KeyMe Locksmiths runs a self-service key-duplication kiosk inside the 7-Eleven on Meade Avenue in Normal Heights, San Diego, providing automated key copying without an appointment or a wait for a technician. The machine-learning cutting system reads the original key's profile and compensates for wear patterns, producing copies calibrated to the lock's factory specifications rather than duplicating the degradation that accumulates on a well-used blank. Vehicle key duplication covers more than 38,000 make-model-year combinations for both traditional cut keys and push-button proximity fobs — the same ignition types serviced at auto shops on Adams Avenue, where Smitty's Service handles the mechanical diagnostics that sometimes follow a key-related electrical fault. Residential, commercial, mailbox, and padlock keys cut on the spot, with over 100 decorative key-blank designs available for standard house keys. Key fobs and building-access cards can also be cloned at the kiosk, a feature that apartment tenants and condo owners in the 92116 ZIP code use when property managers limit the number of complimentary copies. The Meade Avenue location sits one block south of Adams Avenue near the intersection with 30th Street, inside the commercial pocket where Normal Heights meets the northern edge of University Heights. A digital key-storage vault backs up scanned profiles to the cloud, which means a replacement can be cut at any KeyMe kiosk nationwide — a contingency useful during cross-county relocations coordinated through outfits such as Spectrum Moving And Storage on the same Normal Heights corridor. KeyMe also dispatches mobile locksmiths for emergency lockouts, lock repair, smart-lock installation, and deadbolt replacement, connecting callers with a technician who carries a full re-keying kit to the property.