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Bike Lock recommendations — Brooklynian

Bike Lock recommendations

anonymous
edited November -1 in Prospect Heights
There seem to be lots of bikers on this board so I was wondering what is your recommendation for a bike lock. The bike will be left on the street for a few hours at a time. It is a good but not super expsensive bike - I still don't want to loose it. Thanks!

Comments

  • kryptonite
  • You should go to Bicycle Station and hear their spiel on bike locks. I bought the one they recommended and mine hasn't been stolen yet (although I rarely leave my bike out for very long and the lock is probably worth more than my bike).
  • my experience from years of urban biking is that if you must lock your bike outside be sure to mentally say goodbye forever to it as you walk away, because if someone has a mind to take it they will. when you come back to where your bike was locked, if it's still there you can experience a rush of unwarranted joy.

    When I used to ride a motorcycle I had a kryptonite chain so heavy I could barely lift it. One day the parking cops decided that I'd been parked illegally on the sidewalk too long (which I had). They snapped that chain apart with a big bolt cutter, threw my motorcycle onto a truck, and drove away, all in about 45 seconds...and that was a 400 pound motorcycle, not a bicycle!

    no lock ever touches my bikes now, because I can't afford to replace any of them. if they can't go inside, I don't go inside.
  • Good point.
    However, the key is to have the best possible security and the cheapest possible bike. When I lived in the Bronx, I actually had a car- an '85 Nissan Stanza. I had an ignition lock, an alarm, a club and a Benzi box radio. I parked it on the street all the time and never had a problem. The point is, although there's a way to beat any defense, if what you've got is crappy enough, anyone who can defeat it would rather spend their effort on something better (like the $5000 mountain bike right next to it).
  • the nyc kryptochain/lock. its $90 and heavy, but damn, its as close as you can get to theft-proof :)
  • rhodamine wrote: the nyc kryptochain/lock. its $90 and heavy, but damn, its as close as you can get to theft-proof :)
    That's the one I've got! My friends joke that one day I'm going to find my bike where I left it, but with the lock stolen. :lol:
  • Carnivore wrote: [quote=rhodamine]the nyc kryptochain/lock. its $90 and heavy, but damn, its as close as you can get to theft-proof :)
    That's the one I've got! My friends joke that one day I'm going to find my bike where I left it, but with the lock stolen. :lol:

    ive had to cut those before, at the bike shop... like, for folks who lost their keys or bought a bike used and it had a lock wrapped around the seatpost or somsthing... and let me tell you... with a diamond-tip high-power angle-grinder, the chain is relatively inpenetrable, and the lock itself takes ten minutes to cut off.

    unless a thief is packing some really noisy, heavy duty equipment, that chain/lock combo is about as good as you can get, hahahaha.
  • When my husband was a bike messenger that is the lock he used (after they stole 2 bikes from him). After that they never stole it again.

    The funny thing is it has a guarantee that no one will break the lock - but the fine print said it excludes the State of NY.
  • Unless it's changed, the deal with NY is that the guarantee is good here, but is not limited in the same way it is for other states. The big problem is that you have to register your bike with the police--good luck. I tried four times--both showing up with my bike and calling in advance. "The guy who does that" was never there. Thanks, cops.

    The chain itself is a thing of wonder. Make sure you don't get a lock with a cylinder (round) key, since they can be picked in about two secs with a Biro pen cylinder. I have the chain and a big shiny regular padlock. In the end, yeah, if someone wants your bike they'll get it, but I'm not gonna make it easy.
  • kryptonite, definately.
    I've been keeping my crappy looking - yet,funtional - bike outside for 10+ years in PH.
    Some hoodlums cut the break cables twice, but that's a small price to pay for not carrying it up two flights of stairs all these years.
  • What's cutting break cables about? I had mine cut also.
    Incidentally the shop on 5th ave wanted $5 for a new cable and $3 to adjust it. The shop on union did it for $5.
  • I figured it was just bored kids.

    I got mine fixed at Dixon's on Union.
    They are inexpensive and they have refrained from asking me the obvious question:
    why on earth would you want to spend another nickle on this thing?
  • stacey wrote: ...
    The funny thing is it has a guarantee that no one will break the lock - but the fine print said it excludes the State of NY.
    I just bought one and filled out the paperwork - NY state residents get a free year of insurance against theft due to lock failure. there is a long list of what's not included. but still it's something.

    i have a decent bike that's been parked on the street for a month now, no problems. even so, i'm always surprised when it's still there.
  • You all heard about this, right?

    Kryptonite locks can be opened in about 90 seconds with a Bic pen

    The flaw affects at least 7 models of locks. Maybe this has been fixed with the newest models, I don't know, but I had mine recalled 2 months after purchasing it.
    Bike shops are recommending that customers replace the small U-lock with a sturdy padlock, like the ones that bodegas use to secure their roll-down gates. These padlocks cost less than $20 at most hardware stores.
  • daveb wrote: You all heard about this, right?

    Kryptonite locks can be opened in about 90 seconds with a Bic pen

    The flaw affects at least 7 models of locks. Maybe this has been fixed with the newest models, I don't know, but I had mine recalled 2 months after purchasing it.
    Bike shops are recommending that customers replace the small U-lock with a sturdy padlock, like the ones that bodegas use to secure their roll-down gates. These padlocks cost less than $20 at most hardware stores.
    The new locks have keys with a straight, not cylinder design, with side pins almost like a Mul T Lok. However, from looking at the key, it appears that it's only a 3 pin lock, so I'd bet the retail roll-gate padlocks are harder to pick.
  • Subject: You're never really safe.

    My $500-ish bike was stolen last week. I had a Kryptonite big friggin whoop hex chain and a roll-down "Tuffy" lock on it (I'd replaced the Bic-defeatable Krypto lock).

    All that was left behind was the lock cylinder. A pro who has the talent and the tools can steal anything.

    This happened in broad daylight on one of the most heavily traveled corners in Manhattan and was witnessed by someone who even asked the thief what he was doing. He claimed my bike was his and it was thusly OK to steal it.

    I now know never to go to Manhattan again.

    PS- What I don't get is why such bike thieves who can obviously defeat roll-down locks don't just break into bike shops at night and steal the entire stock of new bikes rather than one used one here, another one there.
  • Subject: Re: You're never really safe.

    Stuart wrote: PS- What I don't get is why such bike thieves who can obviously defeat roll-down locks don't just break into bike shops at night and steal the entire stock of new bikes rather than one used one here, another one there.
    Because one $500 bike can easilly have its lock defeated by a ball point pen and breaking into a store requires more skills.

    Sorry about the loss, but the thing is I grew up in Brooklyn and have never trusted locking bikes outside ever.
  • daveb wrote: You all heard about this, right?

    Kryptonite locks can be opened in about 90 seconds with a Bic pen
    old meme!
  • Subject: Re: You're never really safe.

    Stuart wrote: PS- What I don't get is why such bike thieves who can obviously defeat roll-down locks don't just break into bike shops at night and steal the entire stock of new bikes rather than one used one here, another one there.
    1. because anyone willing to steal a rear wheel or a bike is usually a crackhead, therefore not resolute enough to break int oa store

    2. because- at least at the bikeshop i work at- doing this would be tantamount to taking a mob hit out on your head :twisted:

    as most people in the neighborhood know, you dont want to incur the wrath of mike @ bicycle station.... trust me on this one, hehehehe.
  • daveb wrote: You all heard about this, right?

    Kryptonite locks can be opened in about 90 seconds with a Bic pen

    The flaw affects at least 7 models of locks. Maybe this has been fixed with the newest models, I don't know, but I had mine recalled 2 months after purchasing it.
    Just went to Dixon's and asked about this. They said that Kryponite will exchange your cylinder key lock for a straight key lock. Just fill out a form online and they will send a box for shipping it back to them and then they will send you a new lock.

    Dixon's also said that theives with Bic pens are more likely in Manhattan.
  • Oiseau wrote:
    Just went to Dixon's and asked about this. They said that Kryponite will exchange your cylinder key lock for a straight key lock. Just fill out a form online and they will send a box for shipping it back to them and then they will send you a new lock.

    Dixon's also said that theives with Bic pens are more likely in Manhattan.
    just good luck on actually getting the form & stuff.... so slow if ever... i gave up!
  • vanilla wrote: just good luck on actually getting the form & stuff.... so slow if ever... i gave up!
    hmm. they replaced mine in under 10 days. i canned em, got the info, sent em my keys and they sent me a brand spanking new lock a week later.

    your mileage may vary. just my personal experience with kryptonite. i got the impression that they were trying to handle this as smoothly and quickly.

    granted, this happened over a year ago though.
  • rhodamine wrote: [quote=vanilla]just good luck on actually getting the form & stuff.... so slow if ever... i gave up!
    hmm. they replaced mine in under 10 days. i canned em, got the info, sent em my keys and they sent me a brand spanking new lock a week later.

    your mileage may vary. just my personal experience with kryptonite. i got the impression that they were trying to handle this as smoothly and quickly.

    granted, this happened over a year ago though.

    The bike shop where I bought the lock took care of everything for me. Pretty easy to do.
  • About four months ago I sent in two Kryptonite bike locks and one rather uncommon 8-year-old Kryptonite steering wheel lock (which, on their site, they didn't even list as exchangeable). Got replacements for all three in a couple of weeks.
  • whatever you do, don't use a cable lock. i was outside Target yesterday, unlocking my bike (kryptonite nyc chain) when i noticed some guy who, as it turned out, was stealing somebody's bike. he was so straightforward about it all i didn't think anything was amiss. then he was off on the bike, rolling his own bike along with it. that was when i noticed the cable lock, neatly snipped at the bottom of the bike rack. i feel bad cuz i feel like i could have intervened but it didn't register what was happening until it was too late. at least it made me glad i always lug around that heavy chain (plus owning a bike few would want to steal!)
  • jimmylegs wrote: whatever you do, don't use a cable lock. i was outside Target yesterday, unlocking my bike (kryptonite nyc chain) when i noticed some guy who, as it turned out, was stealing somebody's bike. he was so straightforward about it all i didn't think anything was amiss. then he was off on the bike, rolling his own bike along with it. that was when i noticed the cable lock, neatly snipped at the bottom of the bike rack. i feel bad cuz i feel like i could have intervened but it didn't register what was happening until it was too late. at least it made me glad i always lug around that heavy chain (plus owning a bike few would want to steal!)

    what could you have done? bike thieves are SO evil...
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