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Garage Hidden Compartments

woodgate

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Nov 7, 2012
Messages
51
I'm looking for a place to hide things in my shop. Keys to my cabinets, cash, guns or just whatever. Hiding places are just always fun. I made a fake outlet box with a magnetic cover, but i bet people can be way more creative than that!
 

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Jay Sco

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Nov 30, 2012
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1,744
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I.E. SoCal
My garage is messy enough I can just toss something on the back of a shelf and nobody would ever find it.
 

Polski-Chevy

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Jun 25, 2012
Messages
218
Location
Indiana
This book is good for shiggles....

es1195.jpg
 

4xdog

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Aug 18, 2012
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Santa Fe, NM

justanengineer

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Apr 5, 2011
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Location
Motor City
My garage is messy enough I can just toss something on the back of a shelf and nobody would ever find it.

Mine is fairly clean but has enough stuff in it to keep things well hidden.

Realistically, there are a ton of hiding places for things in the garage. Theres a ton of room inside the mill not to mention underneath it, could probably fit a rifle or two inside there and a few handguns underneath. The bolt bins are another obvious one with a ton of room for smalls. Every toolbox has a lil space for money or smalls beneath the bottom drawer in that area where small tools like to hide. Theres room behind various items in the cabinets, not to mention plenty of space inside of lil used tools' molded cases. Then theres.....

Why do we need a "hidden" compartment in the garage again?
 

Fortress68

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Joined
Oct 23, 2012
Messages
56
Location
Norfolk, VA
The problem with hiding things in my garage, is that would mean they are important enough to hide. Anything that important doesn't belong in a garage environment, especially not mine. Between fumes, over-spray, oil, grease, fire, and any other number of solvents, I seem to ruin everything that comes near a project, except the project that is. Heck, I can't even pump gas without getting dirty. I don't particularly care for hiding things in the attic either, as it too invites pest and all sorts of other things. Plus, with as much stuff as I have in my garage, it would only serve to attract thieves to it... again not a good characteristic of a hidey hole. I do have a hundred year old safe in there right now, but it is only so I can refinish it for my wife.
 

mayday0017

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Oct 20, 2010
Messages
1,715
Location
Houston Texas
I do like the ideas posted here... I agree I don't hide valuables in my garage but I might buy or make a friend one that looks like a typical item to sit on a shelf. He owns an automotive shop and keeps a couple key chains including the one to his car which has 1 key to the shop on it. I have had him meet up with me before and we got in but he didn't have the keys to his tool boxes on him so we had to try to work using whatever tools we could find. Be nice if he had spares to all his boxes hidden in the loft area of the shop with other sprays or oils.
 

shooting4life

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Joined
Nov 19, 2012
Messages
334
I built a cabinet around my safe so you cannot see the safe when the door is open

In the cabinet I built a false floor on the right. It is held in place with two screws in the front. This is the only picture I have, the floor board come up along the seam.

And here is how it looks from the driveway
 

Jsf721

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Joined
Dec 23, 2012
Messages
4,123
Location
LI, NY
I had a company come on and do a thermal study of my home several years ago to see if blown in insulation or foam insulation would stop some drafts. During the home inspection they used a camera that took thermal images.

The inspector said, oh great place for a safe, we find them all the time. How do you get to it? I said are you sure? He said that or it is a burried electrial pannel box.

I went into the crawl space (past where we store the lugage becasue it is too tight to get to A place I have never been before or again) and between the studs there was a metal box. I pulled out a safe-deposit looking box (not hi security)that was the size of a medicine cabinet. Upon opening it (was not locked-no lock in the hasp there was nothing to speak of. An purfume bottle with foreign writing we think was french (Empty) a few packs of old baseball cards from early 80's rubberbanded together (nothing of value-I checked) and there was remnants of what looked like fabric threads.

I bet the inspectors camera would find those tubes if they are metal, I would go for plastic. Might be more invisible depending what was in the tube.

Good luck and happy hiding.

 
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kbs2244

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Nov 11, 2006
Messages
14,065
Metal detectors are standard equipment for search teams.
If you are hiding something metal, like guns, in a wall put it where there is logically metal in a wall.
That is usually a plumbing wall going to an upstairs bathroom.

Your tube in the door is a good idea, but it needs to be plastic and have non-metallic stuff in it.

Garages or shops are good places because they have so much metal in them under normal conditions.

Be somewhat creative. A heating duct, even a real one, will hide a rifle well.
But if it is a pro with tools, you are gong to be going uphill.
They have classes just for this.
 

dirtguy

Member
Joined
Jun 18, 2010
Messages
6
Location
In the mountains west of Las Vegas
My father had a floor safe under a false panel under the workbench and then he put in a cheap wall safe and put some cheap watches and costume jewelry in it.
Both times he was broken into they went for the wall safe and never got the good stuff.
 

cyamaha2007

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Joined
Apr 20, 2009
Messages
2,001
Location
St.Charles MO
I stash $300 bucks for clist items that popup on lunch or when my boss says hey that lista cabinet doesnt match anymore give me a 100 bucks and its yours. I made a metal tube that i drop into a dead run of 1in emt conduit. Attached to the tube is a piece of wire. If i need cash i get my rolling ladder pop the cover plate off a ancient fan timer and pull the wire and after about 10 feet out comes my tube. In case the wire ever broke i put a dent in the conduit so the tube couldn't fall into the abbis below the slab
 

yuk

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Joined
Nov 18, 2012
Messages
142
Location
Living in quiet rural Missouri.
run a piece of metal conduit from ceiling to floor with a locked electric junction box somewhere in the middle.
use the box for stashing.
stick a bunch of those yellow "high voltage" scare stickers on it.
 

4xdog

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Joined
Aug 18, 2012
Messages
5,595
Location
Santa Fe, NM
run a piece of metal conduit from ceiling to floor with a locked electric junction box somewhere in the middle.
use the box for stashing.
stick a bunch of those yellow "high voltage" scare stickers on it.

That might not always work (smile)...

Crackheads are attracted to copper. High voltage isn't enough to keep them away, or even keep their numbers down in a big way.
 

KEH

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Joined
Jan 31, 2010
Messages
5,142
I may have seen this somewhere and added to the idea. Find a used not too large gun safe. Put it in a not so obvious but easily findable place in the garage. Load it with heavy objects(old batteries, concrete blocks, etc.) Maybe put some cheap tools in it to add to the idea that it is really in use. Perhaps put a tool box in booby trapped with pepper spray, if you can figure a way to disarm it. Theory is that thieves will work to haul it off or work to cut it open, using too much of their time. Put real stash somewhere else not easily found.

Alternative: put your real tool supply in safe which will still be less valuable that your stash. Bolt safe to floor. Really weight it down so hauling it off will be doubtful. If there is a break in, don't tell cops about real stash.

KEH
 

zip95864

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Joined
Jul 25, 2011
Messages
281
Location
Sacramento CA
I've read one of the best places to hide money --- is to cap a PVC tube and bury in the backyard ---- more fireproof.
 

48Classic

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Joined
Jun 27, 2012
Messages
144
Location
Metro Atlanta
I have an old 100amp electrical panel in the garage that is not active. It is in the open area but unless you know its not hot, I don't the someone breaking in is going to open an electrical panel...
 

Thumper68

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Joined
May 16, 2013
Messages
5,134
Location
Duluth MN
I put a floor safe in when I built the shop, I keep it covered by a leg stress relief mat in front of one ,of the stationary tools.
 
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