When it comes down to it there is nothing better than manual tools for your Lock pick Set, whether they be retail, homebrew, macgyver style. DIY'ers look here.
i really like them, but i have a ton of tension tools and i think that the tension tool is more important than the pick because sometimes you have to try many different tension tools to find the one that works
but i like using them in that small gap where the pins meet the plug, and the serrated ones help "lock" them in place
i really like them, but i have a ton of tension tools and i think that the tension tool is more important than the pick because sometimes you have to try many different tension tools to find the one that works
but i like using them in that small gap where the pins meet the plug, and the serrated ones help "lock" them in place
I have the Peterson Pry Bar and a flat tension wrench from HPC. Both work very well and I use them for most everything I pick. The Flat 5 is on my wish list also but I'm putting it off because I'm doing just fine with what I have now.
If a lock is a puzzle, then its key is the complete picture
I have to agree with you. Now, granted have a DIY version, but it was made from a template and the thickness is right. Really it's the basic way it works that I haven't been able to get comfortable with.
If I'm holding a mortise cylinder free-hand the keyway ends up being sideways and I just can't control the pick like that. If the lock is mounted with the keyway vertical my wrist has to be bent at an uncomfortable angle to put pressure on the wrench.
But, many people swear by them, so I guess it's just something you have to try for yourself.
Eyes_Only wrote:I have the Peterson Pry Bar and a flat tension wrench from HPC. Both work very well and I use them for most everything I pick. The Flat 5 is on my wish list also but I'm putting it off because I'm doing just fine with what I have now.
I didn't know HPC had a flat tension tool.. sounds interesting. Any idea what part number it is?
I have both the Peterson Flat 5 tension tools and the Peterson 3 Serrated Tension tools. Both have small serrations that really do help hold the wrench in the keyway. Since I prefer a firm wrench, of the two, I prefer the 3 serrated tension tools as they are firmer than the flat 5.
"Whensoever one of these keys fails so that it turns not aright in the lock," said he to us, "this passage opens not." Purgatorio