Information about locks themselves. Questions, tips and lock diagram information should be posted here.
by atrix » 21 Feb 2007 4:06
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atrix
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by Tygart » 21 Feb 2007 5:08
Wow that looks like one High Security lock.
By the looks of the key I don't see how you could bump it.
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by UWSDWF » 21 Feb 2007 7:07
wtf are the weird little red triangles... or are they ghosts?....
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by hurri » 21 Feb 2007 8:40
UWSDWF wrote:wtf are the weird little red triangles... or are they ghosts?....
same question. did you put them over there? 
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by UWSDWF » 21 Feb 2007 8:49
oh and as for your question... it's a pin tumbler lock and i don't see a side bar so theorhetically it is bumpable.
just remember that in theory practise and theory are exactly the same but in practise they are completely different.
 DISCLAIMER:repeating anything written in the above post may result in dismemberment,arrest,drug and/or alcohol use,scars,injury,death, and midget obsession.
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by HeadHunterCEO » 21 Feb 2007 8:51
The English is poor
The lock is nice
Doorologist
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by atrix » 21 Feb 2007 10:29
little red triangles: A 3 X=Atrix
2 UWSDWF
Your truth in this lock is no side bar.
And if change a keycutting bumping is possible?
someone tried the impression of this lock
I tried with the brass tube - it not work , evidently the markers
I want to try with the aluminum or with copper tube.
your thoughts
2 HeadHunterCEO
 Yes you right my English really bad
thanks for help 
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atrix
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by JackNco » 21 Feb 2007 10:31
Very nice. any chance of a close up of the key as im having trouble working out how all those pins interact with it... and is it just me or doe all those pins look nearly exactly the same size.
All the best.
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by JackNco » 21 Feb 2007 10:32
ok u beat me 2 it...
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by dosman » 21 Feb 2007 11:06
So what type of lock would this be considered? Is it a pin tumbler lock that just uses an irregular shaped key?
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by mh » 21 Feb 2007 16:54
dosman wrote:So what type of lock would this be considered? Is it a pin tumbler lock that just uses an irregular shaped key?
I guess so.
To be more specific, you could call it a dimple lock, it has the same little variation in pin lengths.
I would say bumping would work, as well as raking with suitable tools.
Cheers,
mh
"The techs discovered that German locks were particularly difficult" - Robert Wallace, H. Keith Melton w. Henry R. Schlesinger, Spycraft: The secret history of the CIA's spytechs from communism to Al-Qaeda (New York: Dutton, 2008), p. 210
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by Libris » 21 Feb 2007 17:08
Whoa, now thats a Lock  I'm even too lazy to count the pins! Yeah, I would also call it a dimple, and as someone above me said, theoreticaly, it should be bumpable, although I have never saw anything like this anywhere. Impressive.
Cheers,
Libris
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by atrix » 22 Feb 2007 6:35
yesterday there was post and today already no
Even all answers has not had time to read up
2 admins
Please do not delete this post, аllow to read through answers.
I do not ask to learn me them to open disklock, a simple tube I ask to help to find.
2 Shrub
Please!!!Please!!!Please!!!
Do not erase please  help if you can
2 All
Please repeat your answers and comments in PM
I shall repeat a question:Whence to take a tube for a the middle part ?
where it is used?In cars, medicine, in chemistry,......?
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atrix
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by TOWCH » 22 Feb 2007 9:31
When I made a similar tool I made the tube from aluminum on a lathe. I would recomend steel though. The alluminum flexes too much. I can tell I'm getting less than ideal feedback.
www.smallparts.com has been recommended before.
Look for an online supplier of steel tubing. You may have to chuck the tube in a drill press and sand down the diameter. I've never done this but you might try making a rig to hold the sandpaper on with popsicle sticks and C clamps. You fold the sand paper over the tube, tape two popsicle sticks to the sand paper parallel to the tube, and then use another 4: 2 on top, and 2 on bottom, with c clamps, and some spacers to put pressure on the sandpaper. You'll have to hang the c clamps over the head of the drill press with string, and you can check the diameter of the tube's progress with the tips of you calipers.
This is probably similar to the process I'll use myself soon for a project of my own.
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