Showing posts with label Cylinders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cylinders. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Murfreesboro, Tennessee Locksmith Rates

In Murfreesboro, Tennessee, you can expect these kinds of rates for locks service. First, I will list the rates that A-Best Locksmith charges.
  •  Service call $45 - $50
  • Price per lock cylinder to re-key - $13 to 17.50
  • Car opening - $55 (I pay the sales tax!)
  • Safe recombination - $125 to $150
  • Grade 2 commercial door lever - $150 installed
  • Deadbolt installation - $50 if lock provided by customer, $75 if I provide the lock
  • Open home - $65 to $75
  • Door Closer - $195 for basic grade 1 overhead surface mount, $395 for concealed closer
Here are what my competitors charge
  1. Car Opening - $45 to $75
  2. Basic Service Call - $45 to $60
  3. Lock re-key per cylinder $13 to $18.50
  4. Grade 2 commercial lever - $185 by one locksmith

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Re-Keying Your Front Glass Door Swing Bolt Lock

If you have a a #2 Phillips head screwdriver and a small flat head driver, then you can re-key your own front glass door. When I say "re-key", I mean removing the round cylinder and replacing it with a new one. Go to your better hardware store, not Lowe's, and ask for a 1 inch mortise cylinder with the Adams-Rite Cam. Have extra keys made and test them. Here are the steps in the change-out process
  1. Remove the lock face plate on the side of the door. Usually held in with three Phillips head screws.
  2. Look for two more Phillips head screws, one at the top of the lock and one at the bottom. Loosen these just enough so that the bolt body wiggles a bit.
  3. Look for two sunken flat head set screws opposite each lock cylinder. Look closely. Each cylinder will have one. (Your door does have two cylinders, one inside, one outside.) Loosen these by about three turns, just so you can grab the cylinder you are changing and unscrew it.
  4. Unscrew the lock cylinder. You will notice from the new one you purchased that the cylinder is threaded.
  5. Take the spacer off the old lock and put it on the new one. Reinstall lock.
  6. Do note that, if you screw the lock in too far, the cam may bottom out on the Adams Rite bolt workings inside the door. If you do this, you will feel the key grind as you turn it. If it is grinding, back the cylinder off by one turn.
  7. Options you can add to this job are lubing the inside of the Adams Rite and adding an anti-wrench collar in place of the standard collar.
  8. Reinstall the set screws, tighten the two top and bottom screws, reinstall the face plate. You just saved yourself $70.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Anti-Wrench Collar For Commercial Front Door

No matter how you look at it, your aluminum and glass front door is a security liability; but it doesn't mean you should just sit down and accept it! In fact, there are a a number of things you can do to make this door a more secure, if not from a hardware angle, at least by appearance.
  1. First, you can install physical protection on the lock cylinder. You can use a CRL Cylinder Guard, which is inserted into the door and anchored with a retainer ring behind the aluminum stile. However, this device has been known to cause interference with the Adams-Rite lock mechanism. If you opt to have this installed, make sure your locks turn with ease and that there is no grinding as you turn the key. Another guard to consider is the Keedex guard shown above. This item costs the locksmith around $7.00 and will keep a burglar from using Vice grips on your lock. In Tennessee, you may pay a locksmith around $85 to show up and install this item.
  2. You can install a MAG strike protector for the narrow stile door. This device will make it harder for thieves to pry the bolt through the soft aluminum metal frame. If you have a hook bolt, a quick visual inspection will reveal this, then your door is especially vulnerable to crow bar attacks. Do know that any latch guard can be compromised with time. What you want to do, however, is make the burglar go to the next store.
  3. Get an alarm and display the warning stickers. Or, just go online and get the stickers! You can also buy a stand-alone alarm unit to put on this door, like the EAX-500 by Detex. Although this device will not be monitored by an agency, if the door is breached after hours, the burglar is likely to flee.
  4. Because there is no real fool-proof way to secure your aluminum glass storefront door, a good alarm must be considered, along with the lock hardware upgrades, and good lighting.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Lock Cylinder Spins in Circles and Will Not Lock or Unlock Door

When you insert the key into the lock cylinder, only the plug into which the key is inserted is supposed to turn, thereby unlocking the lock mechanism. However, sometimes a set screw comes loose and the entire lock begins to turn in the door. Here is what you can do to fix this and save that $75 locksmith fee.
  1. Look at how you neighbor's lock cylinder is situated on the front door. On most doors, the key is inserted with the cuts of the key facing up. It is in this 12 o'clock 6 o'clock configuration that you want your lock to conform to.
  2. Unloosen the three Phillips screws on the side of the door where the lock is located. Pry this plate off if it is tight.
  3. Using a small flat head driver, further unloosen the countersunk set screw opposite the lock cylinder. Do not remove it, just loosen it. Turn the lock cylinder to the proper position. Tighten the set screw.
  4. Sometimes, however, you will have to unloosen the two large screws at the top or bottom of the main bolt lock body in order to give the cylinder some wiggle room. When all is set into place, tighten everything. Reattach plate. Test keys and locks. While you are at it, shoot some WD-40 into the bolt.
  5. Also, you will not be able to turn the cylinder if your key is inserted into the lock and turned. The reason is that the cam on the back of the lock is jamming the lock.. If your key is inserted into the lock, you will to turn the cylinder towards where it should be while trying to gently turn the key to where it should be when inserted. You just have to juggle this to get it where the key will come out. Remember, if the key hole is not set to the correct clock position, the key cannot be inserted or retracted.