Hi,
Been a member here for years but posting for the first time.
I have just started playing around with picking.
I bought a few locks from the local Habitat For Humanities Restore.
I have managed to rake them all and now I want to practice individual tumbler picking.
One of them is a tubular type lock, no name brand.
Key hole the one side with push button the other.
When I do the typical "which direction do I tension" test and tension anti-clockwise, raking the tumblers causes them to bind and on releasing they drop down.
This suggests I am tensioning the right way.
However after a lot of trying I could not open the lock. Pin one would bind perfectly and I would then move on to the others with no luck.
So I then did the clockwise test and could get no pins to bind. I still chose to try and pick while applying clockwise tension.
Lo and behold I managed to get it open. I don't know how as I could not detect any pin binding.
What is going on here?
Why is this lock going against the norms?
As a beginner I want to find a trusted method to chose the tension direction. This lock seems to break the rules?
Thanks.
Edited thread title to reflect actual lock type. GWiens2001