The Dee Why Locksmith Services offered to Dee Why are extensive due to the area being an area with a high volume of Unit blocks will benefit from Deadlocks, Window locks and especially garage door Bolts.
Installation of Restricted Key systems to foyer doors is another Dee Why Locksmith Service which Manly Locksmiths provides giving excellent key control due to every key being numbered and recorded and can only be cut by Manly Locksmiths with Authorisation from the restricted system authorizes.
Manly locksmiths offer the following systems Abloy, Bilock, Kaba, MLAA LSGP1 and more.
Manly locksmiths can provide the following Dee Why Locksmith Services to Dee Why and its surrounding suburbs of Collaroy, Collaroy Beach, Collaroy Plateau, Cromer, Cromer Heights, Curl Curl, Dee Why Beach, Elanora Heights, Long Reef, Narrabeen, Narrabeen Peninsula, Narraweena, North Curl Curl, North Narrabeen, Wheeler Heights and Wingala:
- 24/7 Emergency Lockout Service
- Domestic and Commercial Locksmith Services
- Locks Re-keyed, Repaired and Replaced
- Deadlocks and Window locks Installed to Insurance Standards
- Restricted & Master key systems designed and installed
- Electronic Strikes and Maglocks Installed
- Safes Supplied and Installed
Dee Why is a suburb of northern Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Dee Why is located 18 kilometres north-east of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of Warringah Council and is part of the Northern Beaches region. Dee Why is surrounded by the suburbs of Collaroy, North Curl Curl, Brookvale, Narraweena and Cromer.
The origin of the name of neighbouring Long Reef is obvious, but the reasons for Dee Why's name remain unclear. The earliest reference to it is a pencil note in surveyor James Meehan's field book, "Wednesday, 27th Sept, 1815 Dy Beach - Marked a Honey Suckle Tree near the Beach".What it meant to him was not recorded, although various claims have been put forward, including:
- The letters DY were simply a marker that Meehan used to mark many other places on his map.
- The name came from the local Aboriginal language that Meehan used to name many of the locations that he surveyed.
From 1840 the name was recorded as one word, but was split in two during the 1950s. The term 'Dee Why' was also used to name 'Dee Why Heights' or Highlands, known as Narraweena since 1951, and 'Dee Why West', the name of which was changed to Cromer in 1969.