dogtown tom
Member
Yup.....The main use, really, is being able to check the legal box for the sellers..
It's for the children.
Yup.....The main use, really, is being able to check the legal box for the sellers..
Give it back to your dealer. Let him recycle that lock and save the planet.The first thing I do when buying a new gun is when I get home with it is throw it's cheesy little lock in the trash can.
Now, from this thread, we also learn that you might be the source of spare keys for those in a bind.is throw it's cheesy little lock in the trash can.
....grinding produces sparks which could pit the finish of a gun. I would go with bolt cutters. Even the small ones will cut the cable on a gun lock. The cost is less than refinishing a gun. I cut hardened padlocks off all the time with bolt cutters. Cable locks are easy.
I save them up, and when I have a half-dozen or so I take them to the gun club and put them on a table in a box labeled "Free Locks." Somebody must want those things -- they usually disappear in a few weeks.The first thing I do when buying a new gun is when I get home with it is throw it's cheesy little lock in the trash can.
Either that or wrap a towel around the gun. I've used grinders, drills, torches, and welders on cars. That's what fender covers are for.
As to linesman's pliers there are linesman's pliers and then there are Kleins 9 1/4" linesman's pliers which puts all others in the shade when it comes to cutting or at least when I was using them they did. Number 4 ASCR was easy and number 2 was doable an big and strong has never been me.
ACSR?As to linesman's pliers there are linesman's pliers and then there are Kleins 9 1/4" linesman's pliers which puts all others in the shade when it comes to cutting or at least when I was using them they did. Number 4 ASCR was easy and number 2 was doable an big and strong has never been me.