
To prevent mail theft and vandalism of their traditional, sometimes called rural mailboxes, many homeowners make the transition to blocking security mailboxes. Of those proposed today, some of them are made of galvanized aluminum. The heaviest vandalist designs are made of 0.7 inch thick steel.
You can find decorative brass or copper mailboxes for installation on the wall of the porch. There are even wooden mailboxes painted with art scenes or individual logos. People definitely find that traditional tin and plastic mailboxes are too easily damaged by weather and vandals and therefore are looking for the best options. Some garden stores store inscriptions on mailboxes with cows and dogs, and even lighthouses to decorate the tops of traditional mailboxes.
People who decide to explore more secure mailboxes find blocking inserts for their existing mailboxes. Steel blocking mailboxes are currently advertised as protected and anti-vandal. Some of them are stainless steel or 14 gauge steel. Others provide 16 gauge steel construction. The strongest is the collection of mailboxes, which are built from 1/4 "steel shell, which is 2 caliber.
The thickness of the steel mailbox design affects whether you can open the mailbox with a screwdriver, as is the case with some of the steel mailboxes available today. 14 gauge sounds thicker than 1/4 inch. In fact, 1/4 inch thicker than 14 gauge and 2 gauge thickness. 16 gauge is also not as thick and durable as steel 2 gauge. What this means for country mailbox owners, who are often subject to vandalism, is that the thicker the steel structure, the better the solution is when the mailbox is damaged.
A mail thief, if he knows his business, will approach his goal, ready to compromise it, if necessary. He or she will kill the box for a bit or steal the box, and there will be mail and any personal information contained in it. Shooting down most blocking mailboxes is so easy to do that you can do it yourself, and blocking doesn't even matter. This does not interfere with a particular mail thief. So what is the solution to mailbox vandalism? It's just a mailbox that is locked and strong enough to commit any beating.
Mailbox locking is different in their lock types. Those that cannot be blocked are tubular. This means that they are not similar to the ones you find on the locks or entrance doors or on the many clustered mailboxes used in apartment complexes. Since tubular locks are completely safe, the owner is the only one who can receive mail.

