• Mr. Frog
    link
    fedilink
    241 year ago

    You usually see these on fields that are co-owned or need to be accessed by several municipalities. Everybody gets their own key but can still have access to the area whenever needed.

    • @Cha0zz
      link
      English
      41 year ago

      Wouldn’t just duplicating the key achieve the same purpose or am I missing something?

      • The Gay Tramp
        link
        fedilink
        English
        201 year ago

        Duplicating the key removes some accountability. With this set up you can revoke access to only one person, while leaving the access in place for everyone else. If you had a single lock with six copies then a bad actor getting a copy means you’d have to replace everyone else’s keys

        This also means one person can’t take their lock off and replace it with another, and therefore lock out everyone else

        • @Cha0zz
          link
          English
          21 year ago

          Makes sense, thanks!

      • @Arrayrepairman
        link
        English
        51 year ago

        One case I’ve seen this, local PD, Sheriff, city Park District and county Forest Preserve District all needed access. They ech have dozens of hundreds of their own locks keyed the same, so they only need to carry one key, but they all need access to this one gate. If it was only one gate, it would be inconvenient but not too difficult, if it was a dozen shared gates, each with different overlapping agencies and each with their own key, every officer or employee would need a big ball of keys again, defeating the reason behind their keyed alike locks they already have.