(Part 2) Best hardware hasps according to redditors

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We found 40 Reddit comments discussing the best hardware hasps. We ranked the 29 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top Reddit comments about Hardware Hasps:

u/SlickMcFav0rit3 · 12 pointsr/Advice

In support of this comment, let me say this:


You adopted this animal. You agreed to take care of it and protect it and give it a good home. YOU took on that responsibility. These fuckers are now threatening this animal that. Even if you are not the person who takes charge normally, you have to pretend to be for this creature that is in your protection.


  1. If your door locks...LOCK IT

  2. If your door doesn't lock, buy a lock and bolt it on:
    https://www.amazon.com/National-Hardware-N102-855-Swivel-Staple/dp/B000BQO4YQ
u/ActionScene · 3 pointsr/HomeImprovement

This will work:
http://www.amazon.com/Master-Lock-732DPF-Degree-4-inch/dp/B000I1QF00

Thru-bolt it where possible. Back up the inside nuts with a steel plate made from flat bar stock.

u/[deleted] · 3 pointsr/relationships

A trunk could be a very classy addition!

But also, you could introduce locks to your dresser. A small latch, like this one, would be subtle. Though, if you go that way, you will want to find a similar design but with all the screws accessible only from the interior of the drawer. (That model exposes two of the screws, so it does nothing against a person with a screwdriver.)

If you know anyone handy with home improvement who can help you, you may consider going with a desk lock on each of your drawers. Also subtle. Locks would be a tiny investment compared to the goods you're losing to your sister.

u/becausenooneeverhas · 2 pointsr/chickens

Awesome. Congratulations on your new friends. My coops have four walls with a dirt floor and an vented roof. We dig corrugated metal into the ground for the bottom third of the walls (or the whole coop can be wood framed and the metal can be the walls and roof. Shipping pallets suspended by fencing wire for the perches. 3 square foot per bird, 1 nest per 3-4 birds. Straw/hay around the coop and in nesting boxes. We open the door in the morning and they run outside all day and go to bed by themselves at night. We do a head count, make sure no predators are in the coop, and lock the door with a pegboard display hook through a swivel hasp. A cinder block in front of the door works too, especially since that will hold it open during the day.

We use the deep litter method.

Where there are no trees we drive t posts in random places to deter hawks swooping down.

Chickens are fine with cold so long as you block the wind. They may need vasoline on their combs to prevent wind burn and frostbite.

They need oyster shell put out where they can get it if they want it. A good feed. Free ranging is fun for them. Treats are good scraps from the kitchen (watermelon, pumpkins, tomatoes, etc are my bird's favs).

u/zebtacular · 1 pointr/whatisthisthing

I am thinking that if it is that, it would be the hasp of one.

Similar to one like this: Master Lock Lockout Tagout Hasp, Vinyl Coated Steel Hasp, 1-1/2 in Jaw Clearance, 421 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000H5S1SG/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_P4oUDb5Q84JDS

u/nuxxor · 1 pointr/DIY

Just put a HASP on each door on the side. Pre-drill the holes with a 1/8 bit its very thin steel, just do in enough to get through the steel. Then use a 1/2" sell tapping screw into the hole. There isn't anything your going to hurt in the door edge or body.

http://www.phenixresearch.com/images/SCI_FR-LOCK_WL.jpg

http://www.amazon.com/Stanley-Hardware-75-5235-Locking-Hasp/dp/B000ZNORL0/ref=sr_1_12?ie=UTF8&qid=1377636445&sr=8-12&keywords=hasp

u/ModernenMedizen · 1 pointr/NoStupidQuestions

You could probably do something similar to what fire gates (or whatever they're called) do.

I'll draw something really quick, but basically, it's a bar that is locked on either side. When you unlock either side, you can slide the bar and thus unlock the gate from either side.

Edit: Alternatively, if your gate is short enough, you could put a latch on top of the gate that you can reach on either side.

Edit 2: Sketch of a top of gate latch. Probably the best way to do this if you can reach the top of the gate I've found out that this is called a "single hinge hasp." An example