I have had a bit of experience with two types of cheap biometric locks and I'd like to warn folks away from buying these if at all possible. The first was a Securam fingerprint activated safe lock. An old gunsmith hired me to install it upon his Fort Knox gun safe. He had purchased the lock from Northern and I installed it on his safe door. Everything was going as planned until we came to the programming section. The problem was in order to program the lock to accept his fingerprint, the lock needed to "read" his finger twice. No matter how we tried this crummy lock refused to read this guy's finger, not any of them twice. After 10 minutes of trying I finally gave up. He called and sent it back in favor of a digital safe lock, also Securam, which I told him I would not stock, as they just seem too cheap.
Yesterday I had a client bring me a small gunbox which also had a fingerprint reader. This was small enough that it could hold just one medium large sized gun, let's say a 1911. Anyhow the woman who brought it to me wanted a price to open it, it had a tubular (ace type) lock in addition to the non-working fingerprint scanner, so I told her for $35 I would pick open the lock. She wasn't a blonde (didn't check the curtains) but I did hafta do some explaining to convince her that the box, which she had paid over $100 for was indeed worth putting another $35 into, so she could get the keys out of it & return it, to get the $100 back (duh) thereby saving her $65...The fake ace lock picked easily and that was when she told me that after following the instructions for some time was unable to get the fingerprint lock to accept her print, which made her soo mad that she slammed the box shut with the keys inside.
Anyhow, keep on the lookout for these cheaply made fingerprint locks, remember when you are safeguarding a gun that you may need during crunch-time to save your life with, paying a few extra dollars for the next
higher up (better quality) lock on the market could really pay off!