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
 

Tamper Resistant Lock Concept

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

Tamper Resistant Lock Concept

Postby Dragunov-21 » 19 Jul 2007 18:35

Ok, I know I’m a newbie who’s probably overlooked something crucial, but I’ve had an idea for a tamper-resistant lock for places where it’s very preferable to sacrifice a lock than allow entry to a place.

Basically, the pins are made of glass, with the driver pin being a serrated, spool or mushroom pin, and the key pin a mushroom or spool. When the correct key is inserted and turned, great, but when a pin binds through the application of torsional force, it snaps, bits of glass gum up the lock, and once the pick/foreign object/etc is removed, a metal rod contained in the spring drops down, preventing someone from just using a screwdriver to bust the pins and open it. Of course, once this happens the lock is ruined and needs to be drilled, but there you are.

I’m hoping the diagram will explain things better, any feedback would be great.

Image
[/img]
Dragunov-21
 
Posts: 169
Joined: 21 Jun 2007 19:18
Location: Launceston, TAS, Australia

Postby UWSDWF » 19 Jul 2007 18:55

i came up with a similar idea some time back andothers concluded that if the glass were to break that easily in tampering situations then in normal use conditions could end up doing the same
Image
DISCLAIMER:repeating anything written in the above post may result in dismemberment,arrest,drug and/or alcohol use,scars,injury,death, and midget obsession.
UWSDWF
Supporter
Supporter
 
Posts: 4786
Joined: 27 May 2006 13:01
Location: Toronto, ON. Canada

Postby Dragunov-21 » 19 Jul 2007 19:04

I did wonder about that, but if the glass were hardened/tempered (correct term?) then it would have high strength from top to bottom (and thus resist wear and tear, but still be brittle enough to break under the force of being scissored between cylinder and hull?

Or perhaps I'm talking out by butt :wink:
Dragunov-21
 
Posts: 169
Joined: 21 Jun 2007 19:18
Location: Launceston, TAS, Australia

Postby freakparade3 » 19 Jul 2007 20:01

So if you are inside your home and someone breaks the glass in your lock you are just stuck until a locksmith drills you out? I know houses have 2 doors but lots of condos and appartments do not.
Image
freakparade3
Moderator Emeritus
 
Posts: 3457
Joined: 17 Sep 2006 12:01
Location: Cedar Rapids, Iowa

Postby Dragunov-21 » 19 Jul 2007 21:29

I was thinking more for things like storage rooms with... dangerous stuff... behind them. Ok, that was pretty half-baked, but if there was a situation like that then it'd be easy enough to put a bypass on the back pf the door...

Like I said, I've overlooked stuff, but I still think it'd be interesting to try academically...
Dragunov-21
 
Posts: 169
Joined: 21 Jun 2007 19:18
Location: Launceston, TAS, Australia

Postby Schuyler » 19 Jul 2007 21:36

This isn't designed to be used on a house. It's a seal lock, meant to detect surreptitious entry and to lock safe in the case of any major trauma to the lock.

There is a market for this sort of thing.
Schuyler
Supporter
Supporter
 
Posts: 3448
Joined: 24 Jul 2006 1:42
Location: Boston

Postby Dragunov-21 » 19 Jul 2007 22:23

Exactly, for instance, if you were a highschool principal, overseeing a science department with a storeroom full of acids, explosive reagents etc, would you rather call a locksmith to drill and replace a lock the next morning, or explain to horrified parents that it's not your fault that their kid-cum-chemist has nicked reagents and put himself in hospital?

Of course, if it was an environment like a school where the lock was likely to be regularly messed with, you'd want to put a padlocked sheath over the door lock so you weren't constantly having to replace expensive locks, and for a highschool something like an Abloy would probably be sufficient anyway, but you get the point.
Dragunov-21
 
Posts: 169
Joined: 21 Jun 2007 19:18
Location: Launceston, TAS, Australia

Postby Trip Doctor » 19 Jul 2007 22:31

That's what trap pins are for isn't it ?

Once this design would be discovered, someone could easily use a pick or a tension wrench to keep 'rods' from dropping, and the cylinder would then be forced open with a screwdriver (snapping all the pins). On the other hand, entry WOULD be detected, just not prevented.

I think trap pins are the solution to this.
Trip Doctor
 
Posts: 597
Joined: 18 Feb 2007 23:17
Location: MN, US

Postby Trip Doctor » 19 Jul 2007 22:38

Actually, now that I relook the trap pin design those can be bypassed/picked pretty easily too.
Trip Doctor
 
Posts: 597
Joined: 18 Feb 2007 23:17
Location: MN, US

Postby Dragunov-21 » 19 Jul 2007 22:51

Well the idea is to not have the lock readily identifiable as having said pins, so that by the time the picker realises, it's too late. You could even put neobdynium? magnets at the bottom pits to stop the rods being raised again.
Dragunov-21
 
Posts: 169
Joined: 21 Jun 2007 19:18
Location: Launceston, TAS, Australia

Postby mh » 19 Jul 2007 23:37

Dragunov-21 wrote:I did wonder about that, but if the glass were hardened/tempered (correct term?) then it would have high strength from top to bottom (and thus resist wear and tear, but still be brittle enough to break under the force of being scissored between cylinder and hull?

Or perhaps I'm talking out by butt :wink:


You would have to consider that
inserting the key
also applies a shearing force on the pins.

Keep bringing up your ideas!

Cheers,
mh
"The techs discovered that German locks were particularly difficult" - Robert Wallace, H. Keith Melton w. Henry R. Schlesinger, Spycraft: The secret history of the CIA's spytechs from communism to Al-Qaeda (New York: Dutton, 2008), p. 210
Image
mh
Moderator
 
Posts: 2437
Joined: 3 Mar 2006 4:32
Location: Germany

Postby n2oah » 19 Jul 2007 23:54

Trip Doctor wrote:Actually, now that I relook the trap pin design those can be bypassed/picked pretty easily too.


It depends. TOOOL once tested a lock with trap pins(does anybody remember the name of it), and they could never pick/bump the lock, even when trying to keep the trap pins in place when rotating, or trying to force the trap pins back up.
"Lockpicking is what robbing is all about!" says Jim King.
n2oah
 
Posts: 3180
Joined: 13 May 2005 22:03
Location: Menomonie, WI, USA

Postby mh » 20 Jul 2007 0:24

n2oah wrote:
Trip Doctor wrote:Actually, now that I relook the trap pin design those can be bypassed/picked pretty easily too.


It depends. TOOOL once tested a lock with trap pins(does anybody remember the name of it), and they could never pick/bump the lock, even when trying to keep the trap pins in place when rotating, or trying to force the trap pins back up.


And I never understood why they could not.

Actually I find some of the statements in that area quite strange - if some people find a weakness in a lock, they state correctly that it's not so secure.
But if they can't overcome an obstacle, they also make a statement to the effect that it's very secure - although that is so much more difficult to prove and the next guy trying could be more lucky or creative...
"The techs discovered that German locks were particularly difficult" - Robert Wallace, H. Keith Melton w. Henry R. Schlesinger, Spycraft: The secret history of the CIA's spytechs from communism to Al-Qaeda (New York: Dutton, 2008), p. 210
Image
mh
Moderator
 
Posts: 2437
Joined: 3 Mar 2006 4:32
Location: Germany

Postby bluestar » 20 Jul 2007 3:32

Well, let's look at the acid container room example.
case a) using a wrong key. It lifts the pins too much and breaks them, but opens the lock.
a1) you can open this lock with the wrong key or, in an extreme case, just by using a blank. It's locked afterwards, but who cares ;)
a2) you could easily lock this lock forever by simly pulling out the wrong key (which i imagine could happen quite a lot)
b) Someone steals the key. Bad luck. Use an additional combination lock.
c) One can pick the lock, but the lock locks itself -> just remove the glass stuff and lift the top pins with a very long hook -> voila :)

Just some thoughts...
blustar
bluestar
 
Posts: 104
Joined: 9 Jul 2007 6:04

Postby greyman » 20 Jul 2007 5:46

Nice post, from Tasmania, to boot :) My ancestral roots lie there - in the Tin mines of the north...

Interesting idea - I haven't seen glass proposed as a trap mechanism, and there may be a good reason for that. There are many trap mechanisms for pin tumbler and other locks - but the real problem as you have encountered is the need to dismantle the lock if it's been triggered. That is why more than 150 years ago Chubb developed the detector lever mechanism. This could be reset using a separate key hence no need to dismantle anything. Tobias's book has a few examples of patents where there are trap pins, etc. In fact the MLA Binary Plus mechanism has trp pins that are reset by the correct key.
Image
greyman
 
Posts: 1026
Joined: 21 Mar 2005 16:43
Location: NSW, Australia

Next

Return to Locks

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests