mseifert wrote:Picked these 2 up on Ebay a few days ago .. Master 6835KA 
the 6835 has been my introduction to 5 pin locks. it took me a week to figure out, but you know how once you figure it out the first couple times it becomes like clockwork? well yea, i haven't had the funds to buy a new lock yet and i was looking at the bitting and noticed that if it was rearranged it would make for a much more challenging pick so i went ahead and rekeyed it. after i closed the shackle and reached for the picks i realized that i broke my slim profile medium hook and the only other pick i have with a slim profile is a shallow hook. that was 2 weeks ago. i popped it once the night after i rekeyed it but i was so tired that it had to be a fluke because i hadn't been able to get it again until tonight. i was so excited that when i turned to my wife to share the good news i locked it back up by reflex -_- after failing to shim the core i spent a further 6 hours setting, unsetting, then resetting pins until it popped again. needless to say i quickly rekeyed it back to the original bitting. i rearranged the drivers and it's a little bit more difficult, but not much.
Hachronn wrote:When I got to my storage unit at my local Public Storage location today, I discovered that they had recently swapped out the doors on all the outdoor units. The old doors were of the "bring your own lock" variety. The new doors feature "cylinder locks" which according to the location's management are "far more secure" than padlocks. Not to put too fine a point on the thing, but the plug on this thing turned about as fast as I could insert my Bogotas. Fortunately, I can also add my own lock to the mechanism.
blah, they just say that so they because "there isn't any shackle to cut and that's the most common method".

i'd be willing to bet money that the only reason they did that is so that they don't have to get the angle grinder out when people don't pay up, and most people are going to use it because "hey i don't have to buy a lock!" (which would also be the type that would be more probable to not pay their rent). i've yet to give bumping a try, but i'd imagine it'd be easier to bump than a padlock. not to mention that i'm sure even low level street thugs know about raking.
did they let you keep the cylinder or is the customer's lock added to the door in addition to the storage place's lock?