Doctor Hexagon wrote:Thanks for the swift response.
It seems though that this lock may have been incorrectly reassembled. I tried using a 7 pin 0-bitted key with the 7th space cut at #1 depth. It does the same thing as the 6 pin 0-bitted key.
The plug will rotate almost a full 180 degrees in either direction, but with both the 7 and 6 pin key, it gets stopped by something at abou 170 degrees unless the key is extracted partially.
Could it be that the internals for this IC were not all reassembled properly before the core was placed back in to the housing? I'm stumped by this one, and so are the guys at the shop here.
@Doctor Hexagon:
The Yale LFIC core is a normal pin tumbler mechanism as far as the pin chambers as concerned... There are no extra sleeves or anything like that in this type of core...
All of the magic happens at the back of the core -- where the extra long key reaches.,. It is similar to a Schlage LFIC where the removal of the core just requires a key which can turn in the lock while also lifting the little piece at the rear of the core which engages the lug or retention device and allows it to be retracted as the key is turned...
If your 6 pin Yale LFIC 0 bitted core doesn't allow the core retention piece to retract when you are using a 7 pin 0 bitted key with a #1 cut on the 7th tip position then the core is broken and the retention piece is somehow unable to engage...
Are you sure that the LFIC core is a 6 pin core and not a 7 pin core ? If you have any of the old hotel style keyblanks for this keyway try cutting a #1 cut on the very tip of a 7¾ or 7½ pin blank leaving the 7 pin chamber areas uncut... Otherwise the core is broken because the key rotates freely and someone took it apart and put it back together incorrectly...
How did you obtain this core ?
Has anyone ever tried to take it apart ?
Does this core have the spring cap over the pinning chambers or is it an older style which requires the plug to be removed to re-key it ?
~~ Evan