http://blog.ssokolow.com/archives/2017/04/08/home-made-tamper-evident-security-seals-for-kids-and-adults-alike/

Home-made tamper-evident security seals for kids and adults alike

Posted on 
[2017-04-08](http://blog.ssokolow.com/archives/2017/04/08/home-made-tamper-evident-security-seals-for-kids-and-adults-alike/)
 by [Stephan Sokolow](http://blog.ssokolow.com/archives/author/ssokolow/)

Suppose you need to keep siblings, roommates, children, or even friends with 
wandering hands out of something, but you can’t use a lock. Maybe you’re 
worried they’ll find the key, maybe you need something that has no metallic 
parts, or maybe you’re a kid and your parents are worried you will lose the key.

This is the kind of thing numbered security seals are good for… but they’re 
expensive. (The cheapest I’ve found are roughly 50¢ each in packs of 100 or 
more)

…so I decided to do a little experimentation and came up with a 
cheap-but-reliable solution for homemade tamper seals that’s so simple and safe 
that even children can do it.

Instructions

Step 1: Making the seals

The most important thing about a security seal is that it’s unique, so it can’t 
be replaced, and either can’t be reclosed after being opened or you’ll notice 
if it is.

To satisfy these requirements with paper, we need to print or write something 
on the paper which other people can’t reproduce and which will look wrong if 
someone cuts and re-glues the seal.

If you’ve got a printer, you could print out a random image from the Internet, 
delete the file and empty your browser history, then cut strips from it to use 
as seals, but Inkjet ink tends to cost a fortune and most people don’t have 
laser printers.

What I recommend is this: Cut strips from a piece of paper, then sign and 
doodle all over both sides of them so any cuts or complete replacement will be 
obvious. (You do it on both sides, so that you can easily see if someone mends 
a cut by glueing another piece of paper to the inside of the loop.)

Don’t forget to use your scissors to make the ends of the strip round, rather 
than square, so it’s harder for someone to attempt to pick at the joint if they 
want to try to peel it apart.

Step 2: Applying the seals

To apply the seal, you just need to pass it through or around whatever you want 
to seal (eg. cabinet handles) and then glue it into a loop. (a tight loop, if 
you’re securing knob-shaped cabinet handles, so it can’t be lifted off without 
breaking it.)

If you want to seal a box, try gluing several strips together into a shape 
similar to the ribbon on a Christmas present.

It’s the details which make it tamper-evident:

- Get a bottle of Polyvinyl Acetate glue (A.K.A. white glue, school glue, PVA).
- Apply a enough glue to one end of the strip that, when squeezed, it won’t 
leave unglued corners.
- Close the loop and squeeze the ends together for at least five seconds, as 
hard as you can.
- Wait at least 5 minutes, but ideally 10 minutes.

Step 3: Making the seals tougher

Supposing you’re trying to keep really clever people from sneaking access, 
there are two more tricks you should get an adult to do:

- Paint the glued part with clear nail polish to waterproof it, so nobody can 
try to invisibly open the seal by steaming the glue. (This also makes it harder 
to try to pick apart.)
- Cut some diagonal stripes into the glued spot using a utility knife to 
absolutely guarantee that any attempt to peel apart the glue will result in 
obvious tearing.

The “Why”

I was very specific in my instructions, because I actually did a lot of 
testing. If you want to repeat my tests yourself, here’s what I did:

Goals

- A successful seal must not have the glue fail when pulling on both ends of 
the glued joint.
- A successful seal must show obvious damage when someone tries to pick and 
peel at the glued joint.
- A successful seal must have the paper visibly fail before the glue if a 
solvent is applied to the glued joint.

Methodology

- Cut a bunch of paper strips, approximately 3″ long.
- Glue pairs of strips into longer strips, using various test glues.
- On each glued strip, write the time the process was finished, so drying time 
can be considered.
- For each drying time tested, grip the ends of a test strip and pull evenly 
outward as with a [Christmas 
cracker](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_cracker).
The test is a success if the paper breaks outside the glued patch. (If it fails 
far enough from the join, repeat until there’s nothing left to grip)
- For each drying time tested, attempt to peel apart the two strips of paper.
The test is a success if the paper is visibly damaged in a manner that wouldn’t 
be hidden by glueing the joint back together.
- Repeat each test at least once, to account for variations in the process.
- Prepare another set of test strips and allow the glued spot to soak in a drop 
of mineral or vegetable oil for 30 minutes. Repeat the tests.
The glue passes if it wasn’t weakened by the oil. (In my tests, the breakage 
still consistently occurred in the dry portions of the paper, indicating that 
the oil had not weakened it significantly.)
- Prepare another set of test strips and paint the glued patch thoroughly with 
clear nail polish. Repeat the tests.
The glue passes if the solvent in the nail polish didn’t weaken it. (I have 
already confirmed in previous experiments that nail polish will waterproof 
paper without weakening it and, in these tests, the breakage still consistently 
occurred in the un-painted portions of the paper.)

Results

I performed these tests with the following dollar-store adhesives:

Double-sided tapeI tested two different kinds of foamless double-sided tape. 
Both were too weak to be suitable, losing their grip on the paper during the 
pull test with barely any visible effect.Roll-on glue tapeThis contact adhesive 
passed the pull test, but was not tamper-evident in the face of picking and 
peeling at the joint and was so thoroughly weakened by the oil test that it was 
trivial to pull open without harming the paper.Non-frosted Scotch/SellotapeFrom 
personal experience, I know that the frosted variety is meant to be possible to 
peel off without harm if you’re careful. I tested the un-frosted kind and, 
while it just barely passed the pull test, it was too easy to peel off without 
evidence. Also, it was severely weakened by exposure to oil and I suspect this 
to be a trait common to all readily available contact adhesives.Roll-on glue 
tape, plus Scotch/SellotapeDidn’t perform significantly better Scotch/Sellotape 
on its own.Glue stickPassed the dry and oil tests, but whether it passed the 
peel test depended very heavily on exactly how I applied it, so I can’t 
recommend it. It also got severely degraded by the solvent in the clear nail 
polish.White/School/Elmer’s Glue (PVA/Polyvinyl Acetate)I was surprised how 
well this performed… though I probably shouldn’t have been, given that it’s 
used as a bookbinding glue. PVA dries quickly enough that, after 5 minutes, the 
still-damp paper next to the joint breaks under test and, after 10 minutes, the 
paper is back to normal. It is so resistant to peeling that the paper tends to 
tear, and neither the oil nor the nail polish solvent had a measurable effect 
on the joint’s strength.

I did, however, notice that peeling at a corner produced damage that was easier 
to overlook… thus my recommendation to round off the ends of the strip before 
gluing.

I would have moved on to testing other avenues, such as hot glue, super glue, 
contact cement, and so on, but I don’t need to test them to know that, at best, 
they’d match the performance of white glue for this application. (They’re 
harder to work with, more expensive, no faster to dry, and PVA already produces 
a bond stronger than and just as water-resistant as the paper around it.)

(I did, however, test super glue on some scraps of projector transparencies 
meant for black-and-white photocopiers. It passed the pull test but was trivial 
to peel apart without leaving evidence of tampering.)

UPDATE 2018-08-15: After I realized how effective lighter fluid is for safely 
getting tape and other adhesives off books and boxes without damaging them, I 
ran another round of tests.

Lighter fluid does not appear to significantly weaken white glue. However, 
since my initial tests, I’ve switched to a new bottle of glue and it seems that 
the resistance of Polyvinyl Acetate (PVA) glues to being peeled off will vary. 
(I’m not sure whether it varies between batches or just between brands.)

As such, since the quality of your white glue cannot be guaranteed, I now 
strongly recommend the “making the seals tougher” steps be always used (a 
coating of clear nail polish to seal the seam and some cuts to improve the 
chances of tearing when trying to peel it apart), with the use of 
chevron-shaped (< and >) cuts to ensure there’s no angle one can try to peel at 
which will be completely parallel to every cut.

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