So I went to a local locksmith today. I went with the intention of buying some spool, mushroom, or maybe even serrated pins for my little kwikset practice cylinders. The lockie gave me a small handful of spools for free. I felt a tad obligated to at least buy something from the guy. So I started looking around the old (some very old) lock they had in the shop. I stumbled upon the following:
Yale Disc Tumbler Padlock 601
http://img390.imageshack.us/img390/2452/img0043jr3.jpg
http://img473.imageshack.us/img473/1710/img0044ey7.jpg
I didn't have any wafer locks (he said disc=wafer so i assume thats correct) and this was the first one ive ever picked. It feels very different, but I managed to get it open in about a minute.
He also taught me how a sidebar works (I had an idea but now I know for sure). Something he said didn't sit quite well with me though. I asked how much a sidebar affects picking. He claimed and I quote: "Sidebar locks can't be picked." He was an older guy and seemed very knowledgable. I made it very clear what my intentions were (hobby picking) from the get-go so it wasn't a sales pitch. The lock he was teaching me with was an old GM car lock.
With that said, what is the technique to defeating a sidebar? I assume one would use some sort thin wire (maybe even a small pick), and push it out manually somehow. Am I on the right track? I want to go back and pick up that GM lock and just pick it in front of the guy so bad. Oh well, it will come in time.
Another employee also told me that Virginia has not yet passed a law that prohibits the carrying of picks. This is good news, but I'm skeptical.