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by JackNco » 23 Dec 2006 12:47
jbrown346 wrote:JackNco wrote:probaly not but light a candel under the lock and get some carbon on it. if there are marks in it then u knwo someones been at it
What sort of marks should I be looking for, and where abouts on the lock would they be? Cheers, J.
Scratches by the bottom or top of the key way that u would expect in the direction the key would be turned. also a fingerprint or smudge. i usually put my little finger just under and to the right of the key way as a guide to where my pick is in the lock but im not sure if thats common.
Also that is a very home made pick
John
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by Raccoon » 23 Dec 2006 13:28
The candle sooting suggestion is as a stealthy measure to detect future intrusions, and not determine past ones. You can do other things, such as sticking a hair to the box attached by saliva, so when opened the hair is removed. Or put an envelope in your box written "thank you" and put a couple bucks in it. if the envelope disappears, you know for cerain.
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by jbrown346 » 23 Dec 2006 18:52
HeadHunterCEO wrote:thats a horrible pick looks like a penny JackNco wrote:Scratches by the bottom or top of the key way that u would expect in the direction the key would be turned. also a fingerprint or smudge. i usually put my little finger just under and to the right of the key way as a guide to where my pick is in the lock but im not sure if thats common.
Also that is a very home made pick
Raccoon wrote:The candle sooting suggestion is as a stealthy measure to detect future intrusions, and not determine past ones. You can do other things, such as sticking a hair to the box attached by saliva, so when opened the hair is removed. Or put an envelope in your box written "thank you" and put a couple bucks in it. if the envelope disappears, you know for cerain.
Great, thanks for the extra information and ideas. Your input is much appreciated!
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by melvin2001 » 23 Dec 2006 18:59
i was going to say just put a sign on the outside of the mailbox saying "free porn inside this box!"... but then i decided you would get a lot of false positives...
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by maxxed » 25 Dec 2006 14:25
I think that this is a piece from a broken pair of eye wear ( sunglasses )
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by ponsaloti » 25 Dec 2006 17:24
I`ve seen these used to open doors many times, mainly back in the days when tinternet was un-heard of and teachers were encouraged to force feed school children milk, we got post not mail and we did`nt know what an appartment was.
The size has changed quite a bit, they used to be twice the size and they seem to be more avaliable nower days.
This may belong in the advance forum but I`ll take a chance. With one of these and minimal training you could gain entry to area`s that needed to be fairly secure at specific times of the day, what you could do is approch
the door only if you were sure no-one was on the other side of the door,
put the circular tool (penny) into a slot within the lock front and turn a knob, this would then allow you to open the door and spend a penny. As for the bent piece of hair clip, i hanvt a clue what it might be. 
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by unbreakable » 25 Dec 2006 17:35
That has a striking resemblence to a ball pick, my and many others pick of choice when opening waferlocks,
Whats that notch in the other end?
I really wonder if this could be a one handed wafer lock pick, tall tang to apply tension, and ball to set pins??
I can see it working on cheesy wafer locks.
Just speculating.
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by mercurial » 25 Dec 2006 20:59
maxxed wrote:I think that this is a piece from a broken pair of eye wear ( sunglasses )
maxxxed has hit the nail on the head!
I've found many many of these & always pondered their reseblance to a picktool(or possible utility as a picktool in a bind).
They are from eyewear.
...Mark
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by maxxed » 26 Dec 2006 18:32
mercurial wrote:maxxed wrote:I think that this is a piece from a broken pair of eye wear ( sunglasses )
maxxxed has hit the nail on the head! I've found many many of these & always pondered their reseblance to a picktool(or possible utility as a picktool in a bind). They are from eyewear. ...Mark
Hey I've been promoted there's 3 x's in my name now 
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by LockNewbie21 » 27 Dec 2006 8:27
Tampering with mailboxes is a federal crime. Hand it over to your mail carrier and get the Postal Inspection Service involved.
Thats the best advice here, I pity the person thats a very serious effence in states to.
The pick appears to be a crude ball/rake
Call the postal service immediatly if you haven't already, and as suggested set up a CS system there.
Geez this guy this skipped the usual attempt at a free soda and went for a ticket to meet bubba and pain int he butt (no pun intended)
[deadlink]http://i60.photobucket.com/albums/h17/Locknewbie21/LockNewbie21Sig.jpg[/img]
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by Stash » 27 Dec 2006 13:33
That looks a lot like what happened when I first tried to make a pick, as I waited for mine to come in the mail. It's definitely not the best homemade I've seen, but for a simple wafer, it's the perfect tool. I'd suggest putting a note in there for whoever did it, and asking the mailman to hold your mail or deliver it to an alternate address for a day or two.
~Stash
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by rohi » 27 Dec 2006 14:11
unbreakable wrote:I really wonder if this could be a one handed wafer lock pick, tall tang to apply tension, and ball to set pins??
how many pins can one set with a ballpick in a waferlock???
Ronald
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by ponsaloti » 27 Dec 2006 15:10
I`m lost,if its a wafer lock, what are pins doing in there. 
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by Firearm » 27 Dec 2006 15:12
It was sarcasm.
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by ponsaloti » 27 Dec 2006 15:34
ah, silly me, i think his accent thru me. 
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