home security systemsWhile a home security system is the best form of protection when dealing with home burglaries, here are some additional tips to secure a home.

Homeowners need to quit making it easy for a burglar. The best way to do that is by making a complete check of your house and outside property to determine where a burglar could enter. Doors and windows in most homes won’t stop a determined burglar.

Some things to protect your home include:

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home securityBurglars typically invade your home when you leave for work or for school, or even for a vacation. High rates of burglary can be usually observed during summer and holidays. Your home should be the safest place for you. But relax, this article will offer you practical tips to keep your home safe year round by making it unappealing to burglars.

Secure your doors. Burglars are used to forced entry. They will kick your doors to get in. You can’t give them the chance to enter your house or at least give them some hard time in invading your doorsteps! Use one-inch-long quality deadbolt lock and metal box strike in your metal doors. Using a high quality, durable, knob-in-lock with a built in dead-latch mechanism. You can install a 160 degrees peephole. But if you’re using sliding-glass patio doors secured by latches which make them more vulnerable to forced entry, you can insert a wooden rod or stick to put off or limit movement. You must also keep the latch mechanism as well as the sliding rollers in good state and they must be properly adjusted. Alarm systems and dogs are also advisable for sliding glass doors to keep burglars away.

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home-securityDig a moat around your house and a burglar will beat a path to your neighbor’s door, or so goes the notion. But the problem is that no matter how security-conscious you might be, it’s uncomfortably confining to live in a fortress.

In the real world, protecting your home and valuables comes down to a compromise between what makes you feel secure and what level of inconvenience you’re willing to tolerate. Homeowners in the inner city, for example, tend to hide behind iron bars, while those in more affluent communities generally count on alarm systems.

A dark-color house that has big overhangs and a recessed front door with no exterior lights but lots of trees and heavy shrubbery is an invitation to trouble. Setting up multiple roadblocks that steer intruders away from your house is a homeowner’s best protection. The more obstacles, the better chance of keeping the crooks out or at least slowing them down.

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home-security-systemsAn electronic German shepherd door alarm is effective. When someone touches the door knob, the unit plays a lifelike bark of a 100-pound shepherd. There are also timer controlled motorized kits that open and close curtains for an at-home look. A combination lock deadbolt is inexpensive and effective. There are no keys for children to lose. The combination can be changed anytime.

If a burglar does get in a window, he cannot open the door to carry things out. Even if a budget allows for only two sensors, an emergency dialer is a plus. Push an emergency button to automatically call the police. If the smoke alarm goes off while you are away, the fire department is called.

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home-securityIf your idea of a good home security system is a broom handle inserted in a sliding glass door track, a burglar is liable to sweep your valuables right out from underneath your feet. The broom handle has become America’s standard security system and, although it may have worked once, it no longer is enough.

Homeowners today must take precautions in establishing strong security protection in and around the home. The key is to make your house key the only way to enter your home. To prevent burglars from doing their job, take seriously the security of your house. The following checklist will help you determine whether your home is safe.

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