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practicing with auto jigglers?

When it comes down to it there is nothing better than manual tools for your Lock pick Set, whether they be retail, homebrew, macgyver style. DIY'ers look here.

practicing with auto jigglers?

Postby vixroy » 4 Mar 2009 21:09

hey

what would be the best way to practice using these? just got a pair from southord but dont want to ruin anything.
vixroy
 
Posts: 30
Joined: 1 Mar 2009 14:57

Re: practicing with auto jigglers?

Postby zeke79 » 4 Mar 2009 21:38

The southord jigglers are actually very very hard on locks. I would never use them during an auto lockout as even used properly they cause alot of wafer wear. When used improperly they can actually damage a wafer bad enough that a key will not work. This damage can be done by bending wafers or wearing the wafers down badly where they interface with the key causing the key to no longer lift the wafer high enough to pull it all the way into the lock core.

If you are going to use "jigglers" either buy the proper kits designed for ford, gm, chrysler, etc. Or if you want a key type tool use a properly designed and cut Marshall key set. You can also buy tryouts but these have a ton of keys in the sets and are expensive to buy. In the end even if you find a key that works with the tryouts you cannot just copy it as they usually don't work well in the lock because they are based on the half cut theory. You end up with a key that is close and must be worked on and impressioned to end up with a key with the true full cut bitting.

Hope this helps some. I can offer help on the proper tools to use but in the open forums I cannot explain how to use them or offer input about tips or tricks as this really gets into being a topic for the automotive section of the advanced forums.
For the best book out there on high security locks and their operation, take a look at amazon.com for High-Security Mechanical Locks An Encyclopedic Reference. Written by our very own site member Greyman! A true 5 Star read!!
zeke79
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Re: practicing with auto jigglers?

Postby vixroy » 4 Mar 2009 23:28

zeke79 wrote:The southord jigglers are actually very very hard on locks. I would never use them during an auto lockout as even used properly they cause alot of wafer wear. When used improperly they can actually damage a wafer bad enough that a key will not work. This damage can be done by bending wafers or wearing the wafers down badly where they interface with the key causing the key to no longer lift the wafer high enough to pull it all the way into the lock core.

If you are going to use "jigglers" either buy the proper kits designed for ford, gm, chrysler, etc. Or if you want a key type tool use a properly designed and cut Marshall key set. You can also buy tryouts but these have a ton of keys in the sets and are expensive to buy. In the end even if you find a key that works with the tryouts you cannot just copy it as they usually don't work well in the lock because they are based on the half cut theory. You end up with a key that is close and must be worked on and impressioned to end up with a key with the true full cut bitting.

Hope this helps some. I can offer help on the proper tools to use but in the open forums I cannot explain how to use them or offer input about tips or tricks as this really gets into being a topic for the automotive section of the advanced forums.


it does help. now i wont ruin my car lol. just have to wait for 40 posts and 3 months and a bit of lucka haha
vixroy
 
Posts: 30
Joined: 1 Mar 2009 14:57

Re: practicing with auto jigglers?

Postby savs2k » 23 Mar 2009 4:19

i've used jigglers on a few cars I bought from the auctions that came with no keys. It was pretty hard on the lock. 2 cars had keys in the car but was locked. After using the jigglers the keys would feel rough in the locks. I just assumed it was caused by the jigglers.
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