The Indiegogo campaign, through which the SkunkLock is being crowdfunded, describes the device as “the only lock that fights back”. The designers do not claim their lock is the ultimate bike theft solution but it might make thieves think twice about stealing your precious two-wheeled companion after being covered in layers of their own puke. Yes, that is what the inventors promise will happen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v3E7Ux10DGc
It all started when Daniel Idzkowsky friend’s expensive e-bike was stolen outside a restaurant where he stopped just to have a lunch and chat. Idzkowsky, co-inventor of the lock, was outraged by the inability of two locks, each $120, to stop the thief and he made an angry inquiry as to “why didn’t it blow his balls off?” He then came up with a more legal and less limb-tearing invention – with his co-inventor, Yves Perrenoud, he created a U-shaped lock of carbon and steel with a hollow chamber to hold up to three kinds of gas of their own concoction, including one called “formula D_1”. When someone cuts about 30% of the way into the lock the gas should erupt in the direction of the cut. “It’s pretty much immediately vomit inducing, causes difficulty breathing,” Idzkowski said. “A lot of similar symptoms to pepper spray.” Way to turn sticky fingers into stinky fingers. (Sorry.)
With bike theft being rampant in San Francisco and the Bay Area, the lock became a hit and people pledged more than a double of the flexible goal on Indiegogo so far. The inventors also had their smelly gases tested (no pun intended) and their variants were designed to be compliant according to the varying rules of 50 states, major cities and, EU nations.
The device was not yet tested on actual thieves but the inventors have used theirs and their friends’ noses to do the research. “At two feet (60cm) it was pretty bad. It was absolutely vomit inducing in 99% of people. At five feet it’s very noticeable and the initial reaction is to move away from it. At 10ft it’s definitely detectable and very unpleasant,” noted Idzkowski.
Yves and Daniel admit that the lock isn’t fool-proof, it can still be picked but it uses advanced disc-cylinder tumbler lock that can take even skilled lockpicks 30 minutes of fiddling around, thus resulting in plenty of time to be noticed. And even if you were to wait until all the gas is spent to finish sawing through the lock – the substances are designed to cling to your clothes and skin and if you manage to not puke all your intestines out, crawl back home, have a shower, have a change of clothes, and return to the crime scene to finish the gig, well, maybe stealing bikes isn’t your biggest problem.
SkunkLock should go to production in June 2017, pending risk assessment by the inventors’ legal team.