Before I say anything, I should mention that I am a beginner (<2 months), so I am naive and my ignorance will show below. So please don't be afraid to be very descriptive in any helpful post you may have...
Here is the deal; I've got a 7-pin I-core Best lock that I need some help figuring out. I'm usually able to pick the lock using a paper clip as a torque wrench, where I bend the tip of the paper clip and stick the bent end into one of the re-keying holes on the bottom of the inner cylinder. Depending on how good I make the paper clip torque wrench, I can pick it in about 10 seconds... The first time I tried this, I saw a picture of an I-core tension tool on Peterson's website (http://peterson-international.com/i-CORE.htm). I thought, "hey, I see how that works, I bet I can just do the same thing with a bent paper clip shoved in there," and sure enough it worked in the first 45 seconds I tried it. But I had some trouble making other paper clip wrenches work. Strangely it often takes a few tries at making a paper clip wrench to get one that actually works, and I've yet to find a method for consistently getting a good wrench. But a good wrench will only last about 5 tries before it craps out. I just got real lucky on my first try, otherwise I would have figured that special tool was required. But despite this, I bought all three i-core wrenches from Peterson, figuring that they would work all the time, rather than me having to go through 5 or 10 paper clips to get one to work.
As it turns out, I have yet to get any of the Peterson wrenches to work on any best locks, but paper clips still work OK. Anyone have a clue why? The Peterson wrenches are significantly more expensive than a few paper clips, I was hoping that would convert to ease of use. Nope, I'm an ignorant newbie.
The other thing I have noticed is the paper clip always picks the operation shear line, never the control shear line. I originally expected to pick the control shear line, but I have no clue how I am managing to pick only the operation shear line without the control shear line interfearing (so long as it is a "good" wrench).
(By the way, is torque wrench proper terminology, or is it strictly tension wrench? I prefer torque wrench, because that is what it is actually doing, but I wouldn't want to offend anyone if tension wrench is firmly accepted as the correct word to use)
Thanks