Toolwipelocker V300 May 2026

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The V300 operates without a host PC. It features a built-in 10-inch touchscreen LCD running a proprietary real-time OS. Its front panel includes:

The "Locker" mode is essential for imaging suspects’ computers without spoliation. The V300 fits in a go-bag and requires no external power source.

The device allows operators to choose the level of destruction:

Stop sharing dirty tools. Start sharing clean ones.

The ToolWipeLocker V300 automatically wipes, sanitizes, and locks away tools after every use. No more lost tools. No more cross-contamination. Just swipe your badge, insert the tool, and let the V300 do the rest.

✔️ 10-second wipe cycle
✔️ Full access history
✔️ UV sanitization ready
✔️ Heavy-duty steel casing

ToolWipeLocker V300 – Hygiene meets accountability.


The ToolWipeLocker V300 has quickly become a staple in high-precision workshops and industrial settings. This latest iteration of the ToolWipeLocker series represents a significant leap forward in automated sanitation and organized storage. By integrating advanced UV-C sterilization with a heavy-duty physical locking mechanism, the V300 ensures that your specialized tools are not only safe from theft but also free from microscopic contaminants.

The core of the V300's appeal lies in its dual-purpose design. Traditional tool chests provide security but do nothing to maintain the cleanliness required in medical, laboratory, or high-tech manufacturing environments. The V300 addresses this gap by featuring a 360-degree sterilization cycle that activates the moment the cabinet is locked. Within minutes, the internal environment is purged of 99.9% of bacteria and viruses, making it an essential asset for teams that share equipment across multiple shifts.

Security has also seen a major overhaul in the V300 version. The unit features a biometric fingerprint scanner backed up by an encrypted RFID card reader. This allows managers to track exactly who accessed which tools and at what time. The "Smart-Shelf" technology uses weight sensors to detect when an item is removed or returned, sending real-time alerts to a mobile app or desktop dashboard if a tool goes missing.

Durability is another hallmark of the V300. Constructed from aircraft-grade reinforced steel with a chemical-resistant powder coating, it is built to withstand the harshest shop floors. The casters are designed for heavy loads, allowing for easy mobility even when the unit is fully stocked with power tools and precision instruments. The modular interior allows users to customize drawer heights and dividers, ensuring that everything from small calipers to large torque wrenches has a dedicated, secure spot.

In an era where efficiency and hygiene are paramount, the ToolWipeLocker V300 stands out as a comprehensive solution. It eliminates the need for manual tool cleaning while providing the highest level of physical security. For businesses looking to modernize their workflow and protect their investment in high-end tools, the V300 is an unbeatable upgrade that pays for itself through reduced loss and improved workplace safety. toolwipelocker v300

Using the ToolWipeLocker V300 is designed to be intuitive yet forensically sound. Here is a typical workflow for a data center manager:

Step 1: Preparation Power on the V300 and calibrate the pressure gauge (for physical mode). Connect the barcode scanner to scan the asset tag of the first drive.

Step 2: Drive Insertion Insert the drive into the appropriate bay. For 3.5-inch HDDs, use the front-loading sled. For M.2 drives, open the top clamshell cover.

Step 3: Mode Selection On the touchscreen, select "Destruction Profile." The V300 offers pre-set profiles (e.g., "DoD 5220.22-M," "NIST Purge," "NSA/CSS 9-12"). Custom parameters are also available.

Step 4: Execution Press the green "Execute" button. The device will:

Step 5: Post-Processing If using physical mode, the V300 automatically ejects the shredded remains into a sealed collection bin. The operator attaches the destruction certificate to the asset tracking system.

The rain in Sector 7 didn't wash things clean; it just made the grime slicker. Elias wiped his greasy hands on a rag that had seen better decades, staring at the monolithic slab of corroded steel on his workbench.

It was a Toolwipelocker v300.

In the golden age of cyber-industrialism, the v300 wasn't just a tool. It was the skeleton key of the mega-factories. It could lock down a nuclear turbine in seconds or wipe a corrupt AI core with a single magnetic pulse. Now, they were illegal. The Corporations feared what a skilled mechanic could do with a device that could bypass any digital lock. They had switched to biometrics, to DNA-coded seals. The Toolwipelocker was a relic of a time when metal talked to metal, not blood.

"Where did you dig this up, old man?" whispered a voice from the doorway.

Elias didn't look up. He knew the click of Rix’s boots on the concrete floor. Rix was young, desperate, and owed money to the wrong people. He was the reason Elias was currently performing surgery on a ghost.

"Doesn't matter," Elias grunted, picking up a micro-torque driver. "What matters is if the core is intact. If the magnetic damping coil is fried, this is just a paperweight." 👉 Request a demo 👉 Download spec sheet

"It works," Rix said, leaning over the bench, eyes wide. "I saw the light blink when I touched the power node. It hums, Elias. Like it’s alive."

Elias carefully pried open the casing of the v300. Inside, it was a chaotic beautiful mess of analog circuitry and crystalline logic boards. It was built to survive an electromagnetic pulse. It was built to survive the end of the world.

"The job," Elias said, his voice dropping. "The one you can't do. Tell me again."

Rix swallowed hard. "The Agricorp Silo. Sector 9. They’ve got the grain locked down. The security codes rotate every twelve seconds. My crew... we tried to hack it. Lost two men to the auto-turrets. We need the v300. We need the Wipe function."

Elias paused. The Toolwipelocker had three settings. Lock, Unlock, and Wipe. The Lock function created impenetrable magnetic seals. The Unlock function bypassed electronic logic. But the Wipe... the Wipe was different. It didn't just open doors. It erased the concept of the door. It reset the local machinery to a factory-default state, blind to friend or foe.

"You want to wipe a silo?" Elias asked, incredulous. "You wipe the security, sure. But you also wipe the environmental controls. The pressure valves. You'll drop the whole building on your heads."

"Not if we're fast," Rix pleaded. "Elias, my sister is on the hook for a debt I can't pay. We need that grain to trade. Please."

Elias looked at the device. He had sworn off the heavy stuff years ago. Fixing toasters and vintage cars was safer. But he saw the desperation in Rix’s eyes, and he felt the hum of the v300 in his hands. It felt like holding a weapon, but also like holding a cure.

"I do the operating," Elias said finally. "You just watch my back."


They moved through the under-city at night. The Toolwipelocker v300 was heavy in Elias’s coat pocket, weighing down his left side. It felt colder than the night air.

The Agricorp Silo rose out of the smog like a tombstone. It was surrounded by a chain-link fence buzzing with high-voltage lethality.

"Watch," Elias whispered.

He pulled the v300 from his pocket. It was a blocky device, roughly the size of a brick, with a heavy rubberized grip and a dial on the side. He turned the dial to the green icon: UNLOCK.

He pressed the emitter node against the control box of the electric fence.

VWOOM.

The sound was low, felt more in the teeth than heard by the ears. The vibration traveled up Elias’s arm. Instantly, the hum of the fence died. The lights on the control box flickered and turned green.

"Magic," Rix breathed.

"Physics," Elias corrected. "It’s tricking the box into thinking the power is still on, but channeling the current into the ground. Move."

They slipped inside. The inner door was the real challenge. A massive circular vault door, reinforced titanium, guarded by a sentry AI that learned from every intrusion attempt.

"We can't hack the AI," Rix hissed. "It’s adaptive."

"We don't hack it," Elias said, stepping up to the console. "We make it forget."

He looked at the v300. This was the dangerous part. He switched the dial to the red icon: WIPE.

This was the function that gave the Toolwipelocker its infamous name. It didn't just unlock the door;