Burglaries…What can YOU do?
I cannot stress how important it is to do whatever you can to protect your home.
Although Norfolk is quite low on the burglary scale against the rest of the UK, we still have home intruders and they still go for easy targets. The most recent burglary I attended was a case where an insurance standard lock was not fitted on the door through which they gained entry. The alarm was not switched on, and the door through which the intruders entered was dark and secluded. All ideal circumstances for a burglar. The thieves made off with jewellery, ignoring the laptop computers on their way to the bedroom. Whilst it would have been a pain waiting for insurance to replace computers, the family heirlooms amongst the jewellery can never be replaced.
So here again, are the things you should be looking for when making sure you are as safe as you can be and also covered by most insurers.
If you have a upvc door, the locking barrel should have a kite mark on it. Regardless of the number of hooks and bolts and rollers the door has, this is the weak spot and I can guarantee most people reading this will have the basic barrels that are easy to bypass for those who know how, which unfortunately includes the burglars. Even among the kite marked barrels there are varying degrees of safety and we welcome all enquires along with free security checks.
If you have a wooden door with a ‘Yale’ type lock only, then this must also display a kite mark. You will usually see this on the part that is on the front edge of the door and therefore you will have to open the door to see it. These usually also have a chunky part around the keyhole to resist attack. The official name for these is an Automatic Deadlocking Nightlatch. If you only have a basic nightlatch and no other lock on your door, then you are asking for trouble as bypassing the standard nightlatch often takes less than a minute with no major tools.
The other locks found on wooden doors are mortice locks, often called “Chubb” locks. These are the ones that sit inside the door itself. Many people read in their insurance about 5 lever locks and confuse this with the upvc multi-point locking systems. The five levers are actually inside the mortice lock. You can get 2 lever locks, suitable for bathrooms, etc, 3 lever locks suitable for internal doors and then 5 lever mortice locks for final exit doors. If you have a 3 lever lock on your outer door, it will be vulnerable in many ways. They are easy to pick. They are easy to drill. The bolt does not come out as far as a 5 lever lock and they are therefore easier to lever open. The supplied keeps are never as robust either. Kite marked British Standard 5 lever mortice locks are designed to be difficult to pick. They have anti-drill plates. The bolts extend further and are protected against hacksaws and the keeps are strong with long screws to help ensure against being levered open.
If you have any doors in dark areas, invest in a powerful sensor light, and dummy CCTV cameras are a great deterrent. But a real CCTV system can be tailored to most budgets and burglar alarms can now send a message straight to your mobile phone alerting you to a break in, allowing you to be aware instantly that someone has triggered it. Even if you have pets that roam free, modern alarms can be set so that animals do not trigger them, while larger humans do.
Finally, many say to me that if a burglar wants to get into your house, then he will and unfortunately this is true. But he also wants to be able to get out fast without cutting himself on broken glass, so a solid lock on your door is still the best deterrent.
admin December 23, 2013