Lock Picking 101 Forum
A community dedicated to the fun and ethical hobby of lock picking.
       

Lock Picking 101 Home
Login
Profile
Members
Forum Rules
Frequent Forum Questions
SEARCH
View New Posts
View Active Topics


Live Chat on Discord
LP101 Forum Chat
Keypicking Forum Chat
Reddit r/lockpicking Chat



Learn How to Pick Locks
FAQs & General Questions
Got Beginner Questions?
Pick-Fu [Intermediate Level]


Ask a Locksmith
This Old Lock
This Old Safe
What Lock Should I Buy?



Hardware
Locks
Lock Patents
Lock Picks
Lock Bumping
Lock Impressioning
Lock Pick Guns, Snappers
European Locks & Picks
The Machine Shop
The Open Source Lock
Handcuffs


Member Spotlight
Member Introductions
Member Lock Collections
Member Social Media


Off Topic
General Chatter
Other Puzzles


Locksmith Business Info
Training & Licensing
Running a Business
Keyways & Key Blanks
Key Machines
Master Keyed Systems
Closers and Crash Bars
Life Safety Compliance
Electronic Locks & Access
Locksmith Supplies
Locksmith Lounge


Buy Sell Trade
Buy - Sell - Trade
It came from Ebay!


Advanced Topics
Membership Information
Special Access Required:
High Security Locks
Vending Locks
Advanced Lock Pick Tools
Bypass Techniques
Safes & Safe Locks
Automotive Entry & Tools
Advanced Buy/Sell/Trade


Locksport Groups
Locksport Local
Chapter President's Office
Locksport Board Room
 

The old days

Pull up a chair, grab a cold one, and talk about life as a locksmith. Trade stories of good and bad customers, general work day frustrations, any fun projects you worked on recently, or anything else you want to chat about with fellow locksmiths.

The old days

Postby grit1 » 21 Nov 2005 17:26

I've often wondered, upon looking at a system of locks and keys such as the Best SFIC system here at the University of Minnesota, how locksmiths would pin and cut a system this large before the advent of computers...

Now-a-days you can just fire up a master keying software application that automatically calculates master keys, cross-keying, randomizes change keys to minimize keys that work in more than one lock and shouldn't...for those of you that were around back in the day, was it just a major math-intensive pain to develop, pin a cut a system?

The University of Minnesota has over 250 buildings, each having anywhere from 100-1000 locks I would surmise, almost all of them Best SFIC. Albeit there are different keyways but still, you must come close to using a large percentage of possible combinations considering all of the levels of master-keying...

Just a discussion topic to make you realize how much work goes into a system like this... ~Grit.
Image
Got shear line?
grit1
 
Posts: 173
Joined: 21 May 2005 17:07
Location: Twin Cities, Minnesota

Postby Shrub » 21 Nov 2005 17:49

Which came first? the computor or the masterkey system?

What ever did we do before computors?

I dont know! what are we going to do with the younger gereration?

How old is the abacus? did we used to have 40 fingers and toes so we can count higher than 20?

:lol:

I dont think the was much call for masterkeying as we all used to leave the doors open :wink:
Shrub
Moderator Emeritus
 
Posts: 11576
Joined: 23 May 2005 4:03
Location: uk

Postby illusion » 21 Nov 2005 17:52

How old is the abacus? did we used to have 40 fingers and toes so we can count higher than 20?


phew.... I thought I was the only one to have 40 fingers and toes 8)
I dont think the was much call for masterkeying as we all used to leave the doors open


don't they still do this in canada? :wink:
illusion
 
Posts: 4567
Joined: 2 Sep 2005 13:47

Postby grit1 » 21 Nov 2005 17:52

Shrub wrote:I dont think the was much call for masterkeying as we all used to leave the doors open :wink:


8)
Image
Got shear line?
grit1
 
Posts: 173
Joined: 21 May 2005 17:07
Location: Twin Cities, Minnesota

Postby Shrub » 21 Nov 2005 18:00

:lol:

Seriously though if we was to go back to the times when computors werent used for such things (and that includes working out any formulae for non computor use) i just dont think it was called for in such complex uses.

Im sure there must have been such things but a good locksmith would probably just written down the cuts in order to achieve what he wanted.

I would imagine it was with the event of pc's that masterkeying got the numourus methods for doing it expanded up on, before that they would have just been simple systems if any at all.

I do remeber like it was yesterday how we used to go out just pulling the door behind us and even on a summers day leaving it ajar to let the air drift through, ah those were the days.
Shrub
Moderator Emeritus
 
Posts: 11576
Joined: 23 May 2005 4:03
Location: uk

Postby illusion » 21 Nov 2005 18:06

if you left your doors ajar round where I live you'd get the "friendly" neighbourhood "stealing squad" round to "borrow" your possesions... :?
illusion
 
Posts: 4567
Joined: 2 Sep 2005 13:47

Postby Shrub » 21 Nov 2005 18:13

But there wasnt anything like that when i was a kid, you wanst even a glint in your daddys eye then :wink: :lol:
Shrub
Moderator Emeritus
 
Posts: 11576
Joined: 23 May 2005 4:03
Location: uk

Postby illusion » 21 Nov 2005 18:17

:lol:

fair enough... things aint what they used to be then i guess :wink:
illusion
 
Posts: 4567
Joined: 2 Sep 2005 13:47

Postby Shrub » 21 Nov 2005 18:20

I can remember when those vandles left those stones laying around that field in hastings :lol:

Still there to this day i beleive :lol:

Your right nowadays we even have to padlock the gates up on trick or treat night, nasty american custom :lol:

I sat there for hours with my live electric cable and hosepipe but not one of them asked me for a trick :cry:
Shrub
Moderator Emeritus
 
Posts: 11576
Joined: 23 May 2005 4:03
Location: uk

Postby wraith » 22 Nov 2005 0:07

Um, with a pencil and paper?

I re-keyed a church - 40 locks total - I drew a map of the church, marking where al of the locks needed to be, asked the pastor where people needed to get into, and made a list. I called my distributor, told him what I needed, and picked 'em up a day later. Took me a day to install all of the locks... I also have the codes for each of the keys in an encrypted file on my laptop, and on a disk, which I gave to the pastor - so if he needs another key, he just has to call me and I can run one by. No computer needed.

Trey
All I want is for my wife and my girlfriend to get along...
wraith
 
Posts: 219
Joined: 23 Jul 2005 2:22
Location: Kansas City, MO

Postby digital_blue » 22 Nov 2005 2:23

What's he read the disk with then? ;)

db
Image
digital_blue
Admin Emeritus
 
Posts: 9974
Joined: 6 Jan 2005 15:16
Location: Manitoba

Postby Chrispy » 22 Nov 2005 4:40

Shrub wrote:I sat there for hours with my live electric cable and hosepipe but not one of them asked me for a trick :cry:

:twisted: :lol: :twisted:

wraith wrote:I also have the codes for each of the keys in an encrypted file on my laptop

:wink:

wraith wrote:...and on a disk

:D

wraith wrote:No computer needed

:lol:

db wrote:What's he read the disk with then? :wink:

:lol: ROFL :lol:
Image
Some things may be pick proof, but everything can be bypassed....
Chrispy
 
Posts: 3569
Joined: 24 Mar 2005 15:49
Location: GC, QLD

Postby skold » 22 Nov 2005 5:28

lol, no computer needed...i'm gonna be laughing for the next 12 minutes.
Image
skold
 
Posts: 2250
Joined: 24 Feb 2004 3:59
Location: Australia

Postby wraith » 26 Nov 2005 23:29

Oops, I went back and had to laugh at myself :lol:

Let me re-phrase that last part.

I didn't need a computer to re-key the church, I didn't need a computer to keep a copy of the church key codes, I could've written it down in a file - but I choose to keep it on my laptop...

So, yea, computer needed to read the file :lol:

Trey
All I want is for my wife and my girlfriend to get along...
wraith
 
Posts: 219
Joined: 23 Jul 2005 2:22
Location: Kansas City, MO


Return to Locksmith Lounge

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 7 guests