Dave844 wrote:It is the actual orientation. What impact does this have? Is this a security flaw?
I'm deployed right now and the base where I am is really really isolated and we try to make things happen, so my best guess is that the lock was broken at some point and someone found a similar lock and installed it. Or it was installed like that at first, I couldn't tell.
Mounting any lock upside down like that is not recommended. Sargent & Greenleaf used to manufacture left-handed locks, but then got cheap and stopped. So, what can you do?
A spring-loaded lever lock, such as this one, will work fine in any orientation, as long as the spring is functional. If a spring breaks on a lock mounted upside down, the lever cannot drop into the gates unless you turn the safe upside down. You're lucky no one locked the safe with the lock missing that spring. A locksmith would have had to drill it to open it. Kind of the opposite of a 'security flaw'. Hahaha.