You might want to rethink using an unvented cabinet for powder and primer storage. Being unvented should ignition occur you have created a large bomb.A few years ago I scrounged a 30"x36"x24"deep tool box like you would find on a flat deck service truck. Swapped out the t-handle latch with one from Princess Auto and gave it a lick of paint. lt now holds powder and primers but made a very nice, cheap and easy 'vault' as (vaguely) described in the Firearms Act. My example is to let folks know that you can be creative in your storage solutions.
Ok Troop, drop your cox and grab your socks. Heads in! Listen up. I'm only going to say this once, so you slackers in the back pay attention.
The Firearms Act is rather open ended on what is a legal gun storage container. Most people interpret the solid construction, opaque front, and hard to break into, to mean a dial lock heavy gauge steel safe. A gym locker with a solid hasp and padlock meets the definition. After graduating from locking the guns in gun cases to locking them in a closet, I bought a proper office, two-door stationary cabinet. I reinforced the doors with galvanized sheet metal and self-tapping screws so it didn't flex, and installed two little barrel bolts on the fixed door. The key lock actuates two bars and a locking finger into the other door. It works just fine, thank you. A few years ago I graduated from that to genuine Govt of Canada surplus Top Secret rated dial lock filing cabinet safes. The price on them was too good to pass up. For anyone contemplating breaking in, you'll have to work very hard to defeat those locks. The RCMP's physical security directorate (?) says they are perfect for securing Canada's national secret inside a guarded space. My home meets the same definition.
There ain't much that modern battery operated tools can't get through. It helps to keep your safes out of sight and out of mind. Back of a closet, storage room, that kind of thing.
Ok Troop, drop your cox and grab your socks. Heads in! Listen up. I'm only going to say this once, so you slackers in the back pay attention.
The Firearms Act is rather open ended on what is a legal gun storage container. Most people interpret the solid construction, opaque front, and hard to break into, to mean a dial lock heavy gauge steel safe. A gym locker with a solid hasp and padlock meets the definition.
Use what ever meets the minimum storage
regulations.
As soon as they see people willingly spends hundreds or thousands of dollars on storage equipment it will become the new regs
Clearly your house has never been broken into lol
And this is the reasoning they will be pushing $2k safes, special room and monitored alarm systems




























