lrrowe wrote:Last year I lost my keys to my trailer locks. And I was in the woods at the time. A chopping mallet and a couple of well placed strikes and the lock I had on the front end secured to my truck was busted. For the back doors, all I did was take a pair of vise grips and twist the lock and it broke. My point in this is that unless you are using the toughest locks and chains available, then you are basically wasting your time.
And for me, while using the trailer in NF camps, and being away from my camper for hours at a time (or even overnight), then the cost of high priced protection devices may not be that bad.
But I do realize not everyone may be as cautious or paranoid as I am.
halfdome, Danny wrote:I'm not too concerned with securing my trailer while it's unhitched from the tow vehicle since the last 2 teardrops I've made have a removable tongue and coupler.
You'd need a flat bed tow truck or a fork lift to take it or any teardrop with the kind of lock arrangement mentioned here.
My concern is when it's hitched to the tow vehicle.
I once bought a two way locking devise (on and off the tow vehicle) but it never worked as advertised.
Does this company have any such lock when hitched?Danny
lrrowe wrote:Here is a Youtube video of the lock.
http://youtu.be/nyOHa1TZXXo
But I do believe the securing the chain feature is not really that much of of a deterent. With bolt cutters and "S" hooks, one could still employ the "lift and secure the tongue by the chains" method. To me that means if I were to get one of these locks and still wanted more protection, then I would also look to running a chain thru a wheel and to something else. Use of a lock like I posted above and a very thick chain would step up the protection a tad. So in all, the costs rolls up and the guarantee of absolutely no loss still does not exist. But it is a start for we paranoid campers.
lrrowe wrote:The other is to have very heavy duty chains in place with a paddle lock like this.
This lock is more resistant to "mallets" and is it harder to use a bolt cutter on it. Again, not perfect, but could scare a thief away or slow him down.
lrrowe wrote:Ugh!!!!!!
And look the chain failures.
http://www.1st-chainsupply.com/chain/se ... ideos.htm#
And because one can always put the locked wheels on dollies, then it seems that in reality we honest folks have no chance.
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anon1 wrote:I think that those bicycle d locks with the round key might be the easiest lock of all to pick. You just jamb the outer tube of a plastic Bic pen into the lock and it opens.
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