globallockytoo wrote:... and take potential $$$ away from fellow like professionals....
.... Maybe I should sue him for potential lost earnings?
I don't disagree with you often but I have to speak up on this issue. I'm not a locksmith. All of my friends keep telling me I should just take the plunge and become one based on how much I know. But tonight I write this as a hobby lockpicker and DIY store junkie.
There is a movement in America to go to Home Depot or Lowes or Ace Hardware, buy a bunch of stuff and do nothing short of building an entire house from the stuff found on the store shelf. People have learned that they can install their own ceiling fans, lights, hang drywall and replace their old windows with off the shelf vinyl replacements. They have been empowered and every weekend warrior thinks he can build a shed, pour a foundation, and build a deck. As their home repair list shifts from building a deck to insulating the attic, their "honey do" list carefully written up by their wives who are equally as bored on the weekend, things like squeaky doors and old door locks start to make the list. If you can practically build an entire house from the things inside a DIY store, what more natural progression exists than to eventually put lock repinning kits on the shelf to satisfy the do it yourselfers.
The reason I write this, is again and again we hear a lot about how due to lockpickers, or do it yourselfers and weekend warriors, who do sidejobs for friends here and there, that real locksmiths are loosing money and work.
Why is it then that we never hear plumbers, electricians, window installers, and wood floor refinishers complain that these stores, and that these wanna be tradesmen are taking money and opportunity away from them? It just seems locksmiths are very touchy that if some home owner, or hobby lockpicker installs a Schlage from the DIY store, instead of visiting the local lockie, that the lockie will have to close up shop because that $75 lock he didn't sell is going to put him under. I disagree.
I believe this land is large enough and customer base varied enough that there will always be business for locksmiths, be it residential, commercial, or institutional. Besides, I'd rather install a small system for a local store, or a businesss office, than to install a lock for some old lady who's gonna piss and moan about how much more it is than a Defiant deadbolt from the local hardware store, and how after I put it in the door doesnt close as nice as it use to and that I tracked wood chips on her nice carpet. Or worse yet that ever since my visit and working on her front door lock, her garage door opener makes a noise, as if my visit had any effect on that. (you ever get one of those customers? the perpetual complainer and linker of things that are completely unrelated, but since you were at their house a week ago, it must be your fault) I say let those people go to the store and do their own.
Squelchtone