by PherricOxide » 29 Jan 2013 14:39
I've taken up constructing my own picks from hacksaw blades, and in the process have started thinking about pick designs more. I've noticed several common rakes (snake, bogota) are shaped on both the top and bottom sides of the pick. Are there any functional reasons for this? Are such rakes actually flipped over and used both directions? Does it have any benefit for moving around the keyway? It seems that the side contacting the pins is really the only part that matters from a functional standpoint, and there's no reason they couldn't be designed like a sawtooth rake with just a flat bottom. The only functional reason I could see for this is picks that are used more like jigglers (the bogota) might have some advantage if the bottom provided a couple of useful fulcrum points for getting the pick at different angles inside the lock while jiggling.
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