Bike Locks - Security
I need some experienced folks to chime in.
To secure a bike, disc brake locks with an alarm and a heavy chain? I live in a pretty nice place but my storage locker was broken into and my 10 speed trek was stolen so getting my CBR stolen would suck too. Any recommended things i can look at? |
insurance, lots of it. disc locks are pretty useless cause they will just pick it up and throw it in the truck/van. Steering lock works just as good as disc locks in my opinion. Don't know too much about chains. An alarm would be great.
Getting a spot messenger would be another option and hide it somewhere on your bike that won't be easy to spot. You can know the GPS location of your bike at all times. |
Insure that bad boy, fo shizzle.
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I think a chain would be the way to go. Also, I thought there was a motorcycle specific company that sold what looked like an eyebolt that you put in concrete so you can run your cable through the eyebolt, and then though your bike. At least that way they just couldn't pick it up, or roll it.
https://www.kryptonitelock.com/produ...1000&scid=1001 https://www.kryptonitelock.com/Produ....aspx?cid=1003 That looks like the what I was talking about at the bottom, you would jsut have to drill for anchors. There are some examples of whats out there. Kryptonite is one that I've seen around Edited after BTB schooled me on chains. |
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chaining to your wheels means that if the thieves have tools, you'll come out to a wheel or two just laying ther and the rest of the bike GONE. your BEST bet is FULL COVERAGE insurance, and a good alarm. Phantom makes an alarm that works like lojack, but is more precise if I remember right. |
There are better chains than Kryptonite. Those can be cut with a good bolt cutter if the theif has enough patience.
I have a chain from OnGuard with links that are 14mm cross-section.......which I think is thicker than any Kryptonite. I dont think anything is breaking this unless it's a plasma torch. And there's some other chains made in the UK with even thicker links (16-18mm) and they claim that even a plasma torch can't cut it. You can get those off the UK Ebay site. Expensive though. |
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Learned something there, I was always under the assumption that a chain with some heavy bolt cutters would be able to get through a chain. Whereas with cable, if you took bolt cutters it would just crush the cable, unless you had specific cable cutters. I'm just talking a average hack thief, if you go with someone running around with some professional tools, then you better hope its insured. Edit - After reading up on some of the chains, I guess in the eight years of riding, I never really looked into chains all that much - DAMN that is some hard shit. |
Didn't read all the replies, may be repeats...
If possible, chain bike to something solid. If not, you can make a cement block yourself. Which is what I did after my bike was stolen. You need a bucket, U-bar, cement. Mix the cement in the bucket and set the U-bar in it. Buy a bike cover, alot of thieves are just stupid. If they don't see what is under the cover - they will go for the easy access one. I believe it helps if they can't see your bike easily. I say no to alarms and disc locks. I had an alarm and all it did was drain my battery. I eventually disconnected it. Yes to full coverage insurance. :yes: |
Last year my wife's business had a 55' trailer stolen: theives backed a semi up, smashed the hitch lock (it was in pieces on the ground) and drove that bugger away. If pro thieves target your stuff, it's gone.
The more locks and crap you put on a bike, the more likely amatuer thieves will trash it. I now put GPS on my stuff. http://www.bikebone.com/page/BBSC/PR...king/iFind1000 |
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