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by keysersöze » 18 Jun 2009 0:31
I'm new to lock picking, and I have been trying newer, simple techniques to open up this old model master lock I came across, but I still can not get it open. It's very similar to the one in this picture:  I can not find an exact picture of it though, any help with locks like that would be awesome.
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keysersöze
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by l0ckp1cker » 18 Jun 2009 6:13
You cannot find an exact picture? Can't you make one yourself? Is the lock yours / in use?
07JAN2017: - Back on the board again 
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by raimundo » 18 Jun 2009 7:42
I remember those locks but I haven't seen one in years, last general use of them was to secure canvas bags over parking meters for whatever reason. but some cities may have a lot of them. Its a lever tumbler I think but I really cant remember. Look for a number on it. that would likly be the key reference. Things like this may have as many as 200 variants of the key but the liklyhood of it coming from a set that is all keyed alike is high so it is also possible that you may find a key that fits. Antique stores often have a cigar box of old keys under the counter, typically tryouts for old trunks and locked drawers, but they will throw any old looking key in there. They'll sell them if you find what you like, they'll sell anything they have.
Wake up and smell the Kafka!!!
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by TigerDragon » 18 Jun 2009 9:06
I've got one of these, but it needs some cleaning up. Mine has some rusty spots on the casing, and was hanging on a nail in the shed. Previous owners left it behind when we bought our house.
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by keysersöze » 18 Jun 2009 11:17
The locks mine, yes. I found it on some old locker in my garage. It has the imprints 99 49 on it.
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by nothumbs » 18 Jun 2009 17:28
It's a good day when I learn something new.
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by jpb06080 » 18 Jun 2009 23:54
That is not a lever lock. It is a warded lock which can be opened with regular warded skeleton pick shaped like an L.
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by Raymond » 20 Jun 2009 0:34
On the contrary, this Master is a lever lock. It just uses the two levers to directly lock the shackle. Each lever has a hook that fits into the shackle cut out. The levers are moved front to back in conjunction with wards. Also the levers can have more than only one depth cut on the key. The wrong key will not turn because it is 1. not cut deeply enough in that space, or 2. the ward blocks it.
Yes it can be picked with an 'L' shaped pick or almost any curved pick but do so while pulling out on the shackle.
Nothing is foolproof to a talented fool. Wisdom is not just in determining how to do something, but also includes determining whether it should be done at all.
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by thedominator7a » 28 Jun 2009 5:12
you could probably use a warden pick to pick these locks..
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by maintenanceguy » 28 Jun 2009 13:05
This one has a very, very simple mechanism. It's not a lever lock.
The key just pushes the latch out of the way. The latch is holding the shackle.
The only thing thing that makes this even a little difficult is that there are two latches and they both need to be moved by the key so if you're sticking a bent piece of wire in there, you're only retracting one latch.
I've got one. don't know where I got it. It took a few minutes to figure it out but once it's open, you'll be able to see the two latches by looking down into the shackle hole.
-Ryan Maintenanceguy
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by musicninja17 » 21 Nov 2009 17:55
I have just aquired one of these from my grandpa, only it has the numbers "65 66" stamped on it. Fortunately, i got the key with it too, and despite it being old, it works very well. Does anyone know exactly how old it is?
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by musicninja17 » 21 Nov 2009 17:58
^correction...it's 65, 66...not the other way around....
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by pjzstones » 23 May 2010 1:04
i got one of these today. it has 66 49 on it. i got it at a flea market for 50 cents. unfortunately there was no key. does any one know how old it is? i think i've heard that they're from around the 50's, 60's, but i can't remember. i'll post if i get it open and how.
IIRC, and my memory is not that great, these were produced between late 1940- something to mid seventies..
All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered; the point is to discover them Galileo Galilei
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