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As for this guy, yeah, again, I was just trying to help him out. I figured that by billing net 60 days he would have a chance to get back on his feet.

My landlord locked his keys in his car, and I had the opportunity to watch a guy in action. He leaves all his stuff in his trunk out on the road, and brings one up with him, fiddles for a bit, goes away, comes back with a different one, goes away, etc. Takes him about 15 minutes. I offer to help, and he (wryly) threatens to take my fingers off.Danger said:I was in a hurry, so I didn't bother with the traditional fudging around to make it look difficult.
Huh. It had not occurred to me that operators might be bound not to divulge their knowledge. That does put a different slant on it, yes.Danger said:That notwithstanding, if I were to tell anyone how to do either, or even let him/her see my picks close-up, I would be put in prison for 14 years with no chance of parole. If I were to break into something, it would be 21 years. The first 14 would be for 'swearing a false oath' (which was my promise before entering Lock Tech College that I would never divulge any proprietary information to anyone; sworn to an RCMP officer).
Danger said:(which was my promise before entering Lock Tech College that I would never divulge any proprietary information to anyone; sworn to an RCMP officer).
DaveC426913 said:Meanwhile, I've managed to open stranded strangers' locks with a coathanger in - yep - about 2 1/2 seconds (no really - down, up, and it's open). I've become quite adept at it.
Moonbear said:When I was in college, the campus police would help with unlocking cars if you locked your keys in, but would refuse if you had power locks, claiming it was too easy to damage them and they didn't want to be liable. I don't know what's special about them...maybe there are wires that can get snagged or something. Of course, when I was locked out, I had a car with power locks (this was before the locks on cars were all controlled by keyfobs you had to have in hand before you could lock the door...on that one, it was rather easy to bump the power lock button when getting out, which is what happened to me). Fortunately I convinced the cop that having a car with working locks wasn't very useful to me if I couldn't get into it, and would prefer taking my chances with him damaging something I could deal with repairing later over standing outside all night...nothing wound up damaged, so it all worked out well. But, yeah, at the time, even on a poor student budget, if our campus police didn't offer the service free, I'd have GLADLY paid $25 to get into my car (I figure it costs some time and money just to drive out to where I am)...I'd have considered it cheap. I'd have been willing to pay $50 even, for bailing me out of my own stupidity. I might have started cringing at $75, but if I was resorting to calling a locksmith in the first place, I'd have to suck up the fact that I didn't have any other options available. Of course, if I had more than one choice, I would probably ask what their fees were and try a few to see if one was more reasonable than the others, but that might also depend on where I was stuck and how long I was willing to stay stuck there.
JasonRox said:True. The price of $25 isn't even that bad.
When Danger locked the door on the lady, that was just priceless.![]()
"Actually ma'am, from end-to-end, including travel, this job will have taken about 45 minutes of my day. You're getting it for a steal you twit."Danger said:When I presented the invoice, she said "Are you nuts? There's no way I'm paying you $25 for something that took you 2 1/2 seconds."