Goes with post 137
Water Bottle Diversion Safe
This is one of the most realistic diversion safes ever invented. Most burglars spend less than six minutes inside a victim's home and only have time to check the most obvious places for valuables. This unique safe allows you to hide valuables inside a common bottle of water - one of the last places a thief would think to look. This is an actual water bottle which is about 9 1/2 inches tall. A unique locking mechanism insures that the bottle will not accidentally open. When the base of the bottle is rotated counter clockwise and pulled apart a hidden area that measures 2 1/2 inches by 2 1/2 inches will be revealed. This is plenty of space to securely hide your cash, keys, jewelry, credit cards, etc. The bottom portion of the bottle below the label comes filled with water. The hidden area is behind the label. To reduced the weight when shipped, the top portion above the label is not filled with water. You can unscrew the cap and fill it with as much water as you would like.
http://ec2.images-amazon.com/images/P/B000FJOERG.01-A1LA5C16ZAJJTT._AA200_SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg
139 posted on
03/09/2007 10:52:51 PM PST by
stlnative
(http://community.webshots.com/user/dannielynnhopebirkhead)
To: stlnative
That's really interesting!
141 posted on
03/09/2007 11:05:06 PM PST by
toldyou
(Forget the Joneses, I can't even keep up with this saga!)
I found this when searching Diversion Safe Baby Bottle...
In both the Republic of Ireland and the United Kingdom, methadone patients may be dispensed a weekly dose of methadone, with prescribeddaily doses then administered at home each day. Harkin, Quinn & Bradley (1999) reported a survey conducted by 9 GPs in Dublin, Ireland regarding their client's use of a baby bottle to measure or store their methadone dose. A surprising 48 of 186 (26%) methadone patients stated that they had used a baby bottle to measure their methadone in the past month,with 21 of 186 (11%) reporting use of a baby bottle to store the methadone in the past month. A follow-up telephone survey of 10 pharmacists in Dublin and Manchester revealed that 8 of 10 offered a measuring device to new clients at a charge of 30-50p. A previously discarded graduated 30ml plastic device was also offered although it was thought to be unsuitable for repeated use. The authors recommend that clients be asked how they measure their daily dose and that a free measuring device be included with each prescription.
http://72.14.203.104/search?q=cache:14sDqHt6YWUJ:www.rand.org/pubs/monograph_reports/MR1396/MR1396.ch5.pdf+baby+bottle+diversion+safe&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=27&gl=us
143 posted on
03/09/2007 11:07:27 PM PST by
stlnative
(http://community.webshots.com/user/dannielynnhopebirkhead)
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