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How do you find out which pin should be set first?

Picked all the easy locks and want to step up your game? Further your lock picking techniques, exchange pro tips, videos, lessons, and develop your skills here.

How do you find out which pin should be set first?

Postby Wade » 9 Jun 2005 23:15

How do you find out which pin should be set first?
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Postby digital_blue » 9 Jun 2005 23:27

Hi Wade. The simple answer to this question is whichever pin binds first when you apply torsion. Apply very light torsion and feel each pin to determine which pin is binding first. One you establish which pin that is, lift it gently until you feel it reach the shear line and then repeat the process by finding which is the next pin to bind. Rinse and repeat.

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Postby Wade » 9 Jun 2005 23:36

Thanks db, usually ill start at the front pin and pick my wayto the back,which works sometimes, is this method the most efficient than finding the first pin to set?
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Postby Wade » 9 Jun 2005 23:37

*more efficient
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Postby digital_blue » 10 Jun 2005 0:18

It doesn't really matter whether you start at the back, front, somwhere in the middle, or under the refridgerator, you'll not likely be able to set any pin except the one that binds first. To clarify, if you have a 5 pin lock and the 5th pin is the first to bind, if you start at the 1st pin you will lift each pin and feel that it does not bind until you get to the last pin (pin 5). At that point you will notice that there is increased resistance on that pin. Once you lift it to the shear line, the plug will turn ever so slightly and the binding force will be transfered to another pin (in this example, often pin 4, but not always). You could try lifting any other pin, but it is only pin 4 that will be the binding pin.

Hopefully this makes sense. What it means is that your job is to find the one and only binding pin. You can try front to back, back to front, or whatever your heart desires, but until you find the binding pin, you're not going to have any success.

Did all that make sense?

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Postby Wade » 10 Jun 2005 0:23

alrighty then, that all sounds good to me
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Postby vector40 » 10 Jun 2005 1:02

How long is a piece of rope?
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Postby digital_blue » 10 Jun 2005 9:52

vector40 wrote:How long is a piece of rope?


Simple, 2 feet shorter than you need it to be, every time. :P

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Postby zekeo » 10 Jun 2005 10:32

db, you've really got an answer for everything

so how about this one from the Simpsons:

Can microvawe a burrito so hot that he couldn't eat it?
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Postby jamo » 10 Jun 2005 10:40

no i thought the rope's length was double the length from the beggining to the middle :wink:
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Postby zekeo » 10 Jun 2005 10:44

oh, that * should read "the son of god from a Christian perspective"
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Postby digital_blue » 10 Jun 2005 14:21

:lol:
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