jozq15 wrote:Hey everyone!!!
I've spend a couple of months interested in locks and it only gets better. I've accumulated some interest in Abloy and especially Medeco. I'm currently trying to pick a 72s, but I noticed there are different types of 72s locks. I heard there is one with a locking bar and one without. I'll be honest, I havent really seen a diagram that has allowed the information to click in my head on how that works and how the biaxial pins work. I also don't understand not having a shear line. I bought one online to examine, but it wont arrive for another week. I'm like a child because I'm so impatient. lol Someone please throw some info my way. How many 72s are there? Sorry for all the questions.
thanks!!!!
Hello Jozq15,
I have some links for you which should clear things up. Firstly, I believe there are 3 flavors of Medeco 60 Series cam locks. The first kind is Original, then Biaxial, and the newer kind is the Medeco 3, which is easy to identify by the much wider bottom of the keyway. 72s is not the model number on these locks, as I recently documented in another thread. I don't believe there was ever a Medeco cam lock that did not have a sidebar.
Links to explain the 51s and 72s stamping on the front of Medeco locks.
http://www.lockpicking101.com/viewtopic.php?t=36258&start=4http://www.lockpicking101.com/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=43273&start=3Now, to your other question about shear lines and information on how these locks work.
Traditional pin tumber locks such as Kwikset or Schlage rely on 1 point of locking, which happens to be the spring loaded pin stacks that a key pushes on in order to move the metal pins out of the way, thus creating a shear line and allowing for the key to turn the plug.
High security locks such as ASSA Twin, Schlage Primus, BiLock, and Medeco rely on 2 locking points so in case a bad guy actually manages to pick the 1st point, they still have to over come the 2nd point of locking before the plug is free to turn. In the case of a normal Medeco lock you have the key pins and then the angles of the key pins which when set properly, align gates in the pin so that the sidebar's fingers can insert into the grooves cut into the key pins and at that point the plug is no longer bound and can turn and open the lock.
In Medeco cam locks they had to figure out a way to save on space since the diameter of the cam lock is so much smaller than a regular rim or motrise cylinder, so they said, lets get rid of the key pin shear line and make it so the key only has to align little holes in the key pins with the fingers in the sidebar so it can insert into the keypins and not block the cylinder from rotating. One may think that the only think you have to do is rotate the pins so the holes align, but the keys still lift the pins AND rotate them, but all that work is done for the sake of aligning with the finger pins of the side bar. There is no driver pins above these key pins, only the springs.
Here is a picture of how the lock looks on the inside and of these holes drilled into the pins. There are also false holes which are not as deep and meant to inhibit the picking process.
From the Complete Book of Locks and Locksmithing by Bill Phillips p140

Hope this helps, if you have more questions feel free to ask!
Squelchtone