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by lockedin » 29 Jun 2008 1:55
Nor do your steel doors or boron alloy shrouded shackles that carry them.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=rpZlClVdNF4
These guys could bust into Fort Knox with a 14 kg bag of tools. I want some.
It's also effective if your little sister's doll's head gets stuck in the bars covering your windows.
Please see the humor people. I know we are all into nde. This is sick nevertheless.
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by JackNco » 29 Jun 2008 8:57
they were playing with this on "Future weapons" nice bit of kit but expensive i would imagine.
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by Jaakko » 29 Jun 2008 9:09
JackNco wrote:nice bit of kit but expensive i would imagine.
Well, a handy guy could make the set easily at home, just buy those hydraulic automobile lifting things, they are easily available up to the 20 ton limit and then you need just the hoses and some different "heads" for tools  For example, that hydraulic bolt cutter would be fun and easy to try and make
But this topic is bordering advanced material because of DE nature.
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by WOT » 29 Jun 2008 11:49
Everything was in ideal situation though.
Realistically, when you wedge that thing above your head, there's a good chance it'll slide out and whack you right on the head.
Also, when you're trying to pry something open and it won't fit right, it will cam out.
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by MacGnG1 » 29 Jun 2008 12:15
thats awesome. thats some good rescue tools
Nibbler: The poop-eradication is but one aspect of your importance.
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by globallockytoo » 29 Jun 2008 13:55
There's an old saying, 'Dont believe anything you hear and only half of what you see'
One One was a race horse, one one won one race, one two was a racehorse, one two won one too.
Disclaimer: Do not pull tag off mattress. Not responsible for legal advice while laughing. Bilock - The Original True Bump Proof Pin Tumbler System!
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by Jaakko » 29 Jun 2008 15:21
globallockytoo wrote:There's an old saying, 'Dont believe anything you hear and only half of what you see'
And that saying has to do what regarding this topic? 
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by Schuyler » 29 Jun 2008 17:49
He's trying to aussie up the forum a bit 
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by Squelchtone » 29 Jun 2008 18:45
Jaakko wrote:globallockytoo wrote:There's an old saying, 'Dont believe anything you hear and only half of what you see'
And that saying has to do what regarding this topic? 
I think that saying is regarding the topic of fishing stories as told by Finnish fishermen, and the quality of ABLOY locks.
hehehe
=)
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by Servalite6354 » 29 Jun 2008 20:57
Were they air powered pumps? That thing the guy kept hooking up looked like a "quick-connect" for pressurized air. If it was a hydraulic fitting, methinks it'd be a bit messier.
Then again, the website seems to imply that the pumps are either hydraulic or air-powered from a canister.
http://hydronoa.co.il/english/index.htm
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by Archive555 » 29 Jun 2008 21:03
Wow.
I don't imagine even if you were able to afford them, they'd sell them to anyone. You'd have to be law enforcement in all probability.
But still, those are some nice tools. Nice tools I wouldn't mind having
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by lockedin » 29 Jun 2008 21:18
This stuff allows such quick entry that I know after watching the video many people can only think of one thing:
Heist.
I would imagine the company that sells them is very discerning in who it sells it to, but in the wrong hands a well-coordinated group could end up very wealthy. In and out with minimal noise and suspicion.
14 kg (30 lb) of virtually unstoppable entry power. All in a handbag.
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by criminalhate » 30 Jun 2008 0:26
Servalite6354 wrote:Were they air powered pumps? That thing the guy kept hooking up looked like a "quick-connect" for pressurized air. If it was a hydraulic fitting, methinks it'd be a bit messier. Then again, the website seems to imply that the pumps are either hydraulic or air-powered from a canister. http://hydronoa.co.il/english/index.htm
They are hydraulic which means they have to use pressurized fluid to move. The hydraulic quick connects are quite popular in a lot of industries and yes they can be messy if you don't remove all the pressure first but if you did you usually will only lose a drop, if even that. I use them all the time for 25 ton hydraulic pumps used to straighten car frames.
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by greyman » 30 Jun 2008 15:54
Yep. Hydraulics sure are amazing. Just for fun, I might mention that they were invented by Joseph Bramah, they man who invented the Bramah lock. Late 1700s I think.
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by Eyes_Only » 30 Jun 2008 23:56
Funny how those two things intersected again a couple hundred years later. 
If a lock is a puzzle, then its key is the complete picture
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