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Trouble finding materials

Having read the FAQ's you are still unfulfilled and seek more enlightenment, so post your general lock picking questions here.
Forum rules
Do not post safe related questions in this sub forum! Post them in This Old Safe

The sub forum you are currently in is for asking Beginner Hobby Lock Picking questions only.

Trouble finding materials

Postby Rageburner022 » 16 Jan 2005 14:56

I wanna make my own tools but living in italy is proving difficult for finding the right stuff... any advice?
You suffered then (now suffer unto me)
Rageburner022
 
Posts: 4
Joined: 16 Jan 2005 14:53
Location: Italy

Postby silent » 16 Jan 2005 16:02

look harder, be more creative
silent
 
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Location: St.louis

Postby Rageburner022 » 16 Jan 2005 16:25

yeah.. youre right... but living in europe just makes getting getting more creative tiring. if only they stayed open on regular intervals... i wish i was back in the states.
You suffered then (now suffer unto me)
Rageburner022
 
Posts: 4
Joined: 16 Jan 2005 14:53
Location: Italy

Postby Rick-the-Pick » 16 Jan 2005 17:02

You only need a lathe,grinder maybe a milling machine aswell.
Buy a scrap car, you then have wiper blades, hydrolic rams from the boot mechanism, door lock mechanism wires, door locks,brake caliper springs,relays! Get old bike wheels and cut the spokes off!
There's material around you everywhere!
Just put some imagination into your mind and you can create a complete range of non destrutive tools! It's easy.....
An open mind can open anything
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Postby Rageburner022 » 17 Jan 2005 11:49

THATS IT!!! scrap cars! i know where to find a ton of them!!!
great idea....

im just gonna hand file all my tools... its gonna take a century but i will make them kickass!
You suffered then (now suffer unto me)
Rageburner022
 
Posts: 4
Joined: 16 Jan 2005 14:53
Location: Italy

Postby Rageburner022 » 17 Jan 2005 11:50

Rick-the-Pick wrote:Just put some imagination into your mind and you can create a complete range of non destrutive tools! It's easy.....


i do have a very good imagination... the problem is that im still too new to the whole picking thing.... thanks for the tips though
You suffered then (now suffer unto me)
Rageburner022
 
Posts: 4
Joined: 16 Jan 2005 14:53
Location: Italy

Postby fugi » 17 Jan 2005 11:57

one of my first picks was this long thin screwdriver, made of tool steel of course, and I shaped it on a grinder. worked very well after I cleaned it up with a file. a file would probably have been better as the grinding wheel heated it up a good bit and I didn't temper it afterwards.
Anyone who becomes master of a city accustomed to freedom and does not destroy it may expect to be destroyed by it; for such a city may always justify rebellion in the name of liberty and its ancient institutions. -Niccolo Machiavelli
fugi
 
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Joined: 30 Dec 2004 15:46
Location: austin, tx

scrounging

Postby raimundo » 17 Jan 2005 15:16

whenever you find some typewriter or computer or other thing with manufactured parts thrown out, look at it carefully as a source of pieces of interest. collect any parts that show promise, particularily any straight pieces of wire that test by hand to be hardened, (spring back rather than set in a bend.) keep a box of this stuff around, so you can look through it when you have a project. for example the matador dimple pin pick should be easy to make, look for thin steel, feeler gauges, clocksprings, the springs from tape measures, etc. and even broken umbrellas have shapes that apply to some locks, as well as some hard wire in some models. remember, all bike spokes are not alike, some are harder, some are softer, and soft ones could be flattened with a hammer, which should work harden them a bit. umbrellas, sweeper bristles etc should all be tested to see if they are soft, hard, brittle, and do not dismiss one source of material just because you found a piece with difficult qualities, often the same source will produce materials of different qualities, dosen't a garage near you throw out windshield wipers cartridges that have been replaced? if you are liveing in a modern country you should be able to access a lot of useful material for free, look on trash heaps for metal of a certain thickness. Matress springs are very hard, but can be annealed and reshaped, uncoiled, hammerd flat, etc. We are very post iron age, so that sort of material is all around, anything that looks like it could have a possibility should be collected and kept in a junk box until inspiration tells you how to use it.
Wake up and smell the Kafka!!!
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