Picked all the easy locks and want to step up your game? Further your lock picking techniques, exchange pro tips, videos, lessons, and develop your skills here.
by WeedIsMyCheat » 24 Dec 2011 5:03
I've never broken a Lock by picking 
-

WeedIsMyCheat
-
- Posts: 49
- Joined: 13 May 2007 7:43
- Location: Amsterdam
-
by chaos4zap » 28 Dec 2011 18:51
I have a padlock from Masters "Magnum" series that I broke on the second pick. The spring to one of the pins must have pushed through the top and is no longer pushing on that pin stack. I can still pick it and use the key, provided the lock is turned with the pins on the top so that gravity helps me out with that spring-less pin stack. I was in no way using excessive force, so I'm not sure how it happened. Maybe it was a fluke, or maybe these locks are just garbage.
-
chaos4zap
-
- Posts: 75
- Joined: 9 Aug 2010 18:51
- Location: Kansas City, KS
by DayZiro » 1 Feb 2012 18:18
I've never broken a lock by picking one (been at it for over half a decade) but a couple times other members in a lock sport group I go to have had a thin master pin slip out or picked a lock without a retaining clip and had it fall apart.
-
DayZiro
-
- Posts: 44
- Joined: 19 Jul 2011 4:13
by dls » 2 Feb 2012 15:51
I am now the proud owner of a chubb bankers safe with a broken pick in the bottom lock a 6k174  looks like a fatigue failure in the pick. Its well stuck so the drill is going to be busy
When picking starts to hurt take your finger out
-
dls
-
- Posts: 283
- Joined: 10 Mar 2011 16:57
- Location: ireland
by gibson » 25 Feb 2012 10:56
I've seen a few locks that other people have tried to 'pick', like finding a broken hair clip inside a cylinder that mysteriously stopped working.
-
gibson
-
- Posts: 67
- Joined: 16 Feb 2012 11:50
- Location: southeast new york
by Werxes » 9 Nov 2012 0:10
I've never broken one, but my (current) favorite lock to pick, a masterlock no. 575, seems to have gotten much more difficult. It still gives great feedback, is quite smooth, and opens fine with the key... But the lifting force on some of the pins is ridiculous when it used to be easy. This is with applying barely a feather's worth of pressure with the tension wrench. I wonder if the brass has been impressioned or something?
-
Werxes
-
- Posts: 13
- Joined: 6 Oct 2012 19:08
by Pickmequick » 8 Jan 2013 16:14
The first Yale 1A 5 pin i picked must have been well worn or badly made. Once picked, i turned it through 180 and it got stuck as they do, lifted pins or so i thought and it turned but tightly???? once i got it back, i could see part of a spring?? Stripped it and found number 3 in plug now had 2 pins in it so it had rotated leaving the spring to drop into the next gap instead of the driver pin so i now have a 4 pin cylinder when i need something easier 
-
Pickmequick
-
- Posts: 93
- Joined: 5 Oct 2012 12:02
- Location: Staffordshire, UK.
by vinnie » 9 Jan 2013 14:35
I have 2 that I used to pick a lot a lot and could do them no problem in under 10 seconds every time. then I got back to them a couple years later and have trouble picking them in 5 minutes. I'm starting to think there might have been some physical damage. If I decide to open them up I'll be sure to post back here if there is.
-
vinnie
-
- Posts: 74
- Joined: 22 Sep 2012 13:38
- Location: Ontario, Canada
by Pickmequick » 2 Feb 2013 14:32
Not 100% i have broken this one as of yet? A master 5 pin boron shackle as pictured here  It picked 1st time and opened in about a minute. I don't have the key so not sure if key retaining? The key barrel wouldn't turn back so i assumed it was. Re-locked it and tried to turn the core back but it just seemed to rock around the open position? Are these clever enough to have trap pins in?
-
Pickmequick
-
- Posts: 93
- Joined: 5 Oct 2012 12:02
- Location: Staffordshire, UK.
by femurat » 2 Feb 2013 18:13
Are you sure it's 5 pins? Mine is 4. Definitely no trap pins. Cheers 
-

femurat
- Site Admin
-
- Posts: 3745
- Joined: 22 Sep 2008 9:06
- Location: Italy
by soksavik » 2 Feb 2013 22:55
I've yet to break a lock attempting to pick it (hopefully I didn't jinx it). But I have broken several trying to take them apart or reassemble them. Anything from dropping pins or springs, struggling to replace a pin stack I've taken out, or even overtensioning a retaining screw on a cheap Defiant cylinder I got at Home Depot.
I wonder if I'm just clumsy, but I struggle to reinsert the pin stacks on my practice locks.
-
soksavik
-
- Posts: 17
- Joined: 31 Jan 2013 19:38
by Pickmequick » 3 Feb 2013 4:22
femurat wrote:Are you sure it's 5 pins? Mine is 4. Definitely no trap pins. Cheers 
Yes, definitely 5, I could feel them quite easily. It is quite a large lock with about a 12mm shackle. Is yours key retaining? Thanks.
-
Pickmequick
-
- Posts: 93
- Joined: 5 Oct 2012 12:02
- Location: Staffordshire, UK.
by femurat » 3 Feb 2013 5:48
Yes it's quite a big lock, 10 mm shackle iirc. There's a picture of mine with the original packaging in one of my old posts. Mine is not key retaining. Cheers 
-

femurat
- Site Admin
-
- Posts: 3745
- Joined: 22 Sep 2008 9:06
- Location: Italy
by Pickmequick » 3 Feb 2013 16:20
femurat wrote:Yes it's quite a big lock, 10 mm shackle iirc. There's a picture of mine with the original packaging in one of my old posts. Mine is not key retaining. Cheers 
Just read that thread. The image from here:  Shows one of the boron shackle locks with 5 pins however, I don't know what model number i picked. Reading the thread seems to show that the keyway does stop turned with lock open, maybe I just didn't turn it back hard enough for fear of damaging it beyond repair as my bad, it isn't my lock That'll teach me about picking locks in use and that aren't your own! If I can't get it back then my hand goes in my pocket for a new one! Lesson learned 
-
Pickmequick
-
- Posts: 93
- Joined: 5 Oct 2012 12:02
- Location: Staffordshire, UK.
by Pickmequick » 3 Feb 2013 18:13
Thought there was an edit button but can't find it????
Have found info on the lock as follows.....
No. M15 Excell™ Padlock
64mm laminated steel core with Titanium reinforced outer body for higher strength and reliability Exclusive octagonal boron-carbide shackle for maximum cut resistance Double deadbolt locking for added protection from prying and hammering 5-pin cylinder for increased pick resistance
-
Pickmequick
-
- Posts: 93
- Joined: 5 Oct 2012 12:02
- Location: Staffordshire, UK.
Return to Pick-Fu [Intermediate Skill Level]
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 21 guests
|