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Just as much a deterrent against clandestine break-in as its
sturdier siblings but more economically priced, the Sealock Junior provides
peace of mind for a fraction of the cost of heavy locking bars. Like all
Sealocks, two cuts are required for removal. C-TPAT compliant. |
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INSTALLATION
INSTRUCTIONS |
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First insert the long end of the
cable behind the right-hand door's keeper bar & then behind the
left-hand door's keeper bar. (Figure 1)
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Wrap the cable around the
left-hand door handle and then feed it back toward the right-hand
keeper bar. (Figure 2)
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Insert the tip of the cable into
the opening on the Sealock Junior lockbody and push all the way
through. (Figure 3)
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Pull on the end of the cable until
the cable is cinched tight around the two keeper bars. Pull hard
and make it as tight as you can, leaving as little slack as
possible. (Figure 4)
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Now feed the shorter end of the
cable through the door handle's seal aperture where you'd normally
affix a conventional seal. (Figure 5)
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Snap on the seal to the end of the
cable tip. Record the seal number on all shipping documents.
(Figure 6)
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Figure 1 |
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Figure 2 |
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Figure 3 |
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Figure 4 |
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Figure 5 |
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Figure 6 |
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Completely installed Sealock Junior |
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REMOVAL
INSTRUCTIONS |
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The Sealock Junior requires two cuts for
removal with the use of a cable cutter. |
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First cut should be accomplished
on the shorter cable that threads through the right hand door
latch handle. This cut eliminates the Sealing function. (Figure
7)
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Second cut should be accomplished
on the longer cable that loops around the container's keeper bars.
This cut eliminates the Locking function. (Figure 8)
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Figure 7 |
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Figure 8 |
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Removal completed |
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