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  2. Lock Museum of America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lock_Museum_of_America

    The Lock Museum of America houses an extensive lock collection that includes 30 early era time locks, escutcheon plates from safes, a large number of British safe locks, door locks, padlocks, handcuffs and keys, and more. Located in Terryville, Connecticut, the museum is directly across from the original site of the Eagle Lock Company, founded ...

  3. Hall's Safe & Lock Co. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hall's_Safe_&_Lock_Co.

    The Hall's Safe & Lock Company was an American [1] manufacturer of locks, safes, and bank vaults throughout the second half of the 19th century. Incorporated by Joseph L. Hall in 1867, the Hall's Safe & Lock Co. of Cincinnati, Ohio quickly grew to become the largest [ 2 ] safe and vault manufacturer in the world.

  4. Eagle Lock Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eagle_Lock_Company

    The five-story brick loft building on the north side of South Main Street and the south bank of the Pequabuck River was constructed in 1916. To the southeast is a small one-story, storage shed built during the same period. On the north side of the Pequabuck is a one-story brick structure likely constructed during the 1940s.

  5. Rekeying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rekeying

    Locks are usually re keyed to build master-key systems, make a set of locks share a common key, or to eliminate compromised keys. [2] [3] [4] Sometimes worn pins are replaced with new pins if the old pins become too short to reach the shear-line. [5] The shear-line is the thin line shared by the lock plug and its cylindrical housing. If a pin ...

  6. Bramah lock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bramah_lock

    The Bramah lock used a cylindrical key and keyhole, as does the current lock. The end of the key has a number of slots of different depths which, when inserted into the lock and pressed against spring tension, would depress a number of wafers to a specified depth and enable the key to turn and open the lock.

  7. Chubb detector lock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chubb_detector_lock

    A Chubb detector lock is a lever tumbler lock with an integral security feature, a re-locking device, which frustrates unauthorised access attempts and indicates to the lock's owner that it has been interfered with. When someone tries to pick the lock or to open it using the wrong key, the lock is designed to jam in a locked state until ...

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  9. Locksmith's House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locksmith's_House

    The house itself was built in 1840, but the period interiors date to 1904, [1] when the Hodson lock making family first lived there. Lock making skills are demonstrated by volunteers using original tools and equipment, such as the floor press and belt driven machinery. [2] The Lock Museum was opened to the public in 1987. [3]

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