Gordon Airporte wrote:I totally understand that DE is appropriate for professionals, and there's plenty of discussion about it in the Advanced section. Clearly there are all kinds of ways of destroying locks to bypass them - it's just the more refined techniques that might tempt some of the site's readers. The criminal wants the job over just as fast as (or faster than) the locksmith.
That is why I severely limit the detail I go into with some of my explanations.
Some of the time, simply using proper terminology is enough to throw off all but the 1% of criminals (white collar) and they usually don't dirty their hands with something they cant do with what they have, or what they can steal.
Believe me, I belong to a few professional locksmithing associations who definitely would NOT be pleased by anything I have ever said here, should I release my name... oh, btw I forgot about a tool that works fairly well for this particular locksmithing feat, the inventor's name is Frank Markisello and most locksmiths know of his stuff.
Btw for all you criminals out there I have a secret, if you have a giant pry bar, you can use the power of leverage to use a very long pry bar to break... well just about anything! really, simply use Hooke's law to determine how much you can bend it to get things the way you need them.
Any person with a graduate level engineering or physics degree should be able to break into just about anything they want to with a little engineering knowledge.(in theory)