BPA) chemicals that are known to cause cancer, birth defects, or other reproductive harm. The Prop 65 chemical list contains both naturally-occurring (i.e. The Prop 65 warning is a label that the state of California legally requires a company put on a product if it contains certain toxic chemicals over a specified amount. The most common reason luggage contains a Prop 65 label is because they contain phthalates and/or bisphenols (BPA/BPS). Top Pick for Kids’ Luggage: Bixbee Why Does Luggage Have a Prop 65 Warning? Top Picks for Duffle Bags & Weekenders: Lo & Sons (organic cotton option) and Terra Thread Like this post? Please share it! We have plenty more just like it and would love it if you decided to hang around and sign up to get emailed notifications of when we post.Top Pick for Hardside Wheeled Suitcases: Monos Want to sponsor a post, write something for Your Mileage May Vary or put ads on our site? Click here for more info. Want to comment on this post? Great! Read this first to help ensure it gets approved. So the goal, instead of keeping them out, is to make it difficult and time-consuming enough wherein a would-be thief would give up on your luggage in favor of someone else’s that might be more easy to open. The bottom line is, no luggage lock is foolproof – if someone REALLY wants to get into your bag, (s)he will. Unfortunately, all that plastic, which can only be used once, is environmentally unfriendly and winds up in landfills. You also see plastic wrapped luggage more and more often – that also works by making a would-be thief have to take extra time to cut through several layers of plastic before they can get into your bag. But it’ll take the thieves longer and they want to avoid that – their goal is to be finished ASAP. Unfortunately, those straps aren’t foolproof – they can be cut and possibly wiggled enough to come loose. That way even if they bust through the zipper to open the bag, they still can’t get the bag open because the straps will keep it closed. Again, make sure they can be closed with a sturdy lock. If you don’t want to go that route, you may want to consider a few luggage straps that you can wrap about your bag. Some brands even allow combination or key locks to attach (and once you’re in your room, don’t use those flimsy TSA approved locks. Instead, you may want to use a hard-sided suitcase (because we didn’t even go into someone simply knifing a soft-sided suitcase to get into it) that closes with clasps instead of a zipper. Some people have suggested using a higher-end suitcase that uses metal zippers instead of plastic, but unfortunately, it just takes a few more seconds of harder work to break those the exact same same was they can do with plastic zippers. So yeah…locking a zippered suitcase is not even close to being secure. And you’d not know what happened until you opened it, because the bag looks absolutely OK and untampered when they’re done. Yup, all it takes is a ballpoint pen and a few seconds for someone to take stuff out of your suitcase…or to put who-knows-what into it, for that matter. We hate to tell them (and you), but it’s even easier to break into a zippered suitcase with a lock than it is to break into a hotel safe. Several people who read it said they leave their valuables in their suitcases because they keep them locked with TSA compliant locks, so people can’t get in and take their stuff. We posted a while back how easy it is for thieves to break into electronic hotel safes.
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