View Poll Results: Which is better for expensive and recognizable locks such as the Kryptonite New York?
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Expensive lock brands tempt thieves more?
#1
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Expensive lock brands tempt thieves more?
Got a Krytonite new york u-lock as a gift. It's brightly colored yellow and easily recognizable. Thought crossed my mind if obscuring the brand by taping it up be more beneficial?
Leaving it as-is would scream to thieves:
"I'm that yellow u-lock that is tough to break unless you got a the time to grind/torch me off. Better off picking some other bike."
At the same time it also screams:
"Hey, expensive lock here which means bike is worth a ton to steal. Well worth the time!"
Leaving it as-is would scream to thieves:
"I'm that yellow u-lock that is tough to break unless you got a the time to grind/torch me off. Better off picking some other bike."
At the same time it also screams:
"Hey, expensive lock here which means bike is worth a ton to steal. Well worth the time!"
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any U lock can be broken with a can of duster and a hammer. if a thief wants your bike that bad, they're going to get it. the best you can do is use two different kinds of locks, leave your bike in an area where a lot of people are around. i lock my carbon bike up all the time in an area that has a lot of bike theft and my golden rule is to always lock my bike up in front of a window of a restaurant. that way, a thief will assume that im eating there and watching my bike as i eat.
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I think thieves are attracted to nice bikes, and not locks.
Although perhaps there are some locks they believe aren't worth the time or trouble, especially mid-day. So, I'd leave the brand on... I think it would be more of a deterrent than an attractant (unless there is a known flaw such as the round key Kryptonite locks).
I must admit that it bothered me a couple of days ago when I parked my bike right next to a cut cable lock that looked just like mine
There have been people that have purposely obscured good bikes to make them look like junkers with lousy rattle can paint jobs. I don't know how effective it is, but it does cut down on the value of anything that is painted.
Although perhaps there are some locks they believe aren't worth the time or trouble, especially mid-day. So, I'd leave the brand on... I think it would be more of a deterrent than an attractant (unless there is a known flaw such as the round key Kryptonite locks).
I must admit that it bothered me a couple of days ago when I parked my bike right next to a cut cable lock that looked just like mine

There have been people that have purposely obscured good bikes to make them look like junkers with lousy rattle can paint jobs. I don't know how effective it is, but it does cut down on the value of anything that is painted.
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any U lock can be broken with a can of duster and a hammer. if a thief wants your bike that bad, they're going to get it. the best you can do is use two different kinds of locks, leave your bike in an area where a lot of people are around. i lock my carbon bike up all the time in an area that has a lot of bike theft and my golden rule is to always lock my bike up in front of a window of a restaurant. that way, a thief will assume that im eating there and watching my bike as i eat.
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Obscurity does work, I would assume it works to some level on the average thief. However, a pro thief would still recognize bikes even with it covered up by a huffy sticker lol.
Last edited by Hisamatsu; 04-28-15 at 04:31 AM. Reason: edit
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Expensive Bikes Tempt Thieves More
When I rolled the 'Heavy Hauler' out of the LBS and rode it home for the first time, Disc Brakes announced to thieves that the bike that had them was a High End mountain bike. Now even big box store mountain bikes have disc brakes.
15 yrs ago 'Brifters' on a road bike indicated a High Dollar value. Now, we've come almost full circle, Disc Brake equipped Skinny Tire bikes shout to the world that you're locking up a high value bike. I feel fortunate that for the conditions where I live, rim brake technology is more than satisfactory. Once Road Disc systems 'Trickle Down' to the Big Box level road bike I may consider adopting them.
I have protected my bikes with a 'Defense In Depth' strategy, the Foundation of which are the strongest, best rated U-locks I can afford as Primary Anchoring Lock/s (for many years now a combo of O.G. 'BRUTE' std., big 'K's 'New York' F.U. mini AND 'BB's for the 'Heavy Hauler'). Currently using Abus Granit X plus 54 U-lock teamed with O.G. 'Bulldog' mini 7', PLUS the full "suite" of 'Pinhead' security fasteners for daily lock up of the 'Sporty - Quick' bike.
15 yrs ago 'Brifters' on a road bike indicated a High Dollar value. Now, we've come almost full circle, Disc Brake equipped Skinny Tire bikes shout to the world that you're locking up a high value bike. I feel fortunate that for the conditions where I live, rim brake technology is more than satisfactory. Once Road Disc systems 'Trickle Down' to the Big Box level road bike I may consider adopting them.
I have protected my bikes with a 'Defense In Depth' strategy, the Foundation of which are the strongest, best rated U-locks I can afford as Primary Anchoring Lock/s (for many years now a combo of O.G. 'BRUTE' std., big 'K's 'New York' F.U. mini AND 'BB's for the 'Heavy Hauler'). Currently using Abus Granit X plus 54 U-lock teamed with O.G. 'Bulldog' mini 7', PLUS the full "suite" of 'Pinhead' security fasteners for daily lock up of the 'Sporty - Quick' bike.
Last edited by HvPnyrs; 04-28-15 at 05:22 AM. Reason: added "now". Formatting
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any U lock can be broken with a can of duster and a hammer. if a thief wants your bike that bad, they're going to get it. the best you can do is use two different kinds of locks, leave your bike in an area where a lot of people are around. i lock my carbon bike up all the time in an area that has a lot of bike theft and my golden rule is to always lock my bike up in front of a window of a restaurant. that way, a thief will assume that im eating there and watching my bike as i eat.
liquid nitrogen is at -320F, your can of duster is at what -15F so nope
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It would be a real bummer if aliens are just like us.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yh46F3we1-M
and 6367km from the center of the earth is right on the surface at some specific lattitude
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you can see it by yourself at 3:38
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yh46F3we1-M
and 6367km from the center of the earth is right on the surface at some specific lattitude
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yh46F3we1-M
and 6367km from the center of the earth is right on the surface at some specific lattitude
I'm still curious as to which lock you use.
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I'd say thieves actually go for the cheaper lock and I have some extremely limited evidence to back it up. My friend bought a very cheap POS MTB at Target. He also bought a cheap cable lock. I pointed this out to him and he brushed me off then a few weeks later someone stole his bike. So he went back to Target bought the same exact bike but he went out and bought a Kryptonite U-lock and reinforced cable set. He still has the bike. Also I bought a Kryponite Evolution Series 4 U-lock and Master chain lock when I bought my first bike three years ago and I still have my bike. Why would a thief fiddle with a harder lock when he can clip a cable and scamper?
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I think you're answering a different question. In your friend's situation the type of lock made the difference not the branding/name. Very simple to nibble through a cable lock with a pair of dikes while acting like you're having trouble with your lock. I doubt it mattered whether he bought a generic cable lock or a big name cable lock.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2gKB58xa6k
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I think you're answering a different question. In your friend's situation the type of lock made the difference not the branding/name. Very simple to nibble through a cable lock with a pair of dikes while acting like you're having trouble with your lock. I doubt it mattered whether he bought a generic cable lock or a big name cable lock.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2gKB58xa6k
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2gKB58xa6k
#16
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Thieves will definitely go for the more expensive lock. It's all about proving that even the most expensive lock can be defeated. They don't really care about the bike. If it happens to be nice, that's just the bonus at the end.
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Which would you leave your bike out overnight with: Kryptonite branded cable lock or a u-lock with the brand name obscured?
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My Bike locks became more secure when I moved away from 'Bike Friendly' towns with College campuses with a thriving traffic in stolen bikes and Parts ..
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Absolutely true - sometimes they bust the locks and leave the bike there just to show you what good lock busters they are. All branding should be covered up with electrical tape for security.
#20
contiuniously variable
I only lock my bike up to something outside grocery stores. If i go to dunkin donuts or starbucks i lock it to itself by the window i sit at or to the rack outside respectively. When i need to go into say staples or bedbath, i either bring it into the entrance-way and tuck it out of the way or lock it to some large fixed object. I plan to get 3 more U locks for whatever use and a heavy chain and pad lock(s?) for if i need to lock it up in a less secure area outside of town
- Andy
- Andy
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Where are you locking the bike? For how long? How often? What is bike theft like in that area? You have to answer these questions. You might find that locking up in the same place all day long is not a good idea, no matter what lock you have. Here in NYC, crime has gone way down, but bike theft has not. It's pretty bad. I'm lucky that my employer lets me bring my bike inside. I don't even carry a lock!
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However, leaving the branding on would just make it easier for serious pro thieves to scout/spot your bike. They already have the ability to grind any lock at leisure. The yellow kryptonite color sticks out like a sore thumb. Most people wouldn't buy a lock that almost cost as much as the bike.
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When I first got my new bike every day any where I go people would comment "oh, nice bike there" etc... Got tiresome after a couple months listening. I slapped on a Huffy logo decal covering my bike's original brand name. Guess what? Not a single comment or complement from strangers since. Actually, only time anything was said about it was when my bike was being worked on in my LBS. Said it was a clever idea.
Obscurity does work, I would assume it works to some level on the average thief. However, a pro thief would still recognize bikes even with it covered up by a huffy sticker lol.
Obscurity does work, I would assume it works to some level on the average thief. However, a pro thief would still recognize bikes even with it covered up by a huffy sticker lol.
https://www.bikeforums.net/classic-vi...new-huffy.html
One would think that something like the Corvette would lead the stolen cars, but they don't even make the top 10 list, which has Hondas and Toyotas. I.E. Whatever is out on the road.
No doubt there is a huge number of $50 bikes that never are even reported stolen (and thus also safer to sell).

I did fix up a no-name MTB for the son of an acquaintance. I was told that he just left the bike in front of the library (near the bus stop) when he moved out of town??? Anyway, I had some troubles with the combo-lock, so I left it overnight. The next day, the bike was gone

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She also had The Club on her steering wheel, and the thieves took that off the wheel and left it on the seat.
The obvious message was, "We didn't want your car, but if we did this wouldn't have stopped us."
Gotta love people who take pride in their work...
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