Wow, thank you very much! Very informative and interesting ideas. How were you able to install an electrical outlet inside the safe? Wouldn't any alterations void the warranty?
A lot to digest. I found those exterior magnetic racks and under the shelf baskets. Those are smart space savers.
I ended up getting an Eva battery powered dehumidifier. I haven't found a decent hydrometer. Do those remote 2pc hydrometers work through the safe walls. There's a sensor and a touchscreen display, has anyone used one of these?
Thanks again for the great information.
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I got all the lighting at HOME DEPOT. The receptacle is just a 2-outlet normal 110-115V outlet. I installed it in a non-metallic shallow electrical outlet box with the standard plastic faceplate.
To provide power, I got a good quality 3-wire cord. I may have had this lying around the shop, or I may have just gotten an extension cord and cut one end off. There's a hole already drilled in the back or one side of the safe, so there's no problem with warranty. Run the cord from the outside and connect it to the receptacle. Then put the box, receptacle and faceplate together. I used velcro stuck to the back of the box to attach it to the fuzzy carpet on the safe wall. I've seen online suggestions that you might take a small piece of wood, cover it in a similar carpeting, and velcro that to the inside wall. Now you have a place to drill holes and mount anything you want without drilling into the firewall/drywall.
I attached a rope light (can use led strips now -- not available when I did mine). Ran it around the inside frame of the door with the power connection on the RIGHT side of the door frame. That's so I could install a switch. If you open the safe and look inside, you'll see a stationary bolt on the bottom of the hinged side of the door, When you close the door, the stationary bolts position themselves behind the door frame. I use the bottom bolt to push the switch when the door closes. The switch is just like a big refrigerator switch.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Gardner-Bender-10-Amp-Single-Pole-AC-DC-Push-Button-Door-Switch-1-Pack-GSW-SK/100180864That switch mounts with velcro and fits between the closed door bolt and the right side of the safe. Velcro is on the back and side of the switch box attached to the side and inside front of the door frame. I may have had to add a shim to get the switch to make contact with the bolt -- long time ago. The switch looks big, but it's pretty much hidden behind the frame.
I wired the power cord for the light to run through the switch, and then plugged it into the outlet with the dehumidifier rod.
It's a simple wiring exercise. Only 2 wires in the switch. Just take the power cord from the light, cut one of the wires (black or white normally), and connect the 2 halves to the switch leads. Leave the other power wires alone. Door closes, switch stops flow of power. Door opens, power restored. Doesn't take an electrician, but it does take some basic knowledge of how to safely connect electric wires.
I have one of the 2pc humidity and temperature units. It works if you put the sensor unit on the top shelf inside the safe and set the remote display unit on top of the safe very close to the sensor. One problem with this is you have to make a visual check to know if the humidity is high. With the Puck and eLertus devices, they can use digital communications to notify you and send weekly status updates. Also, you have to replace the batteries often if the signal is weak, because the device will drain the batteries trying to maintain a connection. That means replacing batteries in both units. More battery cost for that type than for the WiFi versions.
Let me know if you have more questions. Lots of options, and much of it is preference and where the safe will be in relation to your normal foot traffic paths. if it's in a room that sees little use, I'd say get the WiFi monitoring. If you can see it as you go to the fridge, then the non WiFi might be okay. I liked having the alerts hit my phone, since I had multiple people with access to the safe. Good to know when that door opens and closes.
