@brad it's true. Most locksmiths and door installers use oversized strike plates because it's easier than fitting them correctly, and customers don't like it when their structure settles and then the door doesn't close properly, so you'd be surprised how many doors don't engage the deadlatch.
@riskythinking @deviantollam @alice @brad Good to know that it's not just cybersecurity that works this way.
Like when the heaviest encryption can be defeated by knowing the answer to "what's your mother's maiden name?"
@me yup. Very much like that.
Although I know my mother's maiden name, I need a password manager to remember my "mother's maiden name" for every login.
@deviantollam I think I actually learned that bit of trivia from you π
I have a stop on my route that got broken into through their roll up door windows. they installed an electronic alarm system. then 2 weeks later when I tried to leave the front door wouldn't latch. the strike plate had been shimmed closer to the door latch badly and it required multiple slammings to get it to latch. π€·ββοΈ
oh my god
@alice Canβt tell if this is post is about locksport or infosec..
Iβve re-hung quite a few friendsβ crappy Seattle area doors with long screws and full length plates. Your ring/cam and fancy WiFi lock donβt matter much IRL. Anti-kick does.