on a wooden doors? 🤣

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

Bolt cutters and cordless angle grinders applied directly to the lock are generally preferred for forced entry. Boss man doesn't want to pay for a new fence.

Of course both of those locks, despite looking different on the outside, are susceptible to the same well known bypass attack.

I get it. It was just a joke because it reminded me when my wife wanted to secure our OSB shack with "good" locks.

"Good" probably meant beefy looking Master. Funny as a lock picker because Master are famously easy to pick and for some reason the beefier the lock body the easier they are to pick.

The master paradox is so extreme that one of the more famously difficult Master locks has a plastic body.

Do you happen to watch lockpickinglawyer on YT?

Sometimes. Learned a lot from him and aspire to one day be anywhere near that good.

I'm quite sure I never will.

Therefore I'm more of a brute force enthusiast

It's just funny to seriously think about locks when it's easier to e.g. remove hinges then deal with the locks.

Physical security is a very deep rabbit hole. Why bother with hinges at all when I can bypass both of those locks faster than I can put in the combo.

Counterintuitive too like how smart convertible owners don't lock the car. Easier to replace whatever they wanted to steal than whatever they wanted to steal and your top.