Lock Picking 101 Forum
A community dedicated to the fun and ethical hobby of lock picking.
       

Lock Picking 101 Home
Login
Profile
Members
Forum Rules
Frequent Forum Questions
SEARCH
View New Posts
View Active Topics


Live Chat on Discord
LP101 Forum Chat
Keypicking Forum Chat
Reddit r/lockpicking Chat



Learn How to Pick Locks
FAQs & General Questions
Got Beginner Questions?
Pick-Fu [Intermediate Level]


Ask a Locksmith
This Old Lock
This Old Safe
What Lock Should I Buy?



Hardware
Locks
Lock Patents
Lock Picks
Lock Bumping
Lock Impressioning
Lock Pick Guns, Snappers
European Locks & Picks
The Machine Shop
The Open Source Lock
Handcuffs


Member Spotlight
Member Introductions
Member Lock Collections
Member Social Media


Off Topic
General Chatter
Other Puzzles


Locksmith Business Info
Training & Licensing
Running a Business
Keyways & Key Blanks
Key Machines
Master Keyed Systems
Closers and Crash Bars
Life Safety Compliance
Electronic Locks & Access
Locksmith Supplies
Locksmith Lounge


Buy Sell Trade
Buy - Sell - Trade
It came from Ebay!


Advanced Topics
Membership Information
Special Access Required:
High Security Locks
Vending Locks
Advanced Lock Pick Tools
Bypass Techniques
Safes & Safe Locks
Automotive Entry & Tools
Advanced Buy/Sell/Trade


Locksport Groups
Locksport Local
Chapter President's Office
Locksport Board Room
 

Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

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

Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby spoja » 3 Mar 2009 5:18

Hey all,

I recently bought a Lockwood deadbolt, so I've been messing around with them. I was trying to get the plug out of the first one but as I did it I slipped and a bit of an accident occurred. My plug follower slipped out, the first key pin fell out and then the plug clicked back into its normal position, so now the first driver pin is sitting inside of the plug and I can't figure out how to open it :( I know how to re-pin a lock, as I quite easily did what I was after on the other lock (since a deadbolt comes with a pair of locks, obviously). Unfortunately I'm not quite sure how to get this driver pin down below the shear line while still being able to pick the other pins. I've been able to push it down by shoving a paperclip with a kink in it down through the pin hole, but then the paperclip gets in the way and I can't pick the rest of the pins. I tried picking the rest of the pins from the back of the cylinder and then pushing it down with the paperclip again, but somehow that didn't work.

I'd send pics but I don't really think it'd help much, since it's a pretty normal lock...there's nothing really unique or distinctive about it. It's extremely similar to this one and comes from the same product line. The only difference that I can see is that mine has two screw holes on either sides of the cylinder.
http://www.lockweb.com.au/products/product.asp?id=136&categoryID=236

Thanks!
Last edited by MBI on 25 Jan 2016 21:55, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Moved to the proper forum.
spoja
 
Posts: 9
Joined: 17 Feb 2009 4:50

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby femurat » 3 Mar 2009 6:14

Hi spoja, I think you have 2 options:
1 - shim it from the back;
2 - cut a credit card sample with the same shape of the key, then make some room for pushing down the first pin with your bent paperclip. Insert the credit card in the keyway, push down the first pin and... turn the plug!

Try to remove the "lost" pin from the keyway before starting.

Good luck :)
User avatar
femurat
Site Admin
 
Posts: 3745
Joined: 22 Sep 2008 9:06
Location: Italy

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby spoja » 3 Mar 2009 7:24

I've never tried either of those methods, both are great ideas. I think I'll try both for the sake of experience.
Thanks a lot for your help!
spoja
 
Posts: 9
Joined: 17 Feb 2009 4:50

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby 5thcorps » 3 Mar 2009 15:22

I have done this a few times myself. And the shim method always got me out of the pinch
"Save the whales, Trade them in for valuable prizes."
Image
5thcorps
 
Posts: 346
Joined: 15 Aug 2006 9:38
Location: Haunted Falls Vt.

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby spoja » 4 Mar 2009 0:54

Grr, I can't get the shim into the lock. I made one out of a coke can but there isn't enough room in the lock for it to slide in! How do you shim a lock that is too tight for a shim? I don't know how I'd get a thinner shim than this...
spoja
 
Posts: 9
Joined: 17 Feb 2009 4:50

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby spoja » 4 Mar 2009 1:29

I can't find any information on shimming a lock that isn't a padlock/combination lock :( any ideas?
spoja
 
Posts: 9
Joined: 17 Feb 2009 4:50

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby femurat » 4 Mar 2009 3:42

A can is too thick! Use the VERY thin metal strip that you can find inside of some shoplifting alarm.
Image

Cheers :)
User avatar
femurat
Site Admin
 
Posts: 3745
Joined: 22 Sep 2008 9:06
Location: Italy

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby spoja » 4 Mar 2009 4:22

That's a lot harder to get than a can :(
Any ideas how to easily get some?
spoja
 
Posts: 9
Joined: 17 Feb 2009 4:50

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby FrenchKey » 4 Mar 2009 4:30

Funny source for shims :D I will try if I can find some similar stuff.

If your can is too thick, feel free to make it thinner with very fine sand paper. I do that some times and it does the job.
I never tried manufactured shims, but that's true that some locks are very hard to shim with homemade shims !
FrenchKey
 
Posts: 180
Joined: 20 Feb 2009 3:37
Location: France

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby femurat » 4 Mar 2009 5:19

spoja wrote:That's a lot harder to get than a can :(
Any ideas how to easily get some?


Just buy something :D when you pay they demagnetize it but leave it where it is. Look inside of pockets of recently bought trousers, bags, shoes...
User avatar
femurat
Site Admin
 
Posts: 3745
Joined: 22 Sep 2008 9:06
Location: Italy

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby 5thcorps » 4 Mar 2009 10:15

spoja wrote:That's a lot harder to get than a can :(
Any ideas how to easily get some?

Has anyone ever been caught shoplifting security tags? I'd love to be there when that happens :P
"Save the whales, Trade them in for valuable prizes."
Image
5thcorps
 
Posts: 346
Joined: 15 Aug 2006 9:38
Location: Haunted Falls Vt.

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby Engineer » 4 Mar 2009 16:53

Yup! At my local supermarket (massive Asda - Part of Wal-Mart), they use the tags from bottles of alcohol as keyfobs to prevent them being stolen, or staff inadvertantly taking them home.

So, occasionally it happens...

For a good source of these types of alarm tags though, I see them a lot in DVD cases (often they try to match the colur of the case, so you don't immediately see them. Try going through your DVD cases and you might find some.
Image
Engineer
 
Posts: 584
Joined: 21 Aug 2008 14:53
Location: UK

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby Da_FoXXX » 18 Jul 2011 1:01

femurat wrote:A can is too thick! Use the VERY thin metal strip that you can find inside of some shoplifting alarm.
Image

Cheers :)

Most Bottle shops use them on their liquor. So its a double whammy! Bottle of Jack and a free Shim! :twisted:
Da_FoXXX
 
Posts: 8
Joined: 27 Jun 2011 20:47

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby Squelchtone » 18 Jul 2011 9:18

Da_FoXXX wrote:
femurat wrote:A can is too thick! Use the VERY thin metal strip that you can find inside of some shoplifting alarm.
Image

Cheers :)

Most Bottle shops use them on their liquor. So its a double whammy! Bottle of Jack and a free Shim! :twisted:


or Free bottle of Jack with every $20 shim purchase =)
Image
User avatar
Squelchtone
Site Admin
 
Posts: 11307
Joined: 11 May 2006 0:41
Location: right behind you.

Re: Help re-pinning a Lockwood deadbolt

Postby averagejoe » 18 Jul 2011 10:55

Why not go to your local "has everything" superstore and get a cheap feeler gauge set or two?
User avatar
averagejoe
 
Posts: 488
Joined: 17 Jul 2011 6:12
Location: Canada


Return to Locks

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 7 guests

cron