As someone who has actually.owned and operated lots of vending machines of different types over the years, no this isn’t true.
You can buy vending machine locks that are keyed the same if, for example, you wanted all 12 machines that you owned to have locks that could be opened with the same key but the chances of that key opening any random vending machine you may encounter are about as good as your house key working to open your neighbor’s house… Not impossible but not super likely.
In fact, just yesterday I picked up a vending machine key that it took a locksmith over two weeks to make for me with only the lock to copy it from because I’d lost my original for that particular machine.
I have several other vending keys that I tried (mainly because I was confident that one of them actually was the right key) but none of them worked.
Vending machine locks and keys are actually quite complex and varied.
Oh, I just noticed that you actually asked how much to change the lock…
They quoted me $35 to drill out the one I lost the key for and replace it with a new one and the corresponding key… I could have done that myself for significantly less by just ordering a replacement lock and key from Amazon, but…
I wanted a duplicate of the original because I do actually have several of these particular type machines that are intentionally keyed the same.
Is this true? If so, wow that’s insecure. Someone could easily sneak in some actually good snacks for reasonable prices! Even better then stealing
It’s not just vending machines. It’s everywhere.
Very long, but well done talk on the topic: https://youtu.be/ZUvGfuLlZus?si=nr4Wa_XMxr8woq-P
Generally good to just watch every video Deviant has ever made, at least his con talks.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s): https://piped.video/ZUvGfuLlZus?si=nr4Wa_XMxr8woq-P
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.
A lot of lifts (scissor, boom arms, etc) use the same key as well.
Added to my watch later, very excited. Thanks for sharing this.
As someone who has actually.owned and operated lots of vending machines of different types over the years, no this isn’t true.
You can buy vending machine locks that are keyed the same if, for example, you wanted all 12 machines that you owned to have locks that could be opened with the same key but the chances of that key opening any random vending machine you may encounter are about as good as your house key working to open your neighbor’s house… Not impossible but not super likely.
In fact, just yesterday I picked up a vending machine key that it took a locksmith over two weeks to make for me with only the lock to copy it from because I’d lost my original for that particular machine.
I have several other vending keys that I tried (mainly because I was confident that one of them actually was the right key) but none of them worked.
Vending machine locks and keys are actually quite complex and varied.
About the case you talked that you lost the original key.
How difficult/expensive to change the lock? Trying to make the key from the lock sounds more expensive but I am clueless.
Cost me $48 and change with tax… So more, yes but not too terrible.
Oh, I just noticed that you actually asked how much to change the lock…
They quoted me $35 to drill out the one I lost the key for and replace it with a new one and the corresponding key… I could have done that myself for significantly less by just ordering a replacement lock and key from Amazon, but…
I wanted a duplicate of the original because I do actually have several of these particular type machines that are intentionally keyed the same.
Oh ok I got it.
Next week on Mr beast. Stocking up vending machines with iPhones.
That would actually be a great video, especially if they weren’t the clear front ones.