I’m looking at getting smart locks for my front and back door, but don’t know what to look for. Hopefully something with a keypad, so I can give friends a code to get in, and a RFID badge, so I can easily get in and out. Any suggestions are welcome!

  • Jenterrobahne@dormi.zone
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    1 year ago

    I have Schlage Z-Wave locks. No RFID, but I would use a keycode anyways so there’s nothing physical to lose.

  • Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I will also throw my hat in the ring for the Schlages. I went with a Sense for HomeKit comparability.

    They’re a little loud but they’re bullet proof and very reliable. I’ve had one for many years and it’s always worked. I change the batteries about every 6 months.

  • Lenggo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Just incase you run across it, avoid Ultraloq. It seemed like a good deal with wifi, fingerprint read and keypad but after living with it I’m pretty frustrated. The reader stopped working after a couple months and the deadbolt motor isn’t strong enough to open if there is any friction with the door jamb. Apparently these problems aren’t unique to me so anything else posted here is a better choice.

  • JC1@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I have 3.

    1 yale assure. It’s not loud, doesn’t seem to want to die when locking, good looking and no key hole. I quite like it. They scream quality Imo. The only drawback that I see is that I have no way of getting a zigbee module.

    2 Weiser smartcode. One ZWave and one zigbee. They are loud as fuck, they want to die each time you lock or unlock them. At some point I think they will explode. They are cheap because every SIP that sells home security suite give them, so you can find them on the cheap on marketplace.

    I recommend yale assure. Jokes aside, the Weiser are fine if you can get them cheap. They will probably last, they’re just annoying.

    I don’t want anything wifi and don’t want anymore ZWave (since I have almost no devices, so my network sucks). I tend to prefer digital keypads since you can just wipe your fingerprints. On physical buttons, the buttons will start to wear. Anyway I solved that by taping a NFC tag by each door that unlock their corresponding door, so I almost never touch the keypad. I might investigate the next yale assure 2 when they will release their matter module.

  • stuntman782@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The wyze lock is nice. You just replace the inside of the door’s lock. Their whole smart home ecosystem works well together

  • Another Person @lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’ve purposely stayed away from electronic locks as I don’t see any added security from them and they may even harm security.

    • Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Strong disagree on this one.

      A) unique keypad keys for guests that can be revoked B) capable of automation and can auto-lock with routines or when left unlocked for too long C) the ability to see if you forgot to lock the door, and the ability to rectify that D) notification for picking unlocks, kick ins, etc.

    • Next_Position_Please@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I disagree. My locks have a keypad, so I can give out codes to friends & family that I can control and revoke. If I gave them a key, they could copy it, lose it, etc.

      When I set my alarm for the evening, the script will shut the garage doors if they are open, and lock all the locks if they aren’t already.

      I guess it could be said they can be hacked. But as someone mentioned above, regular locks can be picked. Back up your locks with a nice security system.