Alright. So, today at work i found an old ATT calling card vending machine in a storage closet. Ever interested in discovering new things -- no matter how useless on the surface -- i checked out the locks on it. It had 2 tubular locks; seemingly one for the face to open and another for the cash box (like a pay phone). It also had a 1/4 inch head phone jack next to the cashbox lock, prehaps some sort of alarm system input? Anyway, the jack is not what caught my eye. There is a second lock on the face, set on a mechanism much like the tubular locks you see on other vending machines (soda, candy, etc) in that after unlocking it unscrews from the mechanism, thus freeing the face.
This third lock (the second on the face) is a design i have never seen before. It appears to be pin and tumbler, but the pins, tumblers and springs are aligned horizontally; very similar to how the pins are set in a tubular lock. But the pins are set in a verticle stack. Imagine if you cut the bottom out of a regular pin and tumbler lock, then turned the lock so the original key hole faced upwards, and the missing bottom was the new key hole.
So you look in the key hole and see this:
___
|O|
|O| (With the "O"s being the front -- or the keyside face, if you will -- of the pins)
|O|
|O|
-----
If you will forgive my horrible ASCII art. I would post a picture, but i am not allowed to have cameras at my place of work.
Has anyone ever seen this type of lock before? Does it have a name? I think i know how to pick it, but are there special tools or techniques?
Thank you for your time.
~Clutch13