Fyrme
Well-known member
I planned on just throwing up a pic of the finished product in the repurposing thread, but after looking online for ideas, and seeing several people with the same idea and presents the idea asking for advice on building one, gets flamed for it rather than helpful ideas. I figured I would throw up a thread showing how it can be done.
Now, before I post anything else, I am calling this a "fire RESISTANT gun cabinet" Not fire proof, not a gun safe, just a FR cabinet. If you think I'm an idiot and the only advice you have is "Just by a safe", I've heard your type and you are encouraged to move along please.........
This will be a real time build, and for the most part I will be working on this every third day at the fire station on down time.
I was given an old Hotpoint fridg from the '30s. I was told it might work, but it had been in a barn for the past 50 years. It sat in my lean-to for the past year until I decided what I wanted to do with it. After deciding that I could make a legit FR cabinet, I didn't even plug it it to see if it worked before I tore it apart. Yeah, you guys are allowed to tear me a new one for doing that, I can take it,
Now, on with the show.
Here it is after pulling it out of the lean-to, still attached to the dolly I unloaded it with a year ago...
The first order was to strip it down to see what I had to work with.
First to come off was the top. It was packed with 4" cardboard insulation, which made me think, "no wonder these things are energy hogs". Well that was only on the top for some reason.
Under that was the top of the inner compartment. and a peek at the insulated sides under that paper.
After stripping all the inside components and compressor, I was down to the inner and outer shell essentially.
At this point, I didn't take documentation pics, but I removed the connecting trim pieces and removed the inner compartment exposing the super nasty insulation. I have no idea what that stuff was comprised of, but it was like a super coarse, dense fiberglass with what appeared to be some type of resin, or other semi solid methyl-ethyl-bad **** and throw it in the dumpster.
So back to the pictorials.
The old white paint was chalking really bad so to remove that, and the rust and fiberglass on the inside of the shell, I washed and scrubbed every piece to get ready for the fun part...
Now, before I post anything else, I am calling this a "fire RESISTANT gun cabinet" Not fire proof, not a gun safe, just a FR cabinet. If you think I'm an idiot and the only advice you have is "Just by a safe", I've heard your type and you are encouraged to move along please.........
This will be a real time build, and for the most part I will be working on this every third day at the fire station on down time.
I was given an old Hotpoint fridg from the '30s. I was told it might work, but it had been in a barn for the past 50 years. It sat in my lean-to for the past year until I decided what I wanted to do with it. After deciding that I could make a legit FR cabinet, I didn't even plug it it to see if it worked before I tore it apart. Yeah, you guys are allowed to tear me a new one for doing that, I can take it,
Now, on with the show. Here it is after pulling it out of the lean-to, still attached to the dolly I unloaded it with a year ago...
The first order was to strip it down to see what I had to work with.
First to come off was the top. It was packed with 4" cardboard insulation, which made me think, "no wonder these things are energy hogs". Well that was only on the top for some reason.
Under that was the top of the inner compartment. and a peek at the insulated sides under that paper.
After stripping all the inside components and compressor, I was down to the inner and outer shell essentially.
At this point, I didn't take documentation pics, but I removed the connecting trim pieces and removed the inner compartment exposing the super nasty insulation. I have no idea what that stuff was comprised of, but it was like a super coarse, dense fiberglass with what appeared to be some type of resin, or other semi solid methyl-ethyl-bad **** and throw it in the dumpster.
So back to the pictorials.
The old white paint was chalking really bad so to remove that, and the rust and fiberglass on the inside of the shell, I washed and scrubbed every piece to get ready for the fun part...
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