Josh K wrote:The key may have three cuts, but one of the pins could be a 0 cut pin and wouldn't look like a cutout on the key.
I agree with this. Either that, or you're counting the peaks instead of the valleys. I know I did that when I was a newbie.

Pure SPP is all about finding the exact right tension and rolling your pick gently to rest on the very tip of each pin, pushing very gently on them and taking mental notes on the feedback. When a pin sets, you should know exactly which one it is and when you get the lock picked you should know the binding order and be able to repeat it with relative ease. It takes a lot of practice, but so does anything else that's completely awesome.
Up until yesterday I got away with pretty sloppy SPP because I was working on pretty average locks, but I was very generously given a bunch of new ones, and they're all very high quality. I had no idea how sloppy my technique was until I got them! You have a good mindset, it's definately wise to get pure spp down before you develop bad habits like I did. It took a lot of willpower to stop going back to the way I was doing it before.

It's very rewarding to know exactly what is happening inside the lock, and to have complete control. I can't explain the feeling, but when you know exactly which order the pins set and can do it perfectly, it really is something else. If you just can't seem to pick a lock, take it apart! Take notes, play around with it until you get it. I started on a medeco biaxial yesterday and decided to get the hang of picking it minus the sidebar as a starting point, and I wasn't getting anywhere because I jumped right into it with way too much confidence. I considered myself to be a pretty good picker, but I had to swallow my pride a little and pick it one pin at a time to really get the feel for it. With the technique I was using at first, I was oversetting pins all over the place... and 5 of the 6 key pins have a deep serration cut into them so without proper control I never would have got it.
If I had my SPP down properly in the first place I would have gotten it much easier wthout all that repinning caper, so yeah... you'll thank yourself for getting that stuff out of the way as early as you can. Pin a lock up one pin at a time, newbie style. You'll learn a hell of a lot doing it this way... I remember saying the exact opposite not long ago, but I've been picking for like a year and a half and I really regret putting off such a simple thing for so long now. Pretty soon you'll be able to tell exactly what's inside a lock without any prior knowledge of what's in there, and pick it with real precision. Practice makes perfect. Happy picking!