greengrowlocks wrote:I recently saw reddits ranking system of difficulty and they consider the Keso to be the second highest level of difficulty (just under Assa Twins and Evva 3KS). I cannot attest most of the accuracy of the list at or beyond that point but I know Tumbl3r is a mod there who is vert competent picker and edits it frequently.
I haven't seen the reddit list, but that was the same general impression I was under. I remember seeing Bosnianbill talk about a Sargent Keso padlock in one of his videos in which he stated he was never able to pick it.
I went to Security Snobs in person and wasn't too impressed with their service either. However they seem to to be the only/cheapest supplier of certain things so I still order from them occasionally and $21 for that specific lock w/ key is fair deal compared to eBay prices.
I must admit that you're right in that regard--they do have a few things that are difficult to find elsewhere. And I also think that the price for that lock is certainly fair--it's certainly a LOT less than buying one new. It's really not much given what I have seen collectors drop on other hard-to-find locks.
GWiens2001 wrote:That is the Swiss company Keso. Very different from a Sargent Keso.
Gordon, can you weigh in on this a little further?
A couple of weeks ago I had my local Sargent dealer order me two brand new padlocks. One is the 'base' Sargent model and the other is the Sargent Keso. The dealer had sold a lot of mortise locks and door hardware but had never sold any Sargent padlocks before, so it was a new process for both of us and we went through all the paperwork together to make sure we were ordering the correct part numbers that I wanted. The Assa-Abloy name and logo where everywhere in the "Sargent" catalog. And If I understand correctly Keso is part of that group as well? So might it be possible that the Sargent Keso uses the same technology as the original Swiss did? They told me it will be a few weeks for the locks to arrive. When they do I will be sure to document & post photos here.
I have seen something similar in the Assa-Abloy group where some of the Ikon padlocks have the exact same (and very distinctive) body as the Assa Ruko. So it seems that tech gets "shared" somehow among individual companies under the AA umbrella?