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Litelok: Lightweight Flexible Bike Lock, Last Chance on Kickstarter

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Litelok_lightweight-flexible_bicycle-lock_Boa-Green_night-bike-locked

We’ve been keeping an eye out for alternate bike locks for years, ever since stuffing heavy u-locks down our waistbands or having their plastic frame mounts rattle and fail. Several weeks ago we spotted a different solution in what looks like a more flexible lock from upstart Litelok that makes use of a series of layers of lightweight materials, which combine together with an easy to use locking mechanism to offer pretty solid security (and resistance to attack) at a fraction of the weight we are used to.

Plus, that day-glo green is pretty cool too. Click past the break quickly as their Kickstarter only has a couple of days to go, and get some more details on the Litelok and its options…

Litelok-lightweight-flexible-bicycle-lock_Herringbone-Tweed_detail

The key to the this new lock being brought to reality through Kickstarter is a small flexible strap that joins will a solid clasp to make it easy to use locking to all types of frames and fixed objects. The material of the multi-layer strap is they key; called Boaflexcore, each layer was optimized for security against typical thieves’ tools and adding them together yields a very secure lock that remains light and flexible.

Combine the strap with an almost indestructible hardened steel latch housing, and you get a secure and easy to use lock, which clicks shut to lock without key. The Boaflexcore is apparently strong enough to withstand sustained attack from your typical thieving tools-of-the-trade, like cable and bolt cutters, hacksaws, car jacks, hammers, and lightweight torches. Litelok even has some fun attack GIFs and videos over on their Kickstarter page showing how long the lock held up in their testing.

Litelok-lightweight-flexible-bicycle-lock_carried-on-bike Litelok-lightweight-flexible-bicycle-lock_Boa-Green_detail

The lock is 736mm/29″ long from clasp to clasp. This becomes the effective circumference when it is looped around an object, meaning a 234mm diameter, or just over 9″.  That makes it a little bigger inside than most u-locks we’ve used, but the benefit comes mostly in being able to bend around trees, fences, and other unusual objects (like bike frames and wheels.)

The Litelok is available on Kickstarter in the white and black Herringbone and Boa Green above, plus a shiny all-black option. Each one will come with a pair of soft straps to mount it to the frame for transport, either looped and locked as above, or straight extending along the toptube for example. One lock weighs just under 1kg/2.2lbs, making it almost half the weight of our standard 22cm/9″ long u-lock and about 1/5 of our chain lock which is about 30% longer (and presumably more secure.)

Litelok-lightweight-flexible-bicycle-lock_two-locks_double-security Litelok-lightweight-flexible-bicycle-lock_two-locks_double-length

An option named Twin Litelok lets you double the fun, by using one lock for each wheel, using two next to each other to double the time to defeat it, or linked together daisy-chain-style to reach and lock around bigger objects. Another nice thing about the Twin Liteloks is that they are keyed the same with matching locksets. And since each lock comes with 2 keys (2 keys for a single lock, 4 for the double), it would be convenient for two people to share locks that either one can open.

Pricing on the Kickstarter is £80 for one, £155 for the twinsies. Delivery will be in August 2015. We got in touch with the designer Neil Barron, an industrial designer in London with 25+ years of aerospace experience, and he was pleased with how things have gone. The funding campaign was better supported than expected, which means this will definitely be making it off the drawing board into production. He went in with a £20,000 goal and the project now has over 1,600 backers and £180,000 in seed money to really get this off the ground and up and running. How distribution will happen after the Kickstarter backers receive the first locks this summer is up in the air, but Neil promised to keep us in the loop, and we’ll be curious to hear more from him.

Now there are only 2 days to get in on their Kickstarter campaign, so jump on it now. The project will be funded on Thursday, Apr 23 2015 23:00 Europe time, 5pm on the east coast in the US.

LiteLok.com

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RicoL
RicoL
8 years ago

What? No comments? This looks like a great idea. OTOH, they never showed it resisting a bump key. I would happily get one of these when they come out. The campaign has already raised 9x the goal. They should be ready to pack an ship in a week with that kind of backing.

Of course, I would like to see that thing AFTER they quit chewing on it with the bolt cutter. How much fiber integrity is left then? Or is it just so tough that the bad guys walk away from boredom?

Mindless
Mindless
8 years ago

I do not believe that they had that much trouble cutting it with a cordless grinder. That thing make short work of hardened steel.

Jan
Jan
8 years ago

Looks nice. I just hope open flame or easy-to-get chemicals would not do any harm to it…I mean it’s not a one of the “typical thieving tools-of-the-trade”, but it easily could be…just for example add few drops of diesel or whatever, set it on fire walk away to get a cup of coffee and then come back few minutes later to pick it up and ride away in style (with some propper organic barista-made coffee in hand of course). I know that burning bicycle on the street is not what you see every day, but I don’t think many people walking by would actually do anything about it…considering the flames would not be three feet high….just saying. Having a non-standard lock able to withstand standard attacks, does not necessarily mean it’s not indestructible.

RicoL
RicoL
8 years ago

I never thought of that: setting it on fire. Considering that no one barks about a hacksaw, die grinder or THREE FOOT bolt cutter on a parked bike, what’s a little fire?

I was kind of hoping for an exploding die pack with fast acting poison that only affects the thief. Maybe in the next round of Kickstarter ideas.

BTW, my son had a very successful KS campaign of his own a couple years ago. As it happened, he got the money in the calendar year BEFORE the product shipped and ended up paying taxes on the startup money before he had any income from the product.

Maniac
Maniac
8 years ago

I’m sorry to say that their “in house” testing amounts to mere drama than actual testing. There’s no test to failure, and I think everyone knows that everything can fail, just depend on how hard you try.

#1 The bolt-cutter testing looks rather like they are trying to massage the link than trying to cut it. If you really want to cut something, you wouldn’t be opening and closing the cutter like mad. You would, instead, close it tight and step on the thing with your entire body weight.

#2 The hacksaw… is he trying the scratch the link or is he trying to saw the link? Put your back into it and both hand on the saw if you really want to saw through it. Then again, I guess they don’t want to saw through it.

#3 Are they kidding me??? What kind of test is this waving the flame around like that, are they trying to make lightly cooked sushi or trying to break a lock? When they finally put the flame head on, they never tried to pull it apart with some kind of metal bar while it is glowing red hot. When they do pull on it, clearly everyone can see it is now cold again. So what’s the freaking point of this test?

#4 What are they cutting? a carbon steel block next to the lock? Angle grinder will eat through it like a slightly hard butter if you have a proper blade for the hardened material. Perhaps they know that too, that’s why you are cutting it in the dark, so that no one can see that they are just fidgeting around and not really cutting the lock. Where’s that camera that they attached to the bolt cutter and hacksaw??

Crazy Rider
8 years ago

I really liked the double strap concept and the twin key system which enable sharing of the lock.

Stephane
Stephane
7 years ago

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=he5EsREkZe4

Real test
result ? monumental fail.

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