This is a fast, relatively simple project that can be completed inside of 3 hours if you move quickly and don't make any major mistakes. Further you can plan around irregularities in your workpieces allowing for greater ability to use scraps.
Tools Required:
Circular Saw
Table saw
Band Saw
Drill
Materials required:
3/4 inch pine
1,1/2" screws
~3 hours
Felt pen
Grease pencil
Wood Glue
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Signing UpStep 1: Cut peices
Cut:
2 9x12" boards
2 3x12" boards
1 tapered 2,1/2x32" board, tapering out to 3,1/2"
5 3x24" boards
16 3,1/8x3 boards
10 3x1" boards
Arrange your materials neatly, affix the 3x12" boards to the sides of one of the 9x12" boards creating a notch in the middle











































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www.instructables.com/id/Wooden-Dial-Combination-lock-with-spring-release-/
What you are describing does not work for several reasons:
->There are rods which guide the lock plate and only allow it to move (relatively) uniformly (you can kind of tilt top and bottom or side to side, but it's not actually enough to engage a single dial- it kind of works for two dials at once but that still leaves you with 26^2 combinations you need to work through)
->The spring tension prevents the type of fine feel that would be required to know that it has 'jumped' into position.
-> Finally the pull tension due to the spring is ~15lbs, easy enough to pull if your just know the code, but becoming quite the weight if your trying to hold the spring in one hand and twist dials randomly with the other.
-> (This one is a negative feature- but prevents guessing the code via your method) the front dials are only tension/pin locked, so if you are trying to twist them against resistance (say because your pulling the pins against them from behind) the back dial will lock in place, and you'll slip the pin in the front, changing the code rather then rotating the dial (I've had to dismantle it a few times due to people doing that because there was then no way to know what the code was)
This is of course my feeling for it, someone who cracks dial based safes for fun would likely not have much issue; but that's also not the sort of person I'm trying to keep out of the fridge.
Also, a video of this in action would be great... ;D
Between the time delay, the noise, and the effort the new system seems to let me at least get a view of who's going into the fridge and make sure they don't take things that they should not.
2- Guesstimating the holes: It is actually pretty precise, you'd be unlikely to guestimate unless you happen to have the level of spacial acuity to be able to judge things within ~1cm blind- people who are that switched on generally have better things to do with there time then steal from the fridge. See the video for how close you can be without it clicking through
That said- non-guesstimating (like say, with a ruler, or any accurate measuring metric) would allow you to get the code quite easily- but I think that 12 seconds might be a little generous for how quickly someone is going to be able to measure and line up 5 separate sliders; of course, once you know the code, it's kind of set to there- see my other reference instructable for the upgraded version that has a variable code.
www.instructables.com/id/Wooden-Dial-Combination-lock-with-spring-release-/
(This link has also been added to the front page of my instructable in case eventually these comments bury the link).
Also I was considering, and while a somewhat esoteric stretch- I believe that this project qualifies as making a password real, and thus qualifies to enter the make it real contest (Ignoring the fact that passwords were first used to make a digital lock). Hopefully the moderators agree with me.
You could try to conceal the gates (cuts, notches, whatever you wish to call them) within the mechanism of the box. I'd also be tempted to cut some false gates (don't go all the way through the wood!) so as to frustrate anybody messing with it.
I really like this design and the way you applied it!