enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Keycard lock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keycard_lock

    A keycard lock is a lock operated by a keycard, a flat, rectangular plastic card. The card typically, but not always, has identical dimensions to that of a credit card, that is ID-1 format. The card stores a physical or digital pattern that the door mechanism accepts before disengaging the lock. There are several common types of keycards in use ...

  3. Lock and key - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lock_and_key

    A typical modern padlock and its keys. A lock is a mechanical or electronic fastening device that is released by a physical object (such as a key, keycard, fingerprint, RFID card, security token or coin), by supplying secret information (such as a number or letter permutation or password), by a combination thereof, or it may only be able to be opened from one side, such as a door chain.

  4. Tubular pin tumbler lock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tubular_pin_tumbler_lock

    A tubular lock and key. A tubular pin tumbler lock, also known as a circle pin tumbler lock, radial lock, or the trademark Ace lock popularized by manufacturer Chicago Lock Company since 1933, is a variety of pin tumbler lock in which a number of pins are arranged in a circular pattern, and the corresponding key is tubular or cylindrical in shape.

  5. Skeleton key - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skeleton_key

    A skeleton key is a key that has been filed or cut to create one that can be used to unlock a variety of warded locks each with a different configuration of wards. This can usually be done by removing most of the center of the key, allowing it to pass by the wards without interference, operating the lock. To counteract the illicit creation of ...

  6. Key pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_pattern

    Key pattern is the generic term for an interlocking geometric motif made from straight lines or bars that intersect to form rectilinear spiral shapes. [1] [2] [3] According to Allen and Anderson, the negative space between the lines or bars of a key pattern “resemb [es] the L- or T-shaped slots in an ordinary key to allow it to pass the wards ...

  7. Tor Sørnes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tor_Sørnes

    In 1975 he launched the holecard based recodable keycard lock, where each new hotel guest could have his/her own unique key formed by a pattern of 32 holes in a plastic card. The invention is still in worldwide hotel security use under the brand VingCard .

  8. Security printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_printing

    Security printing. Security printing is the field of the printing industry that deals with the printing of items such as banknotes, cheques, passports, tamper-evident labels, security tapes, product authentication, stock certificates, postage stamps and identity cards. The main goal of security printing is to prevent forgery, tampering, or ...

  9. VingCard Elsafe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VingCard_Elsafe

    VingCard Elsafe, whose origin was in Moss, Norway, is an international producer of hotel locking systems, electronic in-room safes and energy management systems.After inventing the first mechanical hole card operated lock in 1976, VingCard was acquired in 1994 by ASSA ABLOY, and merged with the electronic safe producer Elsafe to form VingCard Elsafe in 2006.