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Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

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

Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby Klaiviel » 11 Mar 2010 20:22

First off let me say that I bought this lock after a recommendation that it was harder to pick than a Schlage, I was sadly disappointed. The Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise I recieved is 7 pin; however, there are no security drivers and the lock was master keyed. I am removing the master wafers to make it more of a challenge. Anyways, during disassembly I noticed a part I have never seen in a lock before, they look like the smallest ball bearings you can imagine and they seemed to have been resting between the master wafer and driver pins in the #5 and #7 pin position. I found 3 total, any idea as to what they are and what their function is?
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby Klaiviel » 11 Mar 2010 21:01

Sorry for the double post. As a follow up it seems removing the master key wafers made it easier to pick; I thought it was supposed to be the other way around?
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby Schuyler » 11 Mar 2010 21:11

are there small holes drilled alongside the normal drilled chambers in the plug?
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby Klaiviel » 11 Mar 2010 22:20

I'll let you know if I ever get this thing open again, the lock seems to be punishing me for my earlier arrogance. From what I remember, I don't recall any such holes.
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby globallockytoo » 11 Mar 2010 22:55

Little known security feature in some Corbin Russwin cylinders is the inclusion of ball bearings as an anti-drill feature. Ball bearings are usually hardened and will often prevent a drill bit from penetrating.
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby Schuyler » 11 Mar 2010 23:37

globallockytoo wrote:Little known security feature in some Corbin Russwin cylinders is the inclusion of ball bearings as an anti-drill feature. Ball bearings are usually hardened and will often prevent a drill bit from penetrating.


Yup & their shape will misdirect drill bits as well.
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby Klaiviel » 12 Mar 2010 20:46

Thanks for the info, that makes sense and is an interesting detail. Yea, I retract my early statement, this lock is much harder without the master wafers. I can only assume I got lucky that first time because I have not been able to duplicate it.
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby Raymond » 13 Mar 2010 0:28

Ball bearings have been used primarily in Corbin/Russwin locks forever. But the original purpose was to prevent wear on the tips of the pins. These ball bearings are the full diameter of the normal pins, .115". The ball just rolls over the key and there is much less friction. Insert a ball, load a master pin to be flush with the shear line, and load a spool top pin. On these locks the springs had a small brass rod inserted inside them to prevent picking by over lifting. Coincidently, I added three ball bearings to a lock in a bank vault day gate just last week because they keep wearing out the lock pins.

The three very small bearings are probably part of a construction key set up. Or they may be planned to make a combo change without removing the lock. With the balls in between pins or master wafers, they are included in the length of the bottom pin stack which will equal a specific key depth.

If a key raised the three balls above the shear line, and this key had a slot cut into the bottom of the blank, the balls would fall into the slot when the key was rotated. When the key is withdrawn, the balls will be pulled out of the lock and fall away intended to be lost. Now only a key cut one depth higher (the thickness of one ball) will raise the same pin stack to the shear line. This lock has now been rekeyed on one pin by one depth. Note that the old key will no longer work and because it is now too low, cannot be made to work.

Another style of this construction keying uses holes drilled in line with the original pin holes on the plug. They are a smaller diameter than a normal pin and the normal pin passes over them without hesitation. When the higher key is used, the bearings are now above the shear line. As the plug is rotated, the balls fall into the extra small hole and are permanently trapped there. This lock is now rekeyed.
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby Klaiviel » 13 Mar 2010 1:01

That makes a lot of sense. After reading your three scenario's I can say with almost 100% certainty that it is the second. I just measured the ball bearings with the micrometer and they read .045" in diameter so that eliminates option #1 and I was finally able to pick it again and I checked the cylinder there are no other holes on it other than the pin holes so that eliminates option #3. I think I have my answer, thanks guys.
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby the87pulse » 22 May 2013 13:38

I am looking for a source for schlage ball bearings. can anyone help me?
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby ARF-GEF » 22 May 2013 15:16

Are there ball bearings in a Schlage lock? :shock:

Anyway, the87pulse, please start a new thread with your question and don't hijack a very nice interesting thread...
I know I'm the arch thread derailer, but it's usually not abrupt and very much related. :)
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby Evan » 22 May 2013 17:21

Are you guys looking for ball bearings for the "lost ball" method construction master keying like what has been described in this thread ?

~~ Evan
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby ARF-GEF » 23 May 2013 5:11

Evan: I don't think so. I believe the original topic was about the ball bearing at the tip of the keypin. Like in many Mogul locks. :)

About the Schlages: I'm not sure they have ball bearings at all. Maybe there he meant the construction keying.
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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby Evan » 23 May 2013 8:29

ARF-GEF wrote:Evan: I don't think so. I believe the original topic was about the ball bearing at the tip of the keypin. Like in many Mogul locks. :)

About the Schlages: I'm not sure they have ball bearings at all. Maybe there he meant the construction keying.


My read is that was what was being discussed throughout due to the plural "bearings" found in the pinstack... Since it was three smaller bearings as opposed to one larger single bearing... The alloys for making pin tumblers have been hard enough to not require the use of anti-wear bearings since the 1950's...

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Re: Question on Corbin Russwin 1000 Mortise

Postby ARF-GEF » 23 May 2013 9:24

You might be right!
I wasn't sure of it at the first place :)
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