I have been looking at some Abloy's at work since I got into picking and have been dying to have a go but, since they aren't mine (yet!), I've not touched them. I asked the boss what he was doing with them and the reply was "Nothing".
I asked if I could have them.
He said "Why?"
I answered "For picking practice." (he knows me very well)
He said "If you can open these, you can have the others", and handed me a Master No5 & an Ingersoll 'Impregnable'.
The Master was popped in about 30 seconds....
The Ingersoll....still trying! (guess he's smarter than he looks)
Upon examination, the lock is a laminated steel body with a shrouded shackle and appears to be a double wafer, with the exception being that the wafers aren't typical of a double wafer lock - more like a 1/2 wafer top & bottom. The keyway is a little restrictive (not particularly warded, but tension wrench placement is not ideal) hence my making a custom wishbone - I REALLY want the Abloys....
The plug turns (under a little resistance) about 10 degrees before coming to a stop. I've had a quick try at raking with the J1 pick from my LT-620 pick set, and can get about 5 wafers unsetting when tension is released, but no more than that. Before I spend much more time on it, I wondered if any of the other Brits, or anyone else for that matter, had any experience with this lock:
Did a quick Google search on this lock and didn't find much, but this excerpt was taken from - http://www.textfiles.com/anarchy/LOCKPI ... seclox.txt
Ingersoll
(UK) ING1 10-lever, double-sided (4-5)
Ingersoll "impregnable" locks have a W-shaped keyway flanked by what appear to
be ordinary wafer tumblers. The key is double-sided with non-symmetric cuts
that are staggered from top to bottom. The wafers drive semi-circular levers
arranged around the plug. Each of the ten wafers must be raised so that the
levers are flush with the plug, allowing it to turn. The rotation of the plug
is heavily damped, so that very little vibration feeds back to the picker
while tensioning the lock. Ingersoll padlocks are extremely large and rugged,
with a suitably thick, ball-locking shackle.
A local locksmith once told me that an expert lock picker took 3 hours to
pick one of these during a professional demonstration.
Wow! I guess I'm not getting the Abloys sometime soon!!!
Anyway, here are some pics:





Hope someone can help me with this one before I go back to the UK (October).