It is sure good to live far enough out and in an area where the biggest crime of they year will be someone's farm implement accidentally knocked over a mail box
most folks around my area just use screen door latches to lock up their houses and tell everyone that if you come over to visit and they are not home just go on in make yourselves at home they should be home sometime soon. If an individual from out of the area did happen to commit a crime the Local Sheriff may never hear about it since a lot of folks like me have their own backhoe, Varmint season is always open
Never try to tell me it can't be done
When I have to paint I use KBS products
On any property, I drill 3 mm holes. House locks (keyed alike), no holes. Workshop, 1 hole; boathouse, two holes.
Inside house, for laundry/machine/utility room cupboards same arrangement. Cleaning help gets some of those.
On the beach/dock, keys for boats, outboards, canoes, kayaks, paddleboards, are on special lanyards, keys are numbered, and a list is kept.
Fairly unwieldy.
No big deal, really. key all your locks alike and have the one set to your key and a second key (master and change key), and swap out cylinders when you let the help go. Takes all of five minutes, drop off the old cylinder and have the locksmith set it to a new change key. Costs all of $5-8, not much work all in all.
I've only been a locksmith for 35 years, so what do I know?
Murph
About 20 years ago I got one of the first Wave tools from Leatherman (their factory was about 3 minutes from our factory).
I loved the two blades - one a drop-point and one a serrated edge blade. But, it was impossible to tell them apart without looking closely before opening them.
So, I ground some little serrations on the back of the serrated blade so my thumb could feel them to tell that blade from the drop-point. I've attached an image of my mod - I still use that Leatherman daily.
A few weeks after I had gotten that Leatherman Wave I got to take a tour of the Leatherman plant and I showed an engineer there my cool idea.
Well, now they ALL come that way! (Aren't I special?)
:-)
And, yes, this actually is a true story.
Charles Waugh
www.charleswaugh.com
"Any tool is just a kit, to be modified as needed for the job at hand"
My locks use the same key these days, (Kwicset Smart-keys) so I I decide too many people have copies of my key, I can change it without changing the locks. Downside, of course, is that they are more complicated, and sometimes they break. Had to replace the deadbolt recently on the front door. It was only a few years old. Their commercial lock sets have locks that use the key in the same position on both the lockset and deadbolt, but the set I have the key is inverted for the deadbolt lock. Maybe one of these days I spring for the fancier commercial locks.
Bill
Last edited by WmRMeyers; Apr 7, 2022 at 12:11 PM.
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