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[ale] Hey Shapiro! New use for that 3D printer!



My experience with 'restricted' key blanks was that some unrestricted
key blanks would work in the same keyways.  You just had to understand
the warding properly. If a key is missing a bump for a slot in the
keyway it'll still work -- you'll only have troubles if the key has a
bump with no corresponding slot.

Ah, this thread brings back old memories.  I used to buy key blanks at
home 'cause the school administration had contacts in the local
hardware stores where I went to school.

-- CHS


On Tue, Jun 7, 2011 at 11:37 AM, Derek Atkins <warlord at mit.edu> wrote:
> Jeff Hubbs <jhubbslist at att.net> writes:
>
>> A commenter mentioned "high security locksets like Medeco" - many years
>> ago I had a Medeco key and its value-add was that the notches were cut
>> at an angle. ?A 3D printer could reproduce that with no additional
>> difficulty as long as you had a way to transcribe the original key
>> sufficiently.
>>
>> As for the carved material being too weak, well, take your printed piece
>> to Lowe's and have them reproduce a metal copy for you...
>
> This only works if Lowes can actually get the key blanks. ?Some blanks
> are "restricted" and Lowes (or Home Depot) wont have them. ?This is
> generally true for Medeco locks in general. ?It can be very hard to find
> a Medeco blank for certain Medeco locks.
>
> -derek
>
> --
> ? ? ? Derek Atkins, SB '93 MIT EE, SM '95 MIT Media Laboratory
> ? ? ? Member, MIT Student Information Processing Board ?(SIPB)
> ? ? ? URL: http://web.mit.edu/warlord/ ? ?PP-ASEL-IA ? ? N1NWH
> ? ? ? warlord at MIT.EDU ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?PGP key available
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