 Good morning. This is Alex. I have a kind of serious video this time. Some of mine are a little bit flippant or otherwise humorous. This is not one of those. In a couple of months, my wife and I are expecting one of these to be joining our family. Hopefully, we'll be the happiest baby on the block. Those are good books, by the way. I highly recommend but we've got one of these on the way. A baby, a child, and we have one or more of these laying around the house. Well, not laying around the house, but in the house. That's a handgun. Okay. And so it becomes immediately obvious that as responsible gun owners, as all of us should be, as gun owners, we need to have a way of protecting the guns from the child, the child from the guns, however you want to put it. But keeping the guns out of the hands of our child and any other children who might be visiting us. I wanted a product that was going to be as secure as it could be for its size. And this is obviously not a vault or even really a safe because it's too small. But I wanted something that was secure reasonably, but that also I could get into if I needed to use the contents to protect myself or my family. There's a lot of crap out there. There's a lot of biometric things, which I guess maybe you could say technology hasn't matured very well. But if you've ever done any real work with your hands and then tried to unlock your laptop with a with your fingerprint, you'll find that it doesn't work because it doesn't recognize the little cuts and stuff in your fingers. I don't like battery powered things. And frankly, as a computer guy, I don't like anything computer powered if I have to rely on it. Because I, you know, I know what idiots we are. So I ended up with this product by Fort Knox. Number one, it is not made in China. It is made in the United States. West, I believe. This is a Kaba simplex lock five button. They don't bother numbering the buttons. Because the design is that, you know, in the dark of night, you reach for it and you enter your combination and it opens. And it's not silent, but it doesn't make any beeping noises. And there you go inside. One of the first things I noticed is this thing weighs, I don't know, 25 or 30 pounds, maybe more. The metal, even on the sides, is 0.14. So that's like over an eighth of an inch there. And here we've got a little more 0.18. Pretty thick metal. It is welded all the way around. Everything is welded. There are no seams or no gaps, even the little pneumatic support strut, which is probably hard to see. But remember going around this way, maybe you can see that pneumatic thing that lifts the heavy lid for you. Counterbalances it. There's the simplex lock. Let me zoom in on that for you. This is a genuine Kaba. Simplex even has the 800 number on it. Very nice hardened steel bolt, even with this extra plate, which I suspect provides a little bit of drill protection, but also keeps this thing from flopping around. This engages solidly under the lip of the safe right there. It comes in under here. You're not going to be able to shim it. It's deadlocking, simple, effective, and secure and made in the US. And frankly, not a whole lot more expensive than some of the crap locks out there that we've seen all sorts of exploits on from Tobias, from Deviant, and some of the other guys out there. I don't know if this simplex lock has the magnetic vulnerability that some of the other ones do, but frankly, if you look at where it's located in here, here's the lock. Here's the steel body of it. Here's the steel case and more... I mean, maybe if you put this inside an MRI machine or something, it might open, but I don't think any child that is young enough to not be able to just exhaustively bypass the... or exhaustively go through the combinations on this thing is going to be able to hold a magnet strong enough to even potentially utilize that bypass. See if it, if this one has it. To Fort Knox's credit, they don't even mess around. They give you the... they give you the full instructions on this lock. There's even mounting instructions on there in three languages, no less. So they just, you know, they show you what products they're using and it's there. This thing is welded all the way around. It's very heavy. The body is made out of one... looks like one big sheet of metal that's been bent up and welded in the corners. It's got little feet on it, plastic feet to keep it from scratching whatever it's on, but those also conveniently pop out and you can bolt it or screw it down to a surface. And Jesus, there's the hinge all welded, bolted down to some surface and keep it from going. It's got lots of foam and stuff inside. Enough for a couple of handguns for a little bit of money maybe, passports, whatever. It's not fire rated. I wouldn't even call it burglary rated just because you could, you know, pick it up and walk away. But I think it's five-year-old rated and it's about $120, $150 on Amazon. And I think if you're planning on having one of these in your house and you have one or more of these in your house, you need to have something like this in your house so that the twain shall not mate. And I have found in my evaluation this is the best product that I could find on the market. It also comes in a couple different form factors. There's a thinner one, there's one that opens from the side so that you can have it mounted vertically and reach down and they also, one will take a longer like a shotgun you can put under the bed. So that's just my two cents on the subject. I don't have any relationship with Fort Knox or the distributors or anything like that. It just happens to be the one that I chose and I'm very happy with the choice. So be a responsible gun owner, don't be an idiot and do the right thing to protect our children and protect our our rights in this country. So this is Alex. Thank you for watching. Have fun, keep it legal and in this case keep these little guys safe, you know. Okay, cheers.