You have become my primary animation reference for firing guns. -Fires big ol'' guns like we do in games -has body like game hero -films in slow motion You tick all the boxes dude. us animators thank you.
Anybody else afraid that the massive recoil from these guns plus his previous injury is just going to cause him to pop open one of these days? Love the content! Don't push it too hard though.
That 416 Rigby is moving so fast, I almost thought the door moved BEFORE he pulled the trigger. I love how Scott is such a BIG kid with the intros. He makes sure we have fun before anything even starts.
@ 19:10 Honestly, that handled the impact WAY better than I thought it was going to. I was expecting to watch it just sheer through the roof and be a new part of the Flex.
Quite an important heads up Scott. I don't know about all safes, but I know that safe doors with fireproofing can & often do have asbestos in them... That white powdery stuff made me nervous when you were blowing it about. I think if it's 25+ years old, it's possible to contain it still.
I will never understand how you can keep on shooting all those different weapons with massive recoil. Truly amazing. I might do it once, maybe twice but after that, no way.
My day always gets better when a new Kentucky Ballistics video launches. Great going Scott. My fav will always be the .416 Rigby, it shoots through a buffalo just as easy as through a vault door. 😉
🎺☁️ 1 Thessalonians 4 kJV ✝️🩸 14 For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him. 15 For this we say unto you by the word of the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not prevent them which are asleep. 16 For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first: 17 Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord. 18 Wherefore comfort one another with these words. ✝️🩸 Ephesians 1 kJV 7 In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his grace;
I love how the 4 bore round, despite being very rounded and squat, very often performs extremely well against very tough object just out of sheer mass and velocity. It’s just moving so fast and is so heavy it just plows through enough stuff to do immense damage.
It's actually very slow for a rifle. That's all mass. Funny thing is everyone thinks stuff like the 223/5.56 is fast, but it's really not crazy. The 220 Swift can push 55 grain bullets 1000+ fps faster. It just kinda died out when guys figured out barrels were burning out in just a few thousand rounds, whereas you can get 5-10000 from a 223.
@@leftyeh6495 ballistic science can change that look at the round for the m200 intervention give this thing the right ammo and it could be a beast like the .960
Another hilarious, brilliant, wildly entertaining episode... And you totally read our minds regarding the 416 Rigby!! Thanks again for all you do, Scott.. You truly are a national treasure.
Amazing as always Scott!! I believe the door is actually for a residential walk in vault. A bank vault door is much different and none of the rifles would have even deformed the main security panel. The main panel is going to be a 2" thick (or even thicker depending on the bank) hardened steel plate that's resistant to cutting tools and torching. Imagine 8 or more level III plates stacked up haha
Depends on the bank. Although I agree it does look like a commercial grade residential vault door, not all banks have the big vaults. Small town local banks "might" have something similar to that, simply due to budget constraints.
Having actually worked with bank vault doors, I can say, with 100% confidence, that this is not a true vault door. A bank vault door this size would weigh around 10000 lb!
Is anybody else concerned about the potential for the "dust" from the door being asbestos? It was used in many applications, including fire 🔥 resistance. But not to worry as long as it is damp or in its encapsulated state.
Yep. Did about 30 minutes of research on it. I couldn't even really find anything on the company that produced the safe. All I could find is a statement by a Irish certifying company for safes. "Where The Asbestos-Free Status Of Any Pre-2000 Safe Or Cabinet Cannot Be Established Or Is In Anyway Uncertain, It Must Be Presumed To Contain Asbestos." Apparently Asbestos was extremely widespread in fire-proof safe-construction untill it was forbidden. He should really get the material checked out.
No more than I'm concerned of the asbestos BRAKE dust that you inhale on a daily basis from driving on the freeways roadways and everywhere else? Or at a brake shop? Or if you change your own brakes?....
Yep definitely asbestos, and probably the high grade bad form of it too with all that dust it was kick up or it will be a asbestos and concrete mix which explains all the dust and is far less worse for you
Scott I am a disabled veteran who suffers from Major Depression Disorder and I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart. Your videos never fail to to make me smile. Your laugh is infectious and you just have a really awesome zest for life. As to your question for me my favorite is the T-Rex. I also have to say I missed the .50 cal., however i guess it wouldn’t be fair considering it is an anti-materials round. ✌️ God Bless and thanks again!
Scott, you should have done the punt gun into the vault door with a slug. That would have been impressive to see. I bet the door would have been jiggling around like crazy.
For me the biggest surprise was the door not punching straight through the vehicle. But on reflection it’s just more proof of the adage that speed defeats armor, same as the smaller faster bullets punched through the door but the bigger slower ones didn’t. Fun as always Scott.
Projectile sectional density and hardness are big factors in penetration too. The 4 bore bullet is just lead which means the bullet spends much more energy in deforming the bullet than punching through the steel.
@@nmspy : "Welcome to the Liberty Safe hotline ..." "If you need the mastercode for the 2023 models please dial 1, if you need the mastercode for a 2022 model please dial 2, if you need ................................"
The 416 Rigby seems like the Goldilocks safari gun. Not nearly as heavy as some others, but often does the most damage. (I recall it was very effective against bowling balls)
MAN the 416 is a absolute Beast. The key is bullet construction & velocity..The 400 gr brass solid going 2800 fps is very hard to stop. No wonder John Rigby used it for elephant.and noted he could shoot completely the head from front to back on a brain shot. BEYOND IMPRESSIVE.
If everyone could just laugh like Scott, this old world would sure be a happier place! You never fail to entertain, and open up new horizons, thanks Scott!
Some vault doors have a security feature that uses a piece of glass inside the door. If the glass is broken, it permanently locks the vault door. This is to prevent thieves from drilling or trying to bypass or compromise the locking mechanisms. Some of the dust that you see coming out of the door might be powered glass, so I would be careful if there’s a next time to make sure that there isn’t a hidden danger.
You're right. It's called a Relocker. But this door only protects against fire, like it said on the plaque on the inside. There was none that said it protected against theft also. Such doors have to deserve such a plaque through a lot of testing, for insurance purposes. Probably you could open it with a couple of crowbars. I live in Europe and I know something about safes. I have one which weighs almost 5 metric tonnes. American safes are most of the time about how it looks. I think that's because Americans are allowed to own guns, and Europeans don't. Americans don't need good locks. They can simply shoot an intruder and get away with it.
Unfortunately, Scott, that isn't a Bank vault door. It's a document vault door. Bank vault doors have hardplate (think very thick, angry AR500) over ~70+% of the door front (and sometimes the door sides). Also, that is just a normal S&G 6700 or 8500 series door lock. Not very secure for a bank vault.
Yeah, was going to make the same comment. An actual vault door would be at least an inch thick and more likely an inch and a half and would laugh at any of those rounds. Would probably take a 20mm cannon round to penetrate, hey, now there's an idea for a video. A proper vault door against a 20mm machine cannon. Hell, I'd become a patreon to see that!
Scott I’m always amazed by the .416 rigby (aka the honey badger) I think for your next video you need to do a thickness gauntlet test for the .416 rigby, just keep shooting thicker and thicker objects and/or materials to see what the rigby can and can’t go threw
The more I see the Rigby work I think you're going to need something very substantial to stop it. I think rolled steel from a submarine or the door of an MRAP would stop it or something similar. 🤔
After reading John Ross' "Unintended Consequences", I've always wanted a 4 bore. A Solothurn too, but let's be a bit realistic. Thanks for doing all the content with the 4 bore shoots, love every one.
Considering all the dust flying around on the slo-mo I really hope that safe door wasn't old enough to be filled with asbestos - whilst the risk of asbestosis is minimal as it requires long term exposure, there is a risk of mesothelioma from any exposure (although again the more exposure the bigger the risk) but you wouldn't know for up to 40 years post exposure!
A trend I've noticed the proper huge hunting rifles is that they, by design I imagine, deliver a lot of stopping power, not penetrating power. They seem to be built more for "a wildebeest is charging at me right now and I would like it to stop dead in its tracks" as opposed to, "I would like to shoot through several inches of armour."
That's something I don't really understand. Past a certain point, couldn't you just have some 50BMG loads with some proper hunting projectiles like soft points/hollow points with ballistic tips or similar and have more than enough power and stopping power to drop any creature in the planet dead on the spot? As much as I absolutely admire those guns and as much as I wish to fire them some day, I don't see a practical and economical advantage over what I mentioned before, unless it's simply for fun or to see who can produce the most outrageously powerful shoulder fired artillery piece, in which case, yeah, I totally understand.
2:32 Scott has amazing recoil control. Watch how he collapses his arm back in a straight line to relieve his wrist of absorbing most of the recoil. It's why it didn't fly out of Scott's hand, but it did with Eddie.
The sensor is called a BBDT Ball Bearing Door Trip. The ring that was noted as a light is a housing for a heat sensor. Lefebure was an American manufacturing company out of Cedar Rapids. Was purchased by Mosler about 25 years ago. Both companies where over a hundred years old. No longer in business. The insulation in record safes is usually gypsum poured in as a slurry. I've been working on vaults for almost 40 years. It was fun watching this video.
5:44 "You can see some like white stuff in there and I think that may be like some sort of fireproof material." Given the apparent age of this thing, who wants to bet that it's asbestos?
The slow motion footage of the 4 bore hitting the door is insane. It looks like water vibrating or something. That is so cool. Sorry to hear that you were sick. Hope you're doing better now.
Honestly I'm most impressed by how well that car stood up to the drops. I mean, if you were in the front passenger seat you might have survived having a bank vault dropped on you TWICE. I expected that it would smoosh the entire car but that car was tough enough to bounce the door off. That's some pretty impressive modern engineering!
Most likely a salvage from a demolition. When a bank branch shuts down, the vaults are always left as part of the base building and becomes the problem of either the new tenants or the demo crew. I've built a lot of banks so I've worked with quite a few vault techs and learned a lot about vault and bank security technologies. That is an old vault door. Newer vault doors weight close to 6000 pounds for an average community bank. They use tungsten carbide for the reinforcement of the cementitious fire proof filler. There is also a glass pack that if broken, the door permanently locks. The door in this video is pretty old and most likely has cement / asbestos filler inside. It's one thing to shoot through that door but it's another thing to cut through those bars in that door and there is no way an average human is squeezing in between them to get in.
Add to that all the asbestos fibres now in your lungs from the dust, you might get away with the bank robbery but the door will have its own revenge years down the line with that lovely mesothelioma
All the energy from the 4 Bore shot spread through the safe door. It looked like paper. Once again, all these powerful weapons were very impressive. Thanks Scott. Curiosity, fun and information guaranteed. Waiting for the next video.👏🏻🤜🏻🤛🏻🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
LET'S GOOO 4M SUBS! You've certainly dealt with enough pain to deserve it, Scott. Can we please also have another Slo Mo Guys collab? They are such good episodes.
416 Rigby never disappoints! If you want the energy of a freight train impacting on a very small area, and don't care what's behind for two or three post codes, then the 416 Rigby is the right tool for the job. The only question that ever only remains is: what on earth would you need THAT for?!?
I was DEFINITELY waiting on the honey badger to make its presence known lol. Huge fan of the 416 Rigby that I only know of because of this channel. Thanks Scott
The 4 bore was my favorite. Scott, you're the only person that I've seen that can fire that rifle and walk away. I know there's no chance that I could handle that much recoil.👍
That's a strong room door, used for slowing people down or in this case used as a firebreak which is more of a lightweight construction design to stop fire for X amount of time. The white powder is most likely diorite, diatomaceous earth or something similar. If you want something relatively solid in a small building which a concrete room, you use a strong room door. These sorts of fire doors if they were used in a bank would be behind the big vault door preventing a fire from spreading inside the protected area.
Thanks for the video! Looks like the 375 and 416 got the job done without the extra punishment of the larger cartridges. It’s all about bullet design and sectional density. Also, at the end, that’s a great selling point for that SUV. It looks like it would’ve protected the occupants quite well in case of a terrible accident. I mean, the top hardly even caved in at all.
pretty sure there was some beefy mechanism inside the door at various places that let some slugs through and stopped others, depending on their impact location.
All vehicles have their rollover protection built into the pillars. There's layers of sheet metal bracing all across the roof tying the pillars together so they don't buckle in a rollover.
Agreed. When it comes to penetrating armor: small, pointy, fast moving bullets trump overall power and bore diameter. 5.7x28mm is pretty anemic compared to .44 magnum; but, it slides through armor that the .44 cannot.
I honestly think you should have a 2 Bore rifle commissioned and built! Not only would it satisfy your masochistic need for recoil, but being the only one of its kind, it would probably be a great investment.....would go nice in the KB museum eventually as well lol
200lbs of recoil? CRAP! The only gun that would make the person shot actually fly backwards like Hollywood like to make EVERYONE else do. Even with 9mm. Just Amazing!! Thanks Scott.
19:30 The roof obviously didn't fare well, but I'm thoroughly impressed with that suspension. Forget the pickup truck adds they have of heavy stuff being dropped in the bed, Ford should really just contract Scott to do absurd things to their vehicles. Then see if they still move lol.
@10:29 the Nitro rifle became a flamethrower. Maybe if we go to 4.0 subscribers Scott will graduate to flamethrowers and artillery? I've done my part, subscribed.
Keep in mind making it through the door is not the same as energy transfer. So the 4 Bore round probably had more energy transfer into the door than the Rigby round which made it through the door. As for the 'smoke' that's something akin to asbestos, but hopefully not as long term dangerous.
9.3x62 mm would be neat to see how it compares against other African rifles. Awesome videos! As always praying for safety out on the range and God keeps his hand of protection over you.
Considering that the vault door's fire insulating lining is likely to be a bunch of asbestos, you might wanna reconsider walking through that dust cloud to check out the rear of the door after you've shot it. You can't put a thumb in cancer after all, scott.
I suspect bullet construction made a huge difference in whether a caliber penetrated the door, or not. The 375 H&H, 577 Trex and 416 Rigby all appeared to use solids which are specifically intended to penetrate as deeply as possible, with minimal expansion. Most of the other calibers appeared to be using controlled expansion or solid lead (4-bore) bullets which don't penetrate nearly as well. All that aside...very entertaining video as always!
I love how Scott is still a mad lad and did not let his accident deter him of enjoying his passion and bringing us these wonderful videos. That said he'd make a terrible bank robber. 😄
The table ending antics are great. Have always loved it. This new thing with the crane for endings though, so next level Kentucky Ballistics. Well done as always, Scott. Just fabulous. Any chance we’ll see the punt gun versus this bank door????
Man, that 700 nitro fireball was even reflected in the metal of the door. That's awesome! And it's not a Kentucky Ballistics video without something being wrecked at the end. 😁
That is a lightweight vault door. The one I worked with was so thick, heavy, and just plain MASSIVE, that when converting the bank to a dentist's office, we had to leave them there, and wall up the doors in soffits, to hide them. They were like 14 inches thick, made of 1/2 inch stainless steel and there wasn't a square millimeter on them that any known civilian firearm round would have penetrated.
Yeah, I was about to say, it seemed a bit on the flimsy side for a vault door, but it's probably one of the few vault doors you could penetrate with a bullet. It'd be a boring video if it was nothing but various sizes of lead smears on metal plate!
An old bank got turned into a restaurant in the neighborhood I lived in as a kid. They insisted on having the vault door removed so they could use the vault room for extra dining space. They sent for someone to come with a cutting torch to cut the hinges off the frame. When the door fell they cracked the concrete floor... and then they realised they couldn't move it or get anything under it... so they methodically cut it up in situ which completely destroyed the floor. The restaurant turned out nice in the end, but they had not budgeted with a new concrete slap so they all but went bust before they even opened.
Wow Kentucky, you never stop surprising me with your content, and honestly some of the tests you have conducted in the past have had outcomes that have surprised and surpassed my expectations, and this is no exception! Keep up the great work and thank you for your weekly uploads! Fav Safari Rifle: 4 BORE!
I started a new channel! Go take a look! th-cam.com/video/PAGI_VqdxbU/w-d-xo.html I hope you enjoyed today's video and thanks for watching!
Hi
Hi
Let’s go
Thank you Scott and company for all the vids over the yrs. Love and respect
Just what I needed! 👍👍
You have become my primary animation reference for firing guns.
-Fires big ol'' guns like we do in games
-has body like game hero
-films in slow motion
You tick all the boxes dude. us animators thank you.
That's so fun! I never even would have thought of that. How cool.
never thought KB's video would be an animation references for a game dev, his firing stance is superb too 😁
Do you make all the game characters say "OH! GOL-LY!!" after every shot? XD
He would be great as Duke Nukem😂
He IS Duke Nukem.
Anybody else afraid that the massive recoil from these guns plus his previous injury is just going to cause him to pop open one of these days? Love the content! Don't push it too hard though.
Every time. I can just picture his rib cage splitting open
Iirc if the wound healed properly it should in theory be stronger than the original
lol, naww...he tough. And after bones heal, they are generally tougher......I think...:)
I read somewhere that if you have enough vitamin C deficiency your scar tissue starts opening up!!😬😬
Physical abuse takes a cumulative toll
You never seem to run out of interesting, formidable, but breachable targets. Thx for the visuals and, of course, your narratives. Total enjoyment !
Amen, I’m concerned he may be breathing in asbestos from the vault door though
@@CyborgRising if he was then just stick a thumb in it of course.
@@CyborgRising I would say with 100% certainty that the door is filled with ACM. At least he is outdoors.
Submissive and Breachable
to the Vault door: Stay strong, you got this... bro is just going through a tough time in life 😅
I honestly think the Chris Farley "okie dokie" is the best part of the videos 😂
Scott, The dust from the door could be asbestos! Being outside is the saving grace, but be more careful in future.
Exactly, he walked through a big cloud of it at the end though 😬
Drywall. Gypsum dust.
@@othfarmin7959 it's a bank vault, asbestos would make more sense, you dont want your important contents going up in flames
Alle machen sich Sorgen um Asbest, aber keiner macht sich Sorgen um McDonald's fraß.
@@AFD.. hahaha good point xD
That 416 Rigby is moving so fast, I almost thought the door moved BEFORE he pulled the trigger. I love how Scott is such a BIG kid with the intros. He makes sure we have fun before anything even starts.
I would love to see a speed comparison slow mo with the slow mo guys and other more common/well known calibers.
Can someone tell Scott to make a video shooting a safe life defence jacket with a 4 bore?
WARNING: Old fire-resistant vault doors and cabinets often contained ASBESTOS. All of that dust hanging around... perhaps a concern.
I hope that's not 😰😰😰
My thoughts exactly, I was just checking to see if anyone's informed him chances are that's asbestos insulation 😅
Red necks don't care. LOL
Came here also to see if someone has pointed this out. Simple rule in my country: If it's made before 1990 and is fire resistant It contains asbestos
you read my mind....
@ 19:10
Honestly, that handled the impact WAY better than I thought it was going to.
I was expecting to watch it just sheer through the roof and be a new part of the Flex.
Yes. Quite robust body. If only our host hadn't shot the engine before...
Yeah thought it would cut it in half
Damn you Ford for making me like something you did.
Quite an important heads up Scott. I don't know about all safes, but I know that safe doors with fireproofing can & often do have asbestos in them... That white powdery stuff made me nervous when you were blowing it about. I think if it's 25+ years old, it's possible to contain it still.
Thank you, I am glad to see someone say this. Commenting to hopefully add some visibility to this. Be careful @KentuckyBallisticss
I was thinking the exact same thing.
Agree, it very well could be.
“What’s this full of, cotton candy?” Nope, just mesothelioma.
LeFebure isn't a brand known for using asbestos in their safes. And not during the time period this door was manufactured.
I will never understand how you can keep on shooting all those different weapons with massive recoil. Truly amazing. I might do it once, maybe twice but after that, no way.
I would do it once for sure. But I am fairly certain my shoulder can't handle what it used to so once would be enough (per outing
Well he is a 260 pound guy with a lot of muscle
@@nicowins And Eddie Hall made him look normal sized.
@@jmazosoWell, The only humans that Eddie doesn´t make look small beside him, is someone like Shaq O´Neil, Brian and people of that gigantuan size.
I prefer my right shoulder attached to my body. I'm forever amazed at how easily Scott shoots those unholy beasts.
I’m with Scott on that 416 Rigby. That round goes through everything he puts in front of it! 😮
Still loving the .416 Rigby. An absolute monster of a round.
Looks like an old vault door, better check that ain't asbesthos dust, Scott.
My day always gets better when a new Kentucky Ballistics video launches. Great going Scott.
My fav will always be the .416 Rigby, it shoots through a buffalo just as easy as through a vault door. 😉
🎺☁️ 1 Thessalonians 4 kJV ✝️🩸
14 For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him.
15 For this we say unto you by the word of the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not prevent them which are asleep.
16 For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first:
17 Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.
18 Wherefore comfort one another with these words.
✝️🩸
Ephesians 1 kJV
7 In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his grace;
I forgot about the Rigby. That one went through anything...
@@AlexanderBrown77relevance?
I like the 416 rigby too, but talking about shooting a Buffalo is disgusting.
@@Akkbar21And why is that?
Scott: "There is some kind of dust in this door"
Announcer : "If you or a loved one have been diagnosed with mesothelioma..."
You may be entitled to financial compensation
Amoilehtosem
My first thought after seeing the fire rating tag.
@@GunneryGames Yup.
I love how the 4 bore round, despite being very rounded and squat, very often performs extremely well against very tough object just out of sheer mass and velocity. It’s just moving so fast and is so heavy it just plows through enough stuff to do immense damage.
It's actually very slow for a rifle. That's all mass.
Funny thing is everyone thinks stuff like the 223/5.56 is fast, but it's really not crazy. The 220 Swift can push 55 grain bullets 1000+ fps faster. It just kinda died out when guys figured out barrels were burning out in just a few thousand rounds, whereas you can get 5-10000 from a 223.
@@leftyeh6495 ballistic science can change that look at the round for the m200 intervention give this thing the right ammo and it could be a beast like the .960
Is there any other style of rounds for that 4 bore? More shape with copper?
They had explosive rounds for elephants back in the day..
@@leftyeh6495 They are fast.
6:12 Scott, please never change, you're such a gem 😂
Another hilarious, brilliant, wildly entertaining episode... And you totally read our minds regarding the 416 Rigby!! Thanks again for all you do, Scott.. You truly are a national treasure.
And as a fellow Kentuckian I approve of this message 😂😂😂
He is one of Kentucky's finest men.
The 4 bore has a place in Scott's heart, but the .50 Cal has a place in his neck.😆 Great video!
50 BMG SLAP more like. 😅
Scott, you ran thru that asbestos dust !!!!!
HA HA HA HA HA
DAAAAAAAMN 😂😂😂😂😂
Not funny this Man Almost died
Amazing as always Scott!!
I believe the door is actually for a residential walk in vault. A bank vault door is much different and none of the rifles would have even deformed the main security panel. The main panel is going to be a 2" thick (or even thicker depending on the bank) hardened steel plate that's resistant to cutting tools and torching. Imagine 8 or more level III plates stacked up haha
Depends on the bank. Although I agree it does look like a commercial grade residential vault door, not all banks have the big vaults. Small town local banks "might" have something similar to that, simply due to budget constraints.
everybodys a vault master now
And I remember the old full auto Friday episode of busting into a Walmart safe. Easy. A real one would be an interesting comparison
Having actually worked with bank vault doors, I can say, with 100% confidence, that this is not a true vault door. A bank vault door this size would weigh around 10000 lb!
@@petethompson721
Not really, just the internet to research the information provided in the video.
Is anybody else concerned about the potential for the "dust" from the door being asbestos? It was used in many applications, including fire 🔥 resistance. But not to worry as long as it is damp or in its encapsulated state.
Yep. Did about 30 minutes of research on it. I couldn't even really find anything on the company that produced the safe. All I could find is a statement by a Irish certifying company for safes.
"Where The Asbestos-Free Status Of Any Pre-2000 Safe Or Cabinet Cannot Be Established Or Is In Anyway Uncertain, It Must Be Presumed To Contain Asbestos."
Apparently Asbestos was extremely widespread in fire-proof safe-construction untill it was forbidden. He should really get the material checked out.
No more than I'm concerned of the asbestos BRAKE dust that you inhale on a daily basis from driving on the freeways roadways and everywhere else?
Or at a brake shop? Or if you change your own brakes?....
white fibers that break into dust(splinters) are def asbestos kevlar isn't used for fireproofing carbon fiber would be black
@@mjolnirswrath23 Same thing with clutches.
Yep definitely asbestos, and probably the high grade bad form of it too with all that dust it was kick up or it will be a asbestos and concrete mix which explains all the dust and is far less worse for you
Scott I am a disabled veteran who suffers from Major Depression Disorder and I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart. Your videos never fail to to make me smile. Your laugh is infectious and you just have a really awesome zest for life. As to your question for me my favorite is the T-Rex. I also have to say I missed the .50 cal., however i guess it wouldn’t be fair considering it is an anti-materials round. ✌️ God Bless and thanks again!
Hang in there, my friend
Scott, you should have done the punt gun into the vault door with a slug. That would have been impressive to see. I bet the door would have been jiggling around like crazy.
in the next video I bet he just explodes the door or tears part of it off with the punt gun
Finally, a video where a table isn't maliciously abused. TABLES LIVES MATTER.
For me the biggest surprise was the door not punching straight through the vehicle.
But on reflection it’s just more proof of the adage that speed defeats armor, same as the smaller faster bullets punched through the door but the bigger slower ones didn’t.
Fun as always Scott.
That and the SUV is built to withstand rollovers at 60mph. They use VERY high grade steel in those supports around the passengers.
With these, it's also the bullet material putting in the work.
Projectile sectional density and hardness are big factors in penetration too. The 4 bore bullet is just lead which means the bullet spends much more energy in deforming the bullet than punching through the steel.
Shoulda bought a liberty safe, not as a sponsor but as a comedic scrutiny 😂
"How many liberty safes it needs to stop this .22LR ..." lol
@@TomKappeln one SUBPOENA 🗿
Shots big guns at another safe with bunch of big guns, stays closed...throws paper plane at liberty and it opens
@@nmspy : "Welcome to the Liberty Safe hotline ..."
"If you need the mastercode for the 2023 models please dial 1, if you need the mastercode for a 2022 model please dial 2, if you need ................................"
Yea, ya don't need any tools to open a liberty safe. Ya just need to ask nicely. 😂
The 416 Rigby seems like the Goldilocks safari gun. Not nearly as heavy as some others, but often does the most damage. (I recall it was very effective against bowling balls)
I was so pleased when he finally shot that. Honey Badger never disappoints.
Has a great combination of diameter, sectional density, and velocity.
@@exothermal.sprocket just like one of my exes and she also left me with a sore shoulder and a gaping hole in my "safe door".
MAN the 416 is a absolute Beast. The key is bullet construction & velocity..The 400 gr brass solid going 2800 fps is very hard to stop. No wonder John Rigby used it for elephant.and noted he could shoot completely the head from front to back on a brain shot. BEYOND IMPRESSIVE.
If everyone could just laugh like Scott, this old world would sure be a happier place! You never fail to entertain, and open up new horizons, thanks Scott!
That is so true.
Some vault doors have a security feature that uses a piece of glass inside the door. If the glass is broken, it permanently locks the vault door. This is to prevent thieves from drilling or trying to bypass or compromise the locking mechanisms. Some of the dust that you see coming out of the door might be powered glass, so I would be careful if there’s a next time to make sure that there isn’t a hidden danger.
fireinsulation from pre 2000 ish = probably asbestos... sooooo wouldn worry to much about that glas
@@korpilombolo1 I didn’t think about that. I wasn’t aware asbestos was used in safes
Exactly-@@korpilombolo1
You're right.
It's called a Relocker.
But this door only protects against fire, like it said on the plaque on the inside.
There was none that said it protected against theft also.
Such doors have to deserve such a plaque through a lot of testing,
for insurance purposes.
Probably you could open it with a couple of crowbars.
I live in Europe and I know something about safes.
I have one which weighs almost 5 metric tonnes.
American safes are most of the time about how it looks.
I think that's because Americans are allowed to own guns, and Europeans don't.
Americans don't need good locks.
They can simply shoot an intruder and get away with it.
I watched cartoons too.
Impressive that Scott can stand there and take that much recoil without flinching. Gets my vote for toughest guy!
I think an "after" video should show us the bruises on Scott's shoulder!!
@@VegasMikeP229 yeah i'm almost certain he says every swear word under the sun after the camera is off.
13:11 DUDE this door just ripples like WATER when hit with the 4-bore round!!!!!
Unfortunately, Scott, that isn't a Bank vault door. It's a document vault door. Bank vault doors have hardplate (think very thick, angry AR500) over ~70+% of the door front (and sometimes the door sides). Also, that is just a normal S&G 6700 or 8500 series door lock. Not very secure for a bank vault.
Yeah, was going to make the same comment. An actual vault door would be at least an inch thick and more likely an inch and a half and would laugh at any of those rounds. Would probably take a 20mm cannon round to penetrate, hey, now there's an idea for a video. A proper vault door against a 20mm machine cannon. Hell, I'd become a patreon to see that!
You should wear electronic muffs over your ear plugs. You may end up with Tinnitus like me if you don't.
@@conifergreen2Huh?
Very true!
Scott I’m always amazed by the .416 rigby (aka the honey badger) I think for your next video you need to do a thickness gauntlet test for the .416 rigby, just keep shooting thicker and thicker objects and/or materials to see what the rigby can and can’t go threw
He should bring out the pine boards for that too.
gonna need a LOT of pine @@DrEpicPhD
The more I see the Rigby work I think you're going to need something very substantial to stop it. I think rolled steel from a submarine or the door of an MRAP would stop it or something similar. 🤔
completely agree. Diameter isn't everything. The .416 rigby is clearly the highest penetration of all his safari guns
13:48 that’s what she said 😂😂 another great video 🎉🎉
4 bore: I’m the worlds biggest gun 😊
Schwerer gustav: hold my beer
I was almost disappointed that the 416 wasn’t in the lineup until you brought it out. That rifle is truly the ultimate honey badger. Well done, sir.
same, that cartridge is insane.
After reading John Ross' "Unintended Consequences", I've always wanted a 4 bore. A Solothurn too, but let's be a bit realistic. Thanks for doing all the content with the 4 bore shoots, love every one.
First, I would be happy for all that Bowman's property so I could train every day with ordinary guns 😇
Considering all the dust flying around on the slo-mo I really hope that safe door wasn't old enough to be filled with asbestos - whilst the risk of asbestosis is minimal as it requires long term exposure, there is a risk of mesothelioma from any exposure (although again the more exposure the bigger the risk) but you wouldn't know for up to 40 years post exposure!
He will be old and already dying in 40 years
I did a Ctrl + F for "asbestos" partway through watching the video.
Gotta give some respect to that Ford!. It crumpled but didn't collapse. That's pretty damn strong and well engineered.
A trend I've noticed the proper huge hunting rifles is that they, by design I imagine, deliver a lot of stopping power, not penetrating power. They seem to be built more for "a wildebeest is charging at me right now and I would like it to stop dead in its tracks" as opposed to, "I would like to shoot through several inches of armour."
That's something I don't really understand. Past a certain point, couldn't you just have some 50BMG loads with some proper hunting projectiles like soft points/hollow points with ballistic tips or similar and have more than enough power and stopping power to drop any creature in the planet dead on the spot? As much as I absolutely admire those guns and as much as I wish to fire them some day, I don't see a practical and economical advantage over what I mentioned before, unless it's simply for fun or to see who can produce the most outrageously powerful shoulder fired artillery piece, in which case, yeah, I totally understand.
Scott's laughter is always hilarious 😂
Even when he feels sick ...
So contagious 😜
@@It-b-BlairYou'll be fine....just put a thumb in it
2:32 Scott has amazing recoil control. Watch how he collapses his arm back in a straight line to relieve his wrist of absorbing most of the recoil. It's why it didn't fly out of Scott's hand, but it did with Eddie.
The sensor is called a BBDT Ball Bearing Door Trip. The ring that was noted as a light is a housing for a heat sensor. Lefebure was an American manufacturing company out of Cedar Rapids. Was purchased by Mosler about 25 years ago. Both companies where over a hundred years old. No longer in business. The insulation in record safes is usually gypsum poured in as a slurry. I've been working on vaults for almost 40 years. It was fun watching this video.
5:44 "You can see some like white stuff in there and I think that may be like some sort of fireproof material."
Given the apparent age of this thing, who wants to bet that it's asbestos?
That was my thought. I hope it's not.
The slow motion footage of the 4 bore hitting the door is insane. It looks like water vibrating or something. That is so cool. Sorry to hear that you were sick. Hope you're doing better now.
If Scott is going to do what I think he's going to for 4 million subscribers, I sure hope The Slow Mo Guys are involved.
14:45 Scott really knows his audience. The 416 Rigby Honey Badger never fails to impress.
Honestly I'm most impressed by how well that car stood up to the drops.
I mean, if you were in the front passenger seat you might have survived having a bank vault dropped on you TWICE. I expected that it would smoosh the entire car but that car was tough enough to bounce the door off. That's some pretty impressive modern engineering!
Modern car safety is absolutely incredible
Same here. Tbh the suspension is the mvp here.
A BANK VAULT!? This man has the power of 100 men!
Most likely a salvage from a demolition. When a bank branch shuts down, the vaults are always left as part of the base building and becomes the problem of either the new tenants or the demo crew. I've built a lot of banks so I've worked with quite a few vault techs and learned a lot about vault and bank security technologies. That is an old vault door.
Newer vault doors weight close to 6000 pounds for an average community bank. They use tungsten carbide for the reinforcement of the cementitious fire proof filler. There is also a glass pack that if broken, the door permanently locks. The door in this video is pretty old and most likely has cement / asbestos filler inside. It's one thing to shoot through that door but it's another thing to cut through those bars in that door and there is no way an average human is squeezing in between them to get in.
Probably more of a fire safe than a security safe.
Mmmmm..... Asbestos....
Add to that all the asbestos fibres now in your lungs from the dust, you might get away with the bank robbery but the door will have its own revenge years down the line with that lovely mesothelioma
Dude! The slow motion ripples in the door when he shot it with the four bore were seriously cool!
The ripple from some shots made the metal look like water for a second. Super cool.
All the energy from the 4 Bore shot spread through the safe door. It looked like paper. Once again, all these powerful weapons were very impressive. Thanks Scott. Curiosity, fun and information guaranteed. Waiting for the next video.👏🏻🤜🏻🤛🏻🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
The things Scott does for us man. Legend.
The arm staying on being picked up, but falling off mid sentence like that was almost catroonishly hilarious. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
LET'S GOOO 4M SUBS! You've certainly dealt with enough pain to deserve it, Scott. Can we please also have another Slo Mo Guys collab? They are such good episodes.
just dont blow it up
416 Rigby never disappoints! If you want the energy of a freight train impacting on a very small area, and don't care what's behind for two or three post codes, then the 416 Rigby is the right tool for the job. The only question that ever only remains is: what on earth would you need THAT for?!?
Safari hunts if you want to hunt a honey badger!!
Need never even enters the equation, only the smile.
Man, Scott thanks for letting us live vicariously through you, your out there living every man’s childhood dreams keep it up.
I was DEFINITELY waiting on the honey badger to make its presence known lol. Huge fan of the 416 Rigby that I only know of because of this channel. Thanks Scott
The 4 bore was my favorite. Scott, you're the only person that I've seen that can fire that rifle and walk away. I know there's no chance that I could handle that much recoil.👍
Both the vault door and the vehicle roof were surprisingly robust!
What are the chances the white fireproofing stuff contains asbestos?
My first thought when I saw him put his finger to his nose.
most definitely asbestos. afaik LeFEBURE was a pre 90s brand before asbestos was banned.
I did think the same. Guess the manufacturers never thought someone would shoot it with a variety of safari rifles....
@kentuckyballistics Don't breathe the dust!
Good call! Be careful!
"People store their money in a bank generally as it's the safest way"
2008 would like a word. Grats on 4m Scott!
Love you KentuckyBallistics from Bosnia🇧🇦🇧🇦🇧🇦🇧🇦🇧🇦
Beatyful Mostar 😀👍
You read my mind. When you got to the 4 bore, I thought, "How can you not shoot it with the honey badger!" You never disappoint. Great video!
That's a strong room door, used for slowing people down or in this case used as a firebreak which is more of a lightweight construction design to stop fire for X amount of time.
The white powder is most likely diorite, diatomaceous earth or something similar.
If you want something relatively solid in a small building which a concrete room, you use a strong room door.
These sorts of fire doors if they were used in a bank would be behind the big vault door preventing a fire from spreading inside the protected area.
The slow-motion is amazing on your channel Scott
Thanks for the video! Looks like the 375 and 416 got the job done without the extra punishment of the larger cartridges. It’s all about bullet design and sectional density. Also, at the end, that’s a great selling point for that SUV. It looks like it would’ve protected the occupants quite well in case of a terrible accident. I mean, the top hardly even caved in at all.
pretty sure there was some beefy mechanism inside the door at various places
that let some slugs through and stopped others, depending on their impact location.
All vehicles have their rollover protection built into the pillars. There's layers of sheet metal bracing all across the roof tying the pillars together so they don't buckle in a rollover.
Agreed. When it comes to penetrating armor: small, pointy, fast moving bullets trump overall power and bore diameter. 5.7x28mm is pretty anemic compared to .44 magnum; but, it slides through armor that the .44 cannot.
The socks also rebounded very well
11:20 You could say that, well, you just put a thumb in it 😂😂😂
How many thumbs he needs
I honestly think you should have a 2 Bore rifle commissioned and built! Not only would it satisfy your masochistic need for recoil, but being the only one of its kind, it would probably be a great investment.....would go nice in the KB museum eventually as well lol
2-bore rifles exist, but the ammunition has to be handmade. Not sure you how to justify a $20,000 gun that costs $100+ to pull the trigger.
big kaboom
@CoconutMigrating alot of the safari guns are 5 figure guns with 100$ trigger pulls
@@CoconutMigratingThat's exactly what the .700 nitro is..$100 a shot.
The 4 bore's recoil would be like shooting five 12 gauge slugs at the same time.
This was absolutely ridiculous and i thoroughly enjoyed it.
14:16 That was definitely a personal attack on you by the cyborg predator and its been a long time coming.
The ripples on the door, beautiful!
I think the 4 bore has a special place on your shoulder 😉
200lbs of recoil? CRAP! The only gun that would make the person shot actually fly backwards like Hollywood like to make EVERYONE else do. Even with 9mm.
Just Amazing!!
Thanks Scott.
I like the part when vin diesel came in and said” fish and chips? Nah… this is family” bone chilling moment
That cackle during the second door drop is pure joy. Love it.
19:30 The roof obviously didn't fare well, but I'm thoroughly impressed with that suspension. Forget the pickup truck adds they have of heavy stuff being dropped in the bed, Ford should really just contract Scott to do absurd things to their vehicles. Then see if they still move lol.
The guy doesn’t blink! Wild
@10:29 the Nitro rifle became a flamethrower. Maybe if we go to 4.0 subscribers Scott will graduate to flamethrowers and artillery? I've done my part, subscribed.
Keep in mind making it through the door is not the same as energy transfer. So the 4 Bore round probably had more energy transfer into the door than the Rigby round which made it through the door. As for the 'smoke' that's something akin to asbestos, but hopefully not as long term dangerous.
I'm always impressed by the 416!
But I'm kind of impressed by how well the car stood up too.
Seeing the reflection of the muzzle flash of the .700 Nitro Express at 10:35 was awesome.
9.3x62 mm would be neat to see how it compares against other African rifles.
Awesome videos!
As always praying for safety out on the range and God keeps his hand of protection over you.
Considering that the vault door's fire insulating lining is likely to be a bunch of asbestos, you might wanna reconsider walking through that dust cloud to check out the rear of the door after you've shot it.
You can't put a thumb in cancer after all, scott.
LeFebure isn't a brand known for using asbestos in their safes. And not during the time period this door was manufactured.
I will never stop enjoying your videos. You, donut, Matt and Brandon will always have a special place in my heart
Let's not forget that FPSRUSSIA opened the door for these guys to succeed.
Wow. What low standards.
Don't forget garand thumb lol
That 1st pistol reminds of the Hunting Revolver from New Vegas that shoots 45-70govt. rounds in game.
Yup
The Hunting Revolver is actually based on a real gun: the Magnum Research Big Frame Revolver (BFR). Fun fact: It can chamber .45-70.
I suspect bullet construction made a huge difference in whether a caliber penetrated the door, or not. The 375 H&H, 577 Trex and 416 Rigby all appeared to use solids which are specifically intended to penetrate as deeply as possible, with minimal expansion. Most of the other calibers appeared to be using controlled expansion or solid lead (4-bore) bullets which don't penetrate nearly as well. All that aside...very entertaining video as always!
Hey Scott great stuff, me and the guys are just worried that the white fireproofing stuff may be asbestos? Please be safe!
From start to finish these videos are so much fun to watch! I agree that the crane was stellar investment. Thanks you, Scott!
For the door clearing 12 gauge shot I literally went "Oh I don't think it wil... huh nevermind." as soon as I saw the dent made by it.
I love how Scott is still a mad lad and did not let his accident deter him of enjoying his passion and bringing us these wonderful videos.
That said he'd make a terrible bank robber. 😄
@anthroimperzia3927 Me and Papa haj? Please. We only eat the souls of bigots. You are not a bigot I assume?
@@Hamokkif you were tryna eat my soul i’d just run up a flight of stairs LMAO
The table ending antics are great. Have always loved it. This new thing with the crane for endings though, so next level Kentucky Ballistics. Well done as always, Scott. Just fabulous. Any chance we’ll see the punt gun versus this bank door????
Man, that 700 nitro fireball was even reflected in the metal of the door. That's awesome!
And it's not a Kentucky Ballistics video without something being wrecked at the end. 😁
That double barrel is B-E-A-utiful...
That is a lightweight vault door. The one I worked with was so thick, heavy, and just plain MASSIVE, that when converting the bank to a dentist's office, we had to leave them there, and wall up the doors in soffits, to hide them. They were like 14 inches thick, made of 1/2 inch stainless steel and there wasn't a square millimeter on them that any known civilian firearm round would have penetrated.
Yeah, I was about to say, it seemed a bit on the flimsy side for a vault door, but it's probably one of the few vault doors you could penetrate with a bullet. It'd be a boring video if it was nothing but various sizes of lead smears on metal plate!
An old bank got turned into a restaurant in the neighborhood I lived in as a kid. They insisted on having the vault door removed so they could use the vault room for extra dining space. They sent for someone to come with a cutting torch to cut the hinges off the frame. When the door fell they cracked the concrete floor... and then they realised they couldn't move it or get anything under it... so they methodically cut it up in situ which completely destroyed the floor. The restaurant turned out nice in the end, but they had not budgeted with a new concrete slap so they all but went bust before they even opened.
Place i used to work at had a vault door from the 1920s. That thing was so solid and heavy id have problems opening the door in the first place
It's so amazing how big that gun is. That can easily take down a dinosaur. That pop sound was satisfying when it popped out the shot gun🍷🗿
Taktikal Trex conspicuously absent
Like a garand but more American
Minus the glass of wine and the tiki face.
What kind of Dino? 😈
@@towerofresonance4877 I added it because the satisfaction sound off the gun.
You were having WAY too much fun with that! Great video loved it!
The shock wave in the door with the 4 bore is amazing!
Wow Kentucky, you never stop surprising me with your content, and honestly some of the tests you have conducted in the past have had outcomes that have surprised and surpassed my expectations, and this is no exception! Keep up the great work and thank you for your weekly uploads!
Fav Safari Rifle: 4 BORE!
This man's dedication to destruction is sublime