Tool recommendations, information on your favorite automatic and/or mechanical lockpicking devices for those with less skills, or looking to make their own.
by ewiener » 11 Apr 2008 16:46
I just obtained a set of seven "tryout" keys for Kwikset locks. I tried them out on three different kwikset locks... and not one opened? What's up? Do the keys just not work, or am I missing something.
The keys are marked "KW1"
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by freakparade3 » 11 Apr 2008 17:09
They work for only one typr of kwikset lock. Whay type are you trying to open?
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by ewiener » 11 Apr 2008 17:20
I'm not really sure. I'm really inexperienced. How do I tell what kind of lock I'm looking at, beyond the "Kwikset" label on the front? For that matter, I don't know that much about they keys... kinda got them as a hand-me-down...
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by MacGyver101 » 11 Apr 2008 17:37
ewiener wrote:I just obtained a set of seven "tryout" keys for Kwikset locks...
Hrm. Just a hunch...
The keying for most Kwikset locks ( e.g., KW1 and KW5) encompasses seven depths. Does each of your seven "tryout" keys have all six cuts at the same depth? If so, I think you may have a "depth and spacing" set instead.
Depth keys are used for making new keys by code when you don't have access to a machine that will cut to code... they won't be able to jiggle a lock open unless there's something terribly wrong with the lock. (You can modify one of the depth keys into a bumpkey, but that's another conversation.)
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by ewiener » 11 Apr 2008 18:53
so how do I turn my depth key into a bump key? Are there videos online or something?
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by Safety0ff » 11 Apr 2008 21:20
This is pretty fishy, mind posting a picture of the lock with a paper next to it that says "ewiener." Is the lock in use? Why do you want to get in so bad? Why choose bump/tryout keys over lockpicks if you're in it for the challenge?
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by bumber » 12 Apr 2008 15:12
MacGyver101 wrote:The keying for most Kwikset locks (e.g., KW1 and KW5) encompasses seven depths. Does each of your seven "tryout" keys have all six cuts at the same depth? If so, I think you may have a "depth and spacing" set instead.
Well at least answer this question if nothing else, because if they look like normal keys they might be tryout keys...
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by ewiener » 14 Apr 2008 11:51
Yeah, I'm pretty sure I have try-out keys, and I've figured out they're not good for opening locks on their own... and I don't have the tools to make them more useful. Oh well.
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by vrocco » 14 Apr 2008 12:38
I have never heard of a kwikset tryout set. Though I gues it's theoretically possible, it's not practical.
7 depths and 5 spaces. How do you find the total number of combinations? Is it 7 to the 5th power or 5 to the 7th power? (I'm not a math guy) Maybe Squeltchtone or one of you other smart guys can help me out.
If my thinking is correct, it is at least 16,000 possible combinations and that's a huge keychain of tryouts.
My math may be totally of base, but my point is that I don't think it's feasible to make a tryout set.
What you bought may be factory precuts, used for rekeying a lock.
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by keysman » 14 Apr 2008 13:08
Try out keys …. My math may not be exact but it is pretty close
If there are 7 depths and 5 chambers there would be 16807 possibilities..
The # 7 pin/ depth is only used in master keyed systems so a “ store boughtâ€
Everyone who eats potatoes eventually dies. Therefore potatoes are poisonous.
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by vrocco » 14 Apr 2008 13:43
[quote="keysman"]Now assuming a “ tryout keyâ€
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by freakparade3 » 14 Apr 2008 15:24
I don't think the OP really knows what he's talking about, I do know however there is a kwikset lock that tryout keys work for........ Anyone? Come on, do a little research. 
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by ewiener » 14 Apr 2008 15:26
I agree... the OP doesn't know what he's talking about. I definitly have depth and slot keys, not try-out keys. Thanks for all the help, everyone.
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by jimb » 14 Apr 2008 17:46
freakparade3 wrote:I don't think the OP really knows what he's talking about, I do know however there is a kwikset lock that tryout keys work for........ Anyone? Come on, do a little research. 
Kwikset SmartKey
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