lunchb0x wrote:The Tri- locks have a plastic part in the furniture that fails and then you can't get in.
Thankfully this hasn't happened to me so far (after ~7 years)....
Re-keying them is a pain, you have to pull the whole thing apart to get to the cylinder, yes I know this is the case with most locks but most other locks come apart a lot quicker.
This is indeed true. There seems to be heaps of small parts which make it fiddly to deal with. And I think the euro cylinder can be a pain to rekey too because it needs to be picked first (unless if one wants to spend all day putting the top pins back into place)...
Gainsborough entrance sets have a plastic housing of the barrel....
I haven't looked closely but the one I have (which is quite old) seems to be all metal...
Gainsborough is mostly fitted by builders
Yeah, new housing estates seem to have Gainsboroughs. I don't know why builders like them so much... At least they're starting to use C4 profiles, making life easier to key everything alike.
Also the price for them, they are about $280 from Bunnings? I think that this is too much for the quality of the lock.....
All their products seem to be at least double in price from substitute counterparts from Brava and Carbine (eg. entrance door knobs). I'm not sure what makes them so pricey...
but in saying that they have been getting better over the years and can be a pain to pick open, at least they use spool pins in their locks, something that Lockwood are slowly learning.
I think Lockwood are a bit tricky to pick in the respect that they tend to use strong springs for their cylinders... In which locks are they starting to put spool pins in?
And Lockwood's quality seems to be quite good too. I would choose a 355 or 001, with a Carbine or Brava entrance door knob over a trilock any day.