Published Feb 7, 2006
Thank you for making a wide variety of locks, all with different combinations. It’s too bad that I have so much trouble keeping them straight.
For instance, there’s some lock that I once owned with the combination 3-16-34. I’m pretty sure that I owned that lock in high school. And then 36-16-24, I had that in junior high, followed, the next year, but 24-16-36. Which created some challenges in keeping things straight. 4-14-34 was pretty easy to remember, if only I knew what lock that combination went to. On the other hand, I have a lock next to my desk that I used about a year ago and I haven’t the foggiest what the combination to that is. So it’s all relative, I guess.
Either way, I can’t operate the lock, so perhaps it doesn’t matter. But at least the combination keeps changing.
Yours in Safety,
Wade
Add a Comment
(Use HTML or Textile shortcuts for formatting.)
Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)
(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)
Comments
Actually, the combinations are pretty easy to crack. Before I actually sprang for a key lock, I used to grab the extras left in the locker room and crack them whenever I need a lock. Which is only, like, twice, so I never got good at it. It’s fun to do about once in your life.
http://www.fr33d0m.net/content-324.html
Posted by: geoff
|
February 8, 2006 2:10 PM