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
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.
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