Larry wrote:Do you have many options on where you want to place the safe. I assume it is going against a wall. so that will restrict the placement of the bolts somewhat. How thick is the concrete at its thinnest? If the safe is large enough you may be able to position the bolts so they intercept the thick part if you can determine where that is. You only need two anchor points to the floor. GPR could identify the thickness of the concrete below but that would be costly and perhaps not have the resolution the other option is to drill test holes to find the thin points then move away from them. Honestly I wouldnt worry about whether it was thick or thin just choose your fastener of choice and put two it the floor and two into the wall on a stud. It will pass any cop push test they dont want to do any damage as long as it doesn't rock you will be sweet. I would put money that you could just put down some contact adhesive along with the bolts and it will never move.
Blr243 wrote:Penetration of the slab compromises the protection from termites Steel framed homes still have a stack of untreated timber . I’d be useing 75 mm ankascrews ( screw bolts )
Obie73 wrote:The other thing I forgot to mention is that it's a steel frame house. So I can't attach the top of the safe to wooden studs behind the plaster. The contact adhesive idea might work, if I first glue a strip of wood to the plaster wall, because there's a kicker board at the base of the wall and therefor the safe is out from the wall about 10mm. Then glue the top of the safe to the wooden strip. What sort of glue is used? 'Liquid nails' or something like that? The other (expensive) alternative I don't really want to do is get someone to install wooden studs between the metal frame uprights inside the wall and then reinstall the plaster board.
I have a suspicion the concrete might only be about 40 cm thick over the top of the foam blocks. I'd say at a guess it would be difficult even with a special gadget to find where the thickest part of the concrete is (but I could be wrong on that). Yes it's going up against a wall, in a corner. Thanks for your advice!