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Free Pinning Mats

Information about locks themselves. Questions, tips and lock diagram information should be posted here.

Free Pinning Mats

Postby vrocco » 23 Feb 2008 15:19

I have a LAB pinning mat that I use pretty regularly. It works fine as a work surface, but the most useful feature is the place to put your pin stacks when repinning a lock.
ImageImage

However, these mats sell for about $25 each. I was looking for a low cost alternative in order to do a repinning tutorial at our LI meeting. After thinking about it, I remembered the all-weather rubber mats. These are the kind you often see inside the entrance of a bulding in the winter time. They are rubber and have a corrugated surface. I thought this would be good for holding the pins stacks.

I located a few companies on the internet that sold these types of mats and sent a quick email asking for samples. Now before i get flamed about "how I am cheating these companies out of profits", please realize that these are literally scraps that they send out as samples. If you have a large group that needs mats or you want a bigger one, please consider ordering a piece of the mat from one of these companies. You can buy it by the foot. Also, you may want to check with your office building in the early spring. Many will have these mats that need thrown away after a hard winter. You can probably salvage pieces of them to use.

Anyway, after contacting a few different companies, I accquired the samples below.
Image

There were a few different styles, but any of them would work for our purposes.
Image
Image
Image

Next I had Bullet unpin a lock so you could see one of the mats in action:
Image

Here's how I use the mats:
Image
Image

So that's the jist of it. Free pinning mats just for asking. Now you can probably incorporate them other ideas as well. My friend Marc said he always liked the idea of a felt work mat. He was going to glue a piece of the rubber mat to one corner of his felt covered mat just so he had a place to hold his pin stacks.

Hope this was helpful to someone. It very well may have been covered in the past on this board. I didn't search to try and find it.
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Postby duramaxdavid » 23 Feb 2008 19:21

thats a great idea. If you wanted them on a hurry and didn't want to wait on shipping you could buy them at a local hardware store. Our local Lowes even sells them by the foot for less than a dollar if memory serves me.
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Postby bumber » 23 Feb 2008 23:35

When picking out a color if you have a choice go for a color that will contrast the majority of you springs and pins, I know this seems obvious...but if you didn't think about is and got one that was flat black or something because it looks cool and you couldn't really see anything that would suck :lol:
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using the mat

Postby raimundo » 25 Feb 2008 12:22

notice how hes lining the pin stacks on the rubber, he keeps a single open channel between the rows.

I use corregated cardboard, with a key shape drawn on it to distinguish the front and back end of the collums.

I recommend that you keep even more distance between the collumns of pins,

this is because as you work, sometimes your shirt cuff will drag across the pins as you are reaching across for some tool on that side of the bench,

when this happens, you have a pin that has come out of it channel and may have gotten into the empty channel between pin collumns,

if two or more pins are in these areas, it can become difficult to resort the mess.

when you space your collumns with three empty channels between them, then when some tool hits the bench and knocks them out of order,
you have a chance that they will be caught in the next channel in a way that is easy to figure out, where each pin has likly come from.

Just a tip, for those who want it, if you dont agree, thats ok, no need to argue.
Wake up and smell the Kafka!!!
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Postby HeadHunterCEO » 25 Feb 2008 22:09

hey that dog of yours seems pretty talented.
ask him if he is willing to run calls
Doorologist
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Postby vrocco » 26 Feb 2008 9:44

Bullet says she will lockout calls but only if if they don't interrupt her beauty sleep.

She needs about 18 hours a day.

:lol:
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Postby Eyes_Only » 26 Feb 2008 9:50

What companies did you contact to get those samples? I need a few of those for my work van.
If a lock is a puzzle, then its key is the complete picture
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Postby vrocco » 26 Feb 2008 9:52

I honestly don't rmember the exact company names, but I googled something like "corrugated rubber mat" and chose the first 5 or 6 results.


Each company had a contact form and I just found the item number that looked the most like what I wanted and sent them a request for a sample of it.
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Postby Eyes_Only » 26 Feb 2008 9:59

Okiez, I'll give that a try. But if it doesn't work out what section in Lowes do they sell these mats? Cos of all the numerous times I've gone there in search for the perfect locksmithing hand tools I've never seen those mats being sold there.
If a lock is a puzzle, then its key is the complete picture
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Postby vrocco » 26 Feb 2008 10:41

I personally couldn't find them there. I know someone else posted that, but I tried Home Depot and Lowes befor eI turned to the internet and I struck out.
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Postby bumber » 26 Feb 2008 18:22

http://www.rubbercal.com/
http://www.jnkproducts.com

These are the first two I came across and so I ordered from each of them from JNK I got the garage tiles which should be about 12"X12" so that be more than enugh for a mat :lol: hope that helps...
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Postby Eyes_Only » 26 Feb 2008 21:21

Thanks, I'll look into them.
If a lock is a puzzle, then its key is the complete picture
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Postby buzzardbait » 27 Feb 2008 18:28

That's a good tip vrocco, it's also, kind of funny. I took the Foley/Belsaw course many years ago, (around '82, I think), and that black piece of mat in the last two photos, is exactly what they furnished in the course as a pin tray. LOL. Just about the same size too.

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old school

Postby raimundo » 28 Feb 2008 12:47

I guess I learned back in the day when a shop towel was the common pinning mat, but you can also use the black foam back of a mouse pad to keep pins from bouncing and rolling, some of them have a textured surface. Just turn over the mouse pad and try to bounce pins on it, if it stops them from rolling off the table, thats what you want.
Wake up and smell the Kafka!!!
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Postby jaysonbernard » 29 Feb 2008 1:43

I picked up some of this kind of mat at home depot and covered the bench in my van with it. It has saved my butt countless times when you drop small parts. Stops them from rolling off the bench on to the floor where you will never find them again.
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