Keys on Show

Thumb turnYesterday, I got to called to a house where the customers had accidently shut themselves out of their house. A nice easy job, I thought. Most nightlatches (often referred to as ‘Yale’ type locks) are simple to bypass. As I arrived, I got a bit more excited. The lock was a kite marked BSI 3621 variety, meaning I was in for more of a challenge and probably late for the next job of the day.

But the challenge was not to be. The door had a convenient window and less than an arm’s distance away, hanging on hooks, were all the customer’s keys. Flexible metal rod through the letter box and less than a minute later, the door was open. No special tools. On any given day, a burglar could have done the same thing and entered the house, or as is becoming more common, got the displayed car keys, and easily taken the car.

Car theft is growing in the UK with most cars now being stolen direct from the driveway or with signal cloning. The thieves know we keep our keys near the front door, so having them in plain view is just an open invitation to have your car stolen.

Most of us put front door keys and car keys together, so you need to leave your bunch near the front door in case of fire. But you can put them in a wall mounted cupboard with a door, or even a key safe. Some key safes now come protected from signal cloning.

While we are talking about signal cloning, Faraday pouches are a great way to protect your keys while you are out and about. These are signal protecting pouches for your keys.

If you wish to know more about any of the above, please get in touch via my contacts page.

Thanks for reading.

When is a Smart Lock not so smart?

The answer to the above question, is ALL TOO OFTEN!

I have just done an online check of UK available smart locks on Google and I don’t like what I see. If you have a standard wooden door, getting a smart lock to replace your existing lock might look flashy, but you could well be invalidating your insurance because you are reducing your security levels.

Most of the wooden door smart locks are based around a latched lock. In the industry, we call them Nightlatches, but you might be more familiar with calling them Yale type locks. There are very few insurance standard nightlatches out there and part of what gives them their British Standard 3621 rating is the anti-pick and anti-drill key hole. Replacing that key hole with something else gives your insurer an excuse to not pay out in the event of a claim, even if a burglar entered via another route. If you are fitting a smart lock to a standard nighlatch, chances are, the burglar can bypass the whole thing with a method called ‘slipping’, faster than you can activate the lock via your phone app (more on that later). I did see a couple of smart locks that operated deadbolts. But the deadbolts that come as part of the kit were very small. One available on Amazon plainly states it replaces your existing deadbolt. But taking your existing deadbolt out and putting the replacement in would be like putting an apple in a hole big enough for a melon! And again, to conform to British Standard 3621, and therefore insurance, the dead bolt has minimum size requirements and should have anti-saw capabilities, a feature this lock certainly does not have.
Smart lock

If you have any door with a multipoint locking mechanism, you are a bit luckier because the insurance industry still does not require British Standard locking barrels. Or are you? Over the last few years, burglars have increasingly attacked these door types because they are easy to get into and once you are in, the door is open for you to carry out whatever you want without leaving DNA on broken window glass. None of the new smart locks make this any harder. And you can’t use them very well in conjunction with Kite marked locking cylinders. One of the big things that deter burglars is an obviously strong cylinder. Smart locks cover up the cylinders so the burglar who cannot tell your house is well protected, is just likely to have a go anyway, destroying your expensive smart lock in the process.  
smart locks

A better investment would Kite marked cylinders and a smart doorbell that records people approaching the door. Era

But a smart lock is more convenient and saves the hassle of keys, I hear you argue. Let’s face it, we all want to be able to open the door without having to put our bags down while getting soaked in the rain and a smart lock allows us to do that. Or does it?

Without a smart lock, you approach your door, retrieving your keys from your pocket/bag put the key in the door and you are in. Maybe you do have to put some bags down first. With almost all smart locks, you have to take out your phone, wave it front of your face so it recognises you (put in a code if it doesn’t recognise you or your fingerprint), open the smart lock app, find the unlock feature, and activate it. You might need two hands where the key only required one. All in all, it might take longer to use the smart lock rather than lock and key. Your alternative is the code version entry. These not-quite-smart locks still enable you to go key free, but what if the batteries go or the electronics fail. You are still better off with the key. Besides, knowing your eldest childs’ birthday will probably let me into your home anyway. People are too obvious with key codes.

So, you really want smart technology. What do I actually recommend? Well, I’m not changing my mind anytime soon on multipoint doors. You really need a good Kite marked cylinder as a deterrent to keep you safe. And the best ones are only available through locksmiths to my knowledge. Even smart products still require you to lift the handle before locking and you still have to use the handle to open the door. Coupled with a smart doorbell, this is your best option by far. Smart doorbells are a great Xmas prezzie idea for your older generation relatives if they are able to use smart phones. It lets them see who is at the door without having to get up. I know there are plenty of people with mobility issues who could benefit from this technology.
Doorcam

If you have a wooden door, it gets even better. A new smart lock is due out in September. It is a Nightlatch, but it carries the all important BSI 3621 kite mark, making it acceptable to insurers. It will link in to Alexa and other smart devices. While it will require you to have an app, the app will run in the background on your phone, so you won’t need to take your phone out and turn it on. As long as the phone is on you, you will be able to open the door. All you do is approach your door and place your finger on the sensor. A truly secure, smart, lock.

If you require any more information regarding the above, please do not hesitate to get in touch via any of the methods on my contacts page.

Thanks for reading.


What Simple Security Steps will make your home much Safer?

Simple security steps to help make your home safer 

Every other week, I help my kids out with the delivery of the local community magazine. We do just over two hundred houses in a small town. Every time I do these deliveries, I am shocked to see people’s front doors with keys in which I could have taken, using their own cars as getaway vehicles (‘It was only for five minutes,’ they tell me), or doors ajar, just waiting for someone to poke their head inside with no one around. In these latter cases, you can’t use the letterbox as the door swings, but you can open the door a bit more, unchallenged, which reveals all sorts of easily stolen items. I also see letters piled up, indicating no one has been home for a few days at least (easy prey). Just today, I noticed the magazine I posted two weeks ago, which told me a lot.

I do also see good things, and it is those I would like to talk about because they offer security you wouldn’t think about. An awful lot of the non-destructive entries I do are through the letterbox. And if I can do that, the burglar can. So if you have locks that look like this on the inside:

Thumb turn Thumb turn

Night latch Night latchI can get to these through the letterbox and open the door in seconds. Even kitemarked products are not impossible to open. Leaving keys on the inside of the lock is just as bad. You can get letterbox guards that stop me using my specialist tool, but even these can be bypassed. But here is something that is going to cause me problems.

Letter box cage

A letter cage stops all tools being able to get more than a few inches through the letterbox.

Better still, bolt your letterbox shut and get one of these external letterboxes;

Not only will this mean no one gets in through your letter plate, but a separate letterbox at the end of your garden will have you loved by the postman and paper deliverers everywhere.

If you have any questions regarding the above information, please get in touch via any of the methods on my contacts page.

Thanks for reading.


Blow torch attacks and door maintenance

It seems there is a new spate of attacks in the UK where the burglars use a blow torch on plastic (upvc) double glazed doors. Because they are using fire, this makes a major mess of the door and frame. You are not just looking at replacement locks, but a whole replacement door. If you have the anti-snap cylinders available in DIY stores, then you are still going to be a victim with this sort of attack. If you have an inner anti-snap protector, as used on many new build properties, the burglar will still have a go before he sees the protector. You might not be burgled, but your door is ruined.
Kite marked lock

To be properly protected, you need the advice of a good local locksmith who has access to the very best locks and equipment. They will provide you with the locks that show the burglar they are wasting their time attacking your property. The potential intruder needs to see from a distance that easier pickings are to be had elsewhere.

Thinking anyone can get in if they really want to is unfortunately usually correct, but burglars want to get in as quickly and quietly as possible. The other worry with this blow torch method is heat transference; the intruder can see the damage they are doing to the outside, but they cannot see if they are causing flames inside. It is a very dangerous form of attack especially as nearly half of all burglaries occur when someone is home.
Moving on from that last point, recent reports show that adults and children suffer long term effects of insecurity following burglaries.
Finally, while I was halfway through writing this piece about blow torch attacks, I had a recall from a customer whose lock had failed. Once I got the lock open, I discovered the door was sticking a lot at the bottom. Where the door was not closing properly, the latch was being placed under long term pressure, which led to the lock breaking internally. Doors warp, drop, swell and buckle. Kids will try and slam them with the bolt extended and all sorts of other damage can occur. As a general rule of thumb, if the door is even marginally difficult to lock/unlock, then something, somewhere, is going to be out of alignment. If your door needs a boot at the bottom to get it closed, do something about it before the cost becomes prohibitive. If the door is ok, but the lock is still difficult, a good locksmith will lock at the problem without charge. It’s then up to you whether or not you enter into a situation where the locksmith corrects the problem for a fee. If your lock is stiff and you don’t sort out the problem now, chances are it will fail when you get home from the school run with three screaming kids and their buddies on a sleepover and all of them will be wanting the toilet. On top of that, all the local locksmiths will be busy for the next seven hours or not even picking up the phone, meaning you have to call a national, who will charge you double, and you will wish you had gotten around to dealing with the problem when time was on your side. This same advice applies to locks where you need a special knack to unlock it. That knack might have been good for five years, or five minutes, but sooner or later, a lock that does not function normally, will fail and it will be at an inopportune moment.
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If you have any questions regarding the above, please get in touch via the contacts page.

Why should I change the locks on my brand new property?

There seems to be a massive drive to build new homes lately. Almost everywhere you go, you are bound to be driving past a new build construction site. You might even be looking at a nice newly built home in your area. The beauty of a new home over an older one is that you can move in knowing you have nothing to do. The carpets are already fitted to your criteria, the sparkly kitchen gleams and there is no worry that some random neighbour has a spare key to your home.Home security

So why change the locks? Quite frankly, the developers will do the minimum possible to meet regulations, and currently, in the UK the regulations just are not up to the same level as the burglars. New homes are all being built with multipoint locking mechanisms and while all the hooks, bolts and rollers look impressive and secure, the system is only as good as its’ weakest part, which is the locking cylinder. While standard locking Euro Cylinders are acceptable for insurance purposes, they are incredibly weak to a form of attack called “cylinder snapping.” Property developers will use these standard cylinders wherever possible.

Some of the more reputable developers will at least have the decency to install kite marked Euro cylinders in their doors, but beyond the kite mark, there are still three grades of security, which cover the three main forms of attack, those being snap, pick and drilling. So a cylinder with one star will be proof against picking but not the other two, and a cylinder with two stars will still be susceptible to attack by one of the three main methods. You can supplement the star rating by having anti-snap collars placed inside the handles, or anti-drill handles. You may even have these, but if you don’t know, then the burglar doesn’t know either and he is likely to have a go, fail and leave your door a mess before he leaves. Only a three-star cylinder should be used if you want the burglar to go away before even trying.

With total honesty, there is a tool that can be purchased to bypass even some of the best three-star cylinders, but it takes time to use and is fiddly. Entry with this tool is trial and error, sometimes taking many minutes to get in the door, whereas a standard cylinder can be snapped in under 60 seconds with household tools and no sound. For the same reason, a burglar will not take the time to remove your roof tiles and enter that way, he will not purchase a tool that takes him many times longer to get in than the cheap tools he can get from a DIY store.

Cylinder snapping is no longer about normal burglary any more. Intruders know that most people leave their car keys somewhere in the vicinity of the front door, be they left on a surface, hanging on a convenient hook, or just in a coat pocket. They can now look for the car they want to steal parked nicely on your front drive. As most of us are now two-car families, at least one will sit on the drive, and if that car is your brand new Mercedes or BMW and you keep your keys close to an easily attacked door, your insurance might decide not to pay out because you didn’t take enough care. How many people tell their insurance the car is kept in the garage, knowing that actually, the garage is full of the toot we don’t want in our actual houses? Breaking into a house and stealing the keys is now the easiest way to steal their car.

And while a barking dog is a deterrent to some degree, what protects your home when you are on holiday or even out walking that dog?

Most three-star Euro cylinders are visibly different to standard cylinders. They shout at the burglar you are serious about home security and that attacking your home is going to be noisy and time-consuming. Noise and time are the enemy of the burglar. If he knows breaking into your home is going to be noisy and take up precious time, he is going to move on. If you fit the proper cylinders, chances are you will be angry with the locksmith after years and years of never seeing any signs of attack. You will never know how many intruders scouted your home and mentally noted to leave you alone. It’s not hard. I help my kids with their paper round, and the best locks stick out like a sore thumb. I know exactly how few there are and where they are. A potential intruder only has to deliver some bogus leaflets in any area to work out who is best avoided.

While on this subject, I was emailed a question asking if it is worth putting extra strength glue in an externally beaded window so that if the burglar got the beading off the window would still be stuck in place. Beading removal was never a hugely popular method of attack. There was always too much potential to make noise and take a long time. Also, the risk of breaking glass and then cutting oneself is too high, even without extra glues. Cylinder snapping is quick, quiet and easy. So faced with a choice, you should always upgrade your cylinders.

If you have standard cylinders or even kite marked one-star cylinders, you should upgrade now. If you don’t know what you have, a good locksmith in your area will come and assess your locks via a free security check. Unless a locksmith has provided your locks, I very much doubt they will be the best on the market. You cannot buy the best locks in the DIY shops. While you are ensuring you have the best locks, you should be sending a copy of this information to everyone you care about, because of the following reasons:

* Burglary is on the rise.

* Traditionally ‘safe’ areas are being burgled more often.

* Only a tiny fraction of burglaries get investigated by police.

* You are now at risk from car thieves as well.

* Burglars pass on information to each other, so if you are burgled once, you stand an increased chance of being hit again.

* Every victim I speak to, reports a feeling of personal violation, sleepless nights and detachment from their home.

If you have any questions regarding the above information or any of the other blogs I have written, please get in touch via any of the methods on my contacts page.

Thanks for reading.


Home security – The best Christmas present ever

What are you getting your parents for Christmas this year? Hankies? Pants and socks? A poinsetta plant? A box of chocolates?

Difficult, isn’t it. Maybe they already have everything they could want within an acceptable price range. Maybe you just get them the same things every year out of habit. Maybe they are just don’t make use of the practical presents you would like to get for them.

So why not think outside the box? How long ago did they change their locks? Do their locks even meet today’s insurance standards? How many keys have been lost over the years? How much safer will they feel when they have a nice, new lock fitted?

Better yet, why not get them a doorbell that links to a phone with a screen meaning they can see and talk to someone at the door without ever having to get up or open the door to a stranger.

Or, even better, how about a home security alarm system with added features like a panic button that can alert you if they take a fall, or will allow you to use your mobile phone to check in on them from time to time.

AC Locksmiths

This Christmas, or birthday or just because you can, why not get your parents something that matters? Part of the joy of Christmas is seeing the people you love use the present you buy them. Pants and socks just don’t quite work.

If you have any questions regarding the above information, please get in touch via any of the methods on my contacts page.

Thanks for reading, and Merry Christmas


Rental & holiday home locks

Just recently, I was called to a holiday let property at midnight because the lock had failed and the holiday makers were unable to get in. By the time I got there, the property owner had also arrived and there was an atmosphere you could have cut with a knife. It was cold, dark and wet. The holiday makers wanted to get in from a night out, the owner had been in bed and both were insinuating it was the others’ fault that the key was not working. Luckily, I was able to jiggle the key and get them all into the house quickly. But the lock was old and both keys were having problems, so I showed the landlord as discreetly as possible it was her problem and got that lock changed as fast as possible in order to get away from the tension that was growing with every minute.

A C Locksmiths Norfolk

The landlord had made several mistakes:

Firstly, she had let a lock get too old. The industry recommends that you change your locks every five years as standard. Of course, in the home, we hardly even think of changing our locks until they go wrong, but as another recent customer told me, she got her locks changed because her teenage son kept hiding keys in the garden so his friends could let themselves in when they wanted! He then forgot where he would hide them and she thought he might have lost around seven keys and even had more cut that she didn’t know about. With a holiday let home, you should be more vigilant with locks. Especially near the coast where they get weather beaten and corrode more quickly. Also, we trust our houses to strangers. How do we know none of them are making copies to return in a year or two to break in when other holiday makers are out? For security and peace of mind, it is good practice to get into the habit of changing the locks on a holiday let yearly. If you do it in late March, you won’t even notice the cost because it’s tax deductible. You have nothing to lose.

The second mistake was giving customers copy keys: locks come with two or three keys as standard. Always keep one key to have for emergency copy purposes. The others should be for the use of customers. They will be the ones using the lock the most. If you damage a lock using inferior cut keys, you have no come back on guarantees. If you have cleaners and/or management companies looking after your property, they should be using the copies because they only usually need to go in once a week on change over day. But the keys that are used the most should always be the originals. As a side note, in my experience, the worst key copiers are chain stores. Support your local cobbler/engraver as they usually do a much better job. But most of the time, even the local key cutters will only stock non-original brand key blanks. Customers don’t want to pay for the branded keys. But branded keys last longer and work better with the locks. If you have a Yale lock, you want a key that also has Yale written on it, not JMA or worse still, no marks at all. The absolute best thing you can do is to order all the keys you need when you talk to your locksmith about fitting a new lock. Remember, it’s a business expense, so you might as well get something for your money rather than lose it to the tax man.

Holiday let owners know the peace of mind that comes with having customers who come back year after year or recommend their property to others. It’s a lot better than having to refund a customer because of something that could easily have been avoided. And unfortunately, you can’t rely on the cleaners/management company to notice. The cleaners quickly get used to locks that need a knack (they need changing quickly) and the management companies don’t want to keep hassling you for jobs that require expenses, especially if they have to pay the trader and then wait for you to pay them. A good holiday let owner will have a locksmith go in and look at all their doors and windows, either at the start or end of the season. UPVC doors might need adjusting, wooden doors might have swollen or as was the case with some doors this dry summer, contracted to a point of the locks being unusable. Mechanisms should be oiled twice a year (when clocks go forward and back is a good habit to get into) and handles might have lost their spring. A door and lock might seem like a boring thing, but it is your customer’s first point of contact with your house. They won’t notice if it all runs smoothly, but if it looks shabby or is a bit stiff, that sets the tone for more things to find wrong, whether they know it or not.

For property owners of longer lease homes, you really should be changing the locks between tenants. No matter how good your outgoing tenant s may have been, you simply don’t know how many copies of keys they have had made. Scarily I’ve seen it a number of times when people buy homes for themselves, and later discover the old owner letting themselves in. Again, as this is a business expense, there is nothing to stop you installing new locks. And better you do it rather than the tenant. At least you can use the same locksmith every time who will usually use the same brands so your door is not being weakened by different sized locks needing ever bigger holes in the door.

As a tenant, you are well within your rights to demand that your new landlord provide new locks with original cut keys. Any additional keys should be discussed with the landlord because if you get bad cut copies, the lock becomes your problem.

If you have any questions regarding the above information, please don’t hesitate to get in touch using any of the methods on my contacts page.

Thanks for reading


Dark Nights

Now the clocks have changed, bringing the dark evenings with them, we have to prepare for the sadly inevitable increase in burglaries.

Make your property more secure

Time and again I hear the phrase: You will never stop the determined invader getting into your home. This is true, but your aim is to make life so difficult for him, he goes on to an easier target. If he gets in through a window, make sure he has to leave through that same window while he is carrying his ill-gotten gains and hopefully he will cut himself on broken glass leaving DNA evidence. The police are hard stretched to even investigate most burglaries, so any evidence you can provide will be a good thing, and while it might not get your possessions back, a very nasty person might just be prevented from stealing someone else’s  irreplaceable family heirloom.

Smart technology is making life easier, but too many people think it is out of their price range. That is simply no longer true. DIY kits can be bought on line with cameras small enough to not be seen. If your parents or anyone you care about are technology illiterate, why not set them up a system that sends images to your mobile phone? Not only can you keep them safe from invaders, but also keep a check on them if they fall. Obviously professional installations are better, but no one needs to be unprotected. Doorbell cameras synched to your mobile phone allow you to not only see who is at your door, but talk to them too, even if you are on the other side of the world. This technology allows you to vet whoever comes to your door without you needing to get up from your chair, a great defence against door step scams and distractors.

Bright sensor lights always make burglars jumpy, so make sure there are no dark spots around your perimeter. Good ones can distinguish between humans and smaller animals so they are not going off like discos. Window locks are required by insurance companies on ground floor windows and usually first floor windows as well. But make sure these are visible to someone scouting. In all honesty, most window locks are fairly easy to bypass, but cable restrictors add a second line of defence and are especially good upstairs in summer for rooms you want aired, but without danger of children managing to open the window enough to fall out.

Your door locks should always carry a British Standard Kite Mark. It is required by your insurance company if you have a wooden door, but anyone who has seen me bypass a door with multi-point locking mechanism in seconds will always upgrade to a kite marked cylinder without hesitation. Again, you can buy these in DIY stores, but it takes a professional to know which kite marked ones are best. Even some of the kite marked ones can now be bypassed with a cheapish tool, so contact your local locksmith before buying any old lock, even if you trust the brand name. Also beware of smart locks. In some cases, making life easier by switching to a keyless lock is also making life easier for the burglar. By ditching the key, you may well also be ditching security. Smart locks are a new thing and a good locksmith will be able to show you the good from the bad. I personally have several orders on hold because I awaiting the launch of a smart lock that will be perfect for wooden doors.

With the run up to Christmas, don’t forget to keep yourself safe in the crowds as well. Put your wallet in different pocket to usual so you will feel it more if someone tries to pick pocket you. Put cards and cash in separate places about your person so if one gets stolen, you still have the other for emergency use. Keep bags zipped up and a tight hold on straps. Wear straps across body as this makes them harder to cut for the bag thief.

If parking in a roofed car park, park with your boot facing outwards. That way, anyone trying to open it will be easier to spot by cameras and passers by. When you open your boot, take the extra seconds to pocket your keys rather than putting them down in the boot. No one wants to add the cost of an auto locksmith having to come and open the car that has been locked with all keys still in the boot. Yes, it does happen a lot.

If you have any questions regarding the above or any information in any of my blogs, please do not hesitate to contact me via me via any of the methods on my contacts page.

Thanks for reading!        


Digital Doorbells and Viewers

As we approach an ever more digital age, it seems the amount of computerised items we never we needed is getting ever bigger. I think then advantages of a digital door viewer are well worth the cost to anyone. But so few of us even know they exist.

ERA doorbell tech
So what are they? Door viewers have been around for a long time. They allow you to get a good look at who is outside, ringing your doorbell (unless you are in a horror movie when they never seem to work!). But the vision through one has always been a bit warped and if you are visually impaired, they are pretty useless. Digital door viewers are different. You can either have a camera placed centrally in the door, or attached to your doorbell with either a screen on the inside of the door that is large enough for you to see the person outside, or a message can be sent to your mobile phone so you can see who is coming to your house, even while you are sipping cocktails in your holiday bar. Some systems will either let you talk to the visitor from your phone, or from a special phone in the house, meaning the elderly and/or infirm don’t have to get out of their seats to deal with nuisance callers, or worse still con artists.

These digital viewers can be used as a stand alone product, or as part of an integrated security system. They can be set to take a picture of the person calling along with date and time stamp, or some will even record a continuous video loop so that you can monitor any suspicious activity going on outside your home. As an example, I was recently at a property where a suspected drugs deal was happening next door. Those who were allegedly purchasing the drugs parked right in front of a digital door viewer and the car number plate was easily observable, as was the driver exiting the car and returning with a bag he did not have before. All this recorded and kept in case of future need. As a stand alone product, digital door viewers are now affordable to most, and will act as a good deterrent to anyone seeking to invade your home, or the home of those you love.

I know it’s only just the end of summer, but as an idea, instead of buying your parents the usual this Christmas, why not buy them something that will boost their home security, save them having to get up every time a salesman knocks, and allow them to nose about at what’s going on outside?

While there are loads of designs and manufacturers to choose from, I personally recommend ERA products as they can be expanded for use with the ERA home guard system, which is almost completely wireless, remotely accessible and will be crowned by an insurance rated brilliant smart lock in the very near future.

If you have any queries regarding the above information, please do not hesitate to get in contact with me via any of the methods on my contacts page.

Thanks for reading


Numbers of unsolved burglaries

As I passed the papers in my local supermarket this weekend, a headline from the Sunday Times caught my eye. It read: Under 5% of all burglaries and robberies solved.

Make your property more secure
Now, that figure includes the recent rise in moped robberies that seem to be in fashion with the criminal element right now, but it does suggest that if you are burgled, the chances are slim that you will ever get your possessions back again, and while that is ok for the things insurance can replace like games consoles, laptops, etc, it is not okay when it comes to special one off gifts from a departed relative, or the files that you need off that laptop in order to start contacting all the people you are going to have to inform about the burglary.

The good news for where I live in North Norfolk is that detection rates are good in comparison to the whole of the UK, but I have personally seen a rise in burglaries and if the criminal is caught, it can be weeks later, long after your belongings have been stolen.

So what can you do? We all have heard someone say; ‘If the criminal really wants to get in, he can.’ And that is correct. What you want to do is make getting in a time consuming, noisy affair with as much light as possible. When I approach a job where a customer has locked themselves out, I can tell by looking at the door and its’ lock/s just how long I can expect to get them in. Sometimes it is seconds, sometimes it takes a good long while. But I am prepared for what I have to do through experience. The burglar is no different, If your lock has a British Standard Kite mark, he recognises that and knows that is extra time. He might well be able to get in faster than me, because I am taking my time to limit damage to door and lock, whereas he can be a bit more heavy handed. Believe it or not, the window is not a worthwhile entry point if you have to come back out over broken glass with hands full of stolen items, so the burglar always wants to leave by a door. So all those keys left in a bowl on the side or hanging from hooks nearby, are just making life easy for him, especially if they are visible from a window. If your car keys are there as well, you are giving him a getaway vehicle and the capacity to take more. Contact your local locksmith, If they are any good, they will offer a free security check. Whether you can afford to act upon their advice is down to you, but you will know your vulnerabilities and how to deal with them. If my customers want to take my advice, but cannot afford the whole job in one go, I make allowances to return at reduced rates within certain time frames. Do not think your UPVC doors are especially safe, cylinder snapping is a rising attack method and once employed, renders all the hooks and bolts in your door useless. Talk to your locksmith about anti-snap cylinders that are better than the ones you can buy in DIY stores.

Slowing the burglar down is still not going to stop them all. You have to allow for the opportunist and inexperienced intruders who will have a go at anything. Wireless alarm set ups are now available in DIY stores and all over the internet. They can be controlled by mobile phone apps and can have panic buttons and smoke detectors all linked in. A kit you can buy yourself is going to be the cheapest option, but they often come with sensors you don’t want and not enough of the sensors you do want. There is also the minefield of pet friendly devices and best possible places to maximise coverage with the simplest set up. Again, your local locksmith should be familiar with good alarm systems or able to point you in the direction of an alarm specialist who will be more expensive, but will have an even greater range of products such as central control centre monitoring. Alarm systems now come with CCTV which not only keeps you safer, but because it is mobile phone app controlled, you can also use it to check your kids are not having any parties while you are away.

Make sure your alarm box is easy to see and difficult to reach. Then put up plenty of warning signs that the house is protected by CCTV. I install alarms that let you communicate with whoever is inside the house. A burglar is going to scram quick when a disembodied voice starts warning him you are just around the corner.

Security light

Security lights are worth their weight in gold. Burglars are constantly on edge. A sensor light that shines bright at night illuminating their antics is going to make them jump like they’re watching a 90’s slasher movie. They can never be sure if it is a senor or if someone is actually in the house putting lights on.

Safes are now much more affordable than ever they used to be. And if you really want to protect that information on your laptop, or that piece of jewellery that belonged to your Nan, that might be worthless to anyone other than you, then you really should look into having a safe. If it is a small safe, do not mount it on a wall where it can be easily hammered down. Safes should always be on the floor where possible and if they are awkward for you to get to, then that means more time the burglar will have to spend trying to get into the thing. If you have a small safe with lots of room, I can get into it (destructive method) within minutes. Bolted down in an awkward position is going to make it much harder. If you have an electronic safe with override keys, do not keep those keys in your house. Trust two relatives or two good friends to look after those keys (but don’t trust them enough to tell them where the safe is). And please, change the safe batteries regularly. A safe not only helps protect from burglars, but from fire damage as well.

Having spoken to victims, a burglary is more than just having your stuff stolen. Many say they go months, if not years without being able to sleep properly. There is a feeling of personal invasion. A home sometimes ceases to be a home anymore and you can then add the expense of having to move to the cost of your belongings while the villain has just sold your heirloom for a fiver at a boot sale. Don’t be a victim. Don’t resign yourself to that ‘if he wants to get in, he will,’ mentality. If you have done everything you can to deter him, he will go elsewhere to where pickings are quicker and easier.

If you have any questions about this topic or any of my other blogs, please don’t hesitate to get in touch via any of the methods on my contacts page.

Thanks for reading.