Emergency Locksmith & Safe Opening Service
Read Safebusters blog for a sample of some of the safes we have recently worked on. With over 30 years of experience cracking safes, our safe engineer specialises in opening, fixing and installing every kind of safe.
Chubb Book Room Door Safe
We received a call to attend and make keys for this as the builders had lost both keys… We are regularly called out to assist with Chubb safes suffering from lost or broken keys, seized or worn locking mechanisms, forgotten combinations, and age‑related faults often found in older models. Our service covers both residential and commercial premises, including offices, shops, and secure storage environments.
Once access is restored, we can also carry out lock repairs or replacements, re‑keying, and general servicing to ensure your Chubb safe remains secure and fully operational.
Central London Safe Locksmith – Milners Safe Key Restoration | SafeBusters
The Milners safe originates from the 1830s, a British family run company, known for their beautiful, fire-proof designs…
Withers Brothers Safe
Withers Brothers safes date back from the late 1800’s, extremely popular safe then and currently, renowned for their build quality…
Chubb Grade One Safe-Safebusters.co.uk
Chubb grade one safe picked open and restored. Embankment.
Chubb Lemington Safe-London
Chubb Lemington Safe opened and given new combination, West London.
Vault Door Opened with zero damage
Recovering a lost combination on a substantial book room/ vault door. The door hadn’t been in use for many years…
Mystery Safe opened by Safebusters
This lovely old circa 1880-1890’s key safe was built into a wall in a lovely old house in Oxford…
SMP (secure mechanical products) Safe
This SMP Salopian combination was located in the KT postcode area, Surrey. The customer had recently moved into a new house and found this safe on arrival…
John Tann Safe opening -Central London
🧰 John Tann Safe Opening by SafeBusters
Scenario: A vintage John Tann safe at a builders’ merchant wouldn’t open despite having the keys.
Method Used:
Drilled a small 6 mm probe hole.
Inserted an endoscope to inspect boltwork.
Boltwork appeared to retract correctly, but the door still wouldn’t budge.
Eventually used a forklift to gently tug the door open.
Cause of Issue: The door had sagged by ~2 mm, and a tiny scrap of paper jammed the bottom boltwork.
Outcome: Safe opened successfully with no damage and restored to working order.

