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
 

Squelchtone's workbench

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

Re: old saying

Postby Squelchtone » 29 Jun 2007 10:25

raimundo wrote:Krypos, there is already an old saying, "love laughs at locksmiths" not going to speculate on what that means, but I think its related to "locks keep honest people honest."

Anyone got any more, does shakespeare mention locksmiths? everything he wrote is not an old saying.



I found a poem.
-Squelchtone


ROBIN ROBERTSON

Wedding The Locksmith's Daughter

The slow-grained slide to embed the blade
of the key is a sheathing,
a gliding on graphite, pushing inside
to find the ribs of the lock.

Sunk home, the true key slots into its matrix;
geared, tight-fitting, they turn
together, shooting the spring-lock,
throwing the bolt. Dactyls, iambics —

the clinch of words — the hidden couplings
in the cased machine. A chime of sound
on sound: the way the sung note snibs on meaning

and holds. The lines engage and marry now,
their bells are keeping time;
the church doors close and open underground.




Note: 'locksmith's daughter': 19th-century slang for a key.
Image
User avatar
Squelchtone
Site Admin
 
Posts: 11307
Joined: 11 May 2006 0:41
Location: right behind you.

Postby Jaakko » 29 Jun 2007 10:57

squelchtone wrote:
Jaakko wrote:Of all the things in the picture I spotted two Abloy 3018 padlocks with Classic keyways :D .D

HOW do you know THAT?! man, good eye. It does in fact say 3015-3018 on those two locks.

I'm from Finland, remember? ;) Nah, I've just seen and fiddled enough with Abloys products and the Classic keys bow caught my attention :)
and I'm sure you saw the Model 231 padlock and the Exec key and cylinder sitting on the bench. ;-)

231 is sitting at the middle in the top row without a key, but I first thought it could be 330. Exec key? Doesn't look like Exec, more like Disklock key. Exec has round end of the bow, while Disklock has flat end. I might see wrong, the perspective isn't the best for judgement in the picture.
Image
Jaakko
 
Posts: 1967
Joined: 19 Feb 2006 4:23
Location: Finland (Pirkkala)

Postby n2oah » 29 Jun 2007 16:10

The cylinder is a disk lock for sure; exec cylinders were never made in mortise cylinders.
"Lockpicking is what robbing is all about!" says Jim King.
n2oah
 
Posts: 3180
Joined: 13 May 2005 22:03
Location: Menomonie, WI, USA

Postby Squelchtone » 29 Jun 2007 17:04

Jaakko wrote:[
231 is sitting at the middle in the top row without a key, but I first thought it could be 330.


you. =) it IS a 330, I just turned around and noticed it. for some reason I thought it was a 231. oh man.. I must be tired. tired from playing with this new X-09

:twisted:
Image
User avatar
Squelchtone
Site Admin
 
Posts: 11307
Joined: 11 May 2006 0:41
Location: right behind you.

Postby spyhunter » 11 Jul 2007 23:30

Schuyler wrote:and of course:

"If only I had known, I would have been a locksmith." - Albert Einstein


dude that should be on a tshirt
spyhunter
 
Posts: 40
Joined: 9 Apr 2004 22:43

Previous

Return to Locks

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 9 guests