiors including a system of roll-out sliding drawers in the bottom of the safe. We think the sliding drawers are ideal for storing handguns and expensive items such as cameras and binoculars that you want to keep out of plain view. Mark Zanotti, the innovative creator of these modular safes, can also customize any interior to suit the customer’s particular needs.
Editor’s Note: For most applications, a conventional safe is still the best choice. Bolted in place, a conventional safe with welded walls will provide the best security and a conventional safe can provide increased fire protection. Zanotti safes do not employ a separate layer of sheet-rock or ceramic fire lining. The Zanotti is a special product for gun-owners with special needs. The units are well-made and Zanotti offers many nice custom interior features that you won’t find even on much more expensive conventional safes.
To learn more about gunsafe features and fire-proofing, read our Gunsafe Buyers’ Guide.
No fire barrier and not cheap.
Prices from a customer that ordered one in ’13
Model ZA-1 (16 gun – 60″Hx25″Wx20″D – 400 LBS) is listed at $1,353
Model ZA-II (30 gun – 60″Hx31″Wx25″D – 600 LBS) is listed at $1,562
Model ZA-II 6 ft (30 gun – 72″Hx31″Wx25″D – 700 LBS) is listed at $2,019
Model ZA-III (52 gun – 60″Hx40″Wx30″D – 825 LBS) is listed at $2,138
Model ZA-III 6 ft (52 gun – 72″Hx40″Wx30″D – 925 LBS) is listed at $2,654
Forum thread (where the prices came from) at http://www.northeastshooters.com/vbulletin/threads/258189-My-new-Zanotti-52-gun-safe-review
Thanks for great informations.
Thanks for your comments on the Zanotti modular safe.
– How secure is it vs. a safe with welded walls?
– What would you change to make the safe better?
Looks like not much traffic here.
– Any idea on how secure it is vs. safes with welded walls?
– Think one could break into it by smashing a wall where the pins/tubes are?
(Editor noted: “a conventional safe with welded walls will provide the best security”)