Search For Adhesive Mount Magnet Lock Starter Set @ Amazon.com
| Most helpful customer reviews 222 of 226 people found the following review helpful. ADVANTAGES COMPARED WITH SAFETY 1ST TOT-LOK: (1) Installation is much easier and faster (a few minutes at most). You simply stick the catch (with 4 “installation tabs”) on the cabinet edge, put the latch (with foam tape exposed) on the catch, close the door, and the latch sticks to the correct place on the door. You then break the 4 “installation tabs” on the catch. In theory, you don’t need to use screws; however, if you want a more secure installation (as I did), you can easily screw in the catch and the latch. Ingenious! (2) You need to drill only small pilot holes for the (optional) screws, not a large nonstandard-size hole as for the Tot Lok. (3) Besides the screws, locks, and a key, there are no extra pieces to get lost during installation. (4) The key has a holder, which theoretically will help prevent it getting lost when there’s no steel (e.g., refrigerator door or medicine cabinet) nearby. (5) You don’t need extension pins/slugs for thicker doors as the Tot Lok does; the KidCo will work on doors up to about 1-1/2″ thick. (6) The screws can be turned with a standard #2 Phillips screwdriver instead of a #1 (small) Phillips screwdriver. DISADVANTAGES COMPARED WITH SAFETY 1ST TOT-LOK: (1) The latches depend on gravity, meaning that they can be mounted only at the top of a door or drawer; in contrast, the spring-loaded Tot-Lok can be mounted in any position (e.g., on the side or bottom of a cabinet door). (2) The dark grey sliders to disengage the locks are harder to manipulate than the Safety 1st red bars. (3) Unlike the Tot Lok’s catch (which has oblong slots instead of round holes for the screws), you can’t adjust the catch forward/backward. Combined with the default position of the catch being flush with the cabinet edge, installation on old-style cabinet doors with a “lip” (i.e., that protrude into the cabinet opening perhaps 1/4″) takes extra time. Good luck choosing! BTW, the Safety 1st Tot-Lok and KidCo magnetic keys are of similar strength and polarity (i.e., the Tot-Lok key will open a KidCo lock and vice versa). 58 of 59 people found the following review helpful. 44 of 45 people found the following review helpful. I mistakenly put the first lock in the middle of the top edge of the cupboard door instead of close to the end. This meant that the first door would start opening a tiny bit before it would be stopped by the lock – no big deal. Also, I found that on the second cupboard the key wouldn’t open the lock easily because the hook part of the lock was wedged up against the catch part (as it is supposed to do, but) too tightly. All I had to do was push the door in slightly to loosen it as I applied the key and it opens easy. Something to consider in case you can’t figure out why it isn’t unlocking. Also, the lock has a switch you can deactivate it with if you no longer want to use the lock any more. If you want to buy spare keys cheaply, don’t get a single key for 7 or eight dollars through the manufacturer. Instead go somewhere like dealextreme and get 10 super strong rare earth magnets (stronger than the key that comes with this lock) for about $4 (get the 2mm thick ones as they are stronger). |





