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Asymetrical spools

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

Asymetrical spools

Postby Gordon Airporte » 17 Jan 2007 23:06

I snagged a couple of locks dumpster diving (Russwins) and found that the rings at either end of the spools are of different thickness. Like this:
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Is there a prefered orientation for these (to make it harder to pick?) I popped them all out before I could see how they were originally installed. Chances are it isn't that important, but it seems like there must be a reason for them to be made this way.

I suppose I should experiment more, but I haven't been able to make much of a difference.
Theoretically, though, with the thicker end at the shear line (and the thinner end under the spring) the other pins would have more of a chance to fall out when the spool sets, but with the pin the other way 'round it should be easier to overset the spool from a false set, and harder to avoid a false set initially.
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Postby zeke79 » 18 Jan 2007 0:58

Small end towards the plug. They could be lab security pins sized to correspond with the russwin top pin sizes. Lab spools are made in the way you described in the longer top pins.
For the best book out there on high security locks and their operation, take a look at amazon.com for High-Security Mechanical Locks An Encyclopedic Reference. Written by our very own site member Greyman! A true 5 Star read!!
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Postby Deathadder » 18 Jan 2007 3:16

are you positive they're spool shaped and not mushroom?
It's ok guys, i have a really bad attention sp-wow look, a beach!
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Postby Krypos » 18 Jan 2007 5:23

zeke79 wrote:Small end towards the plug. They could be lab security pins sized to correspond with the russwin top pin sizes. Lab spools are made in the way you described in the longer top pins.


of course zeke knows his stuff.

just think about it logically, the smaller side is more likely to get caught at the shear line and thus (help to) prevent picking.
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Postby Gordon Airporte » 18 Jan 2007 23:14

Thanks Zeke. If these are the longer top pins it's a little surprising since each stack had masterkeying spacers that leveled it off to almost full depth.
As far as the pickability goes, I'm increasingly of the opinon that spools make a lock easier to pick. Just standard spools with smooth keypins, that is. They offer a much larger target for a false set (vs. setting the gap between upper and lower pin at the shear line), and once you have that it's rare (in my experience) that the spools actually do their job and cause enough fallout that the lock cannot be opened readily.
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Postby Schuyler » 19 Jan 2007 2:51

yeah, my mini-durex kit has exactly these spools in it. I just repinned a padlock with a fistful of them.
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Postby JackNco » 19 Jan 2007 9:04

I saw these for the first time last night in an assa core the driers matched the key pin in length for some reason. so some were even more disproportionate. still haven't cracked that lock yet

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Postby Gordon Airporte » 19 Jan 2007 22:50

JackNco wrote:I saw these for the first time last night in an assa core the driers matched the key pin in length for some reason. so some were even more disproportionate. still haven't cracked that lock yet


Yeah, these are called 'compensated drivers'; they even out wear on springs and keep you from decoding the lock by pushing each stack all the way down (or up in my case :-))
My Assa V-10 is the only lock I've seen them in, but I'm sure other companies use them. If you're using a classy HS lock it's worth the extra time choosing the right ones while pinning, I suppose.
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