I've started the Foley-Belsaw course and jumped the gun by making my own picks. Collected all the locks I could find around the house and bought a few for practice. Here's my thoughts so far.
1. Collected locks ranging from small luggage locks to brinks padlocks
2. A few of the locks are keyed alike.
3. Some days I can pick certain locks, some days I can't.
4. Keyed-alike locks don't necessarily open the same way, one of the locks I can rake 3 times and it pops open...the other I have to rake and pick the remaining pins individually or do them one at a time from the start.
5. Tension seems to be the biggest key for me at least as a beginner.
I take all my padlocks and link them together then as I have spare time thru the day I start to try and pick them. Having them linked makes it a little more difficult as they are bulky.
I also keep them on the nightstand and play with them while watching tv at night. I figure if I can pick them without paying 100% attention to them then when I am focused on only picking the lock it will come easier...like running with weights on your ankles.
I have also been playing around with different pick and tension styles. Found some old crochet hooks of my moms that I ground into hooks. They worked well but I think I need to temper them as they lose the shape with use. I also found some sort of scissor thing that I made into a really nice hook pick. The difference is that it looks like I took a regular hook pick and twisted the handle 90 degrees from the pick. Makes it "touchier". I balance it on my thumb and use my forefinger in the back to lift the pins. Will post a pick when I can.
Other than that I've enjoyed the site and look forward to contributing any way I can.