Stormseye wrote:1. For a professional, how long might an average pick job take? You see on TV (NCIS, etc) that it can be done in a matter of seconds, but is that just fiction?
2. Would it be silent to someone on the inside?
3. Would it leave evidence on the lock? Would the evidence be visible to the naked eye on the exterior, or is the lock dismantled and sent to a lab?
i'm sure that all of these questions have already been answered in one form or another, but i just want to add my 25 cents.
1
it really depends. i've had some locks pick so quickly that it actually startled me. others that should have been easy have slapped me around really good. it really breaks down to a few issues:
the picker's "hand". sometimes a specific person might have trouble whereas someone just as adept may have no trouble at all.
the tools being used. just as it's easier to repair an auto or build a home when you have the proper tools, it's typically easier to pick a lock with the right tools. however, if you don't have the necessary skills to build a house in the first place, then even the most expensive hammers and saws won't make up for your deficiencies.
the lock. some locks are just easier to pick than others. there are a number of factors that are best explained through mathematics, but i'll skip it for now and just say that some locks tend to be easier.
2
no. picking is
never silent unless you're picking your lock with a cotton swab. (db -- care to try THAT one with cotton intact?) the cold hard facts are that you're "whacking metal against metal" and it's suspended in the middle of a large diaphragm (diaphragm = door) that can acoustically amplify the sound just like a drum head.
3
yes. i'd rather not go into specific details here, but each method of manipulation DOES "leave it's mark". quite often those pieces of evidence can point to the specific
type of method used to manipulate the lock. and sometimes it can even point to the actual tool type as well. sometimes this evidence is external, sometimes internal and sometimes both.
for your sake, i hope this may have answered your questions, and for my sake, i hope i was sufficiently vague.
