Evan wrote:It looks like a good idea on paper...
How much additional maintenance / cleaning of the cylinders would it require so that a build up of gunk and junk wouldn't render those additional sidebar grooves useless...
One would also think that without driver pins and springs above at least some of the additional side bar grooves it would only be a matter of resetting the pins to the proper angle rather than dealing with both angle and height at the same time... Easier it is when all you have to do is push the pins all the way up against the shell body while just manipulating the angles...
~~ Evan
Not sure why you assume that this would be using medeco's design. There's plenty of other sidebar locks out there.
Also I doubt that the sidebar grooves would really problematically accumulate matter... I mean, any non-key retaining sidebar lock has multiple grooves and we don't see too many issues there...
Rickthepick wrote:erm where im pretty sure the idea originated from another thread, but not yours

I was teasing and forgot to put the

face because I was on the phone. The idea originated from tubular locks anyway, this is just some resistance to traditional impressioning tools.
The BiLock isn't the first bump proof pin tumbler because it isn't a pin tumbler.
And it's called a shear line, not a "sheerline".