When it comes down to it there is nothing better than manual tools for your Lock pick Set, whether they be retail, homebrew, macgyver style. DIY'ers look here.
by HorizonSon » 6 Apr 2013 14:53
Here is the list of my first order I placed: Peterson Pry Bar - 0.050 Peterson Pry Bar - Lite 0.040 Tension Wrench - Long Twist Flex Tension Tool - Double Wishbone Tulip Tension Tool Straight Short Hook Pick with Metal Handle Large Diamond Pick with Metal Handle Long Hook Pick with Metal Handle Small Diamond Pick with Metal Handle S Rake with Metal Handle Key Extractor with Metal Handle Please let me know if I chose wisely 
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HorizonSon
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by easy-e » 8 Apr 2013 17:04
Looks like my first order but I went with picks without handles. I wish I had found the Pry Bar's earlier...they are fantastic!
I use a short hook for the majority of the locks I have. Buying a big set isn't always a great idea so I think you make a very wise decision with your purchase!
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easy-e
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by HorizonSon » 8 Apr 2013 18:09
Thank you for the reply  . I was starting to feel invisible  Looking forward to kick-starting this fun, all-weather, hobby! 
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HorizonSon
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by easy-e » 8 Apr 2013 18:21
Good luck!
There are tons of "What should I buy threads" but you seem to be on the right track. There is no right or wrong way to go, it mostly boils down to personal preference which can only be determined by experience and trying different brands and profiles.
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easy-e
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by fgarci03 » 8 Apr 2013 18:57
My personall choices would ditch the twist flex tension wrench, the large diamond and the key extractor. But hey, it's a PERSONALL CHOICE! I think you chose well to tell the truth. I still don't have pry bars and I'll be getting them soon I hope. Looking forward to see your picked locks 
Go ahead, keep plugging away, picking on me! You will end up on bypass or with rigor mortise. - GWiens2001
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fgarci03
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by HorizonSon » 8 Apr 2013 19:36
I can open a lil black masterlock, which has one (or more?) spool pins, with a modified bobby pin and a tension tool... But the cheap, made-in-China, Wally-World lock gives me hell  I modified the bobby pin before I knew of ideal configurations (was a year ago). Just now picked them back up again, this last week, with same results as before... Looking forward to practice, practice, practicing with real picks and nice tension tools 
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HorizonSon
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by fgarci03 » 8 Apr 2013 19:40
I don't own any masterlocks so I can't tell you how many spools they have. About the cheap one giving you hell, it happens to me. I have cheap 4 and 5 pin locks that give me hell to pick, but I can pick an American Padlock with serrated pins/spools in under 3 minutes most of the times. The cheap chinese are very difficult to me because of the extreme tight keyway mainly. But their feedback is also not very accurate... The world is full of strange things 
Go ahead, keep plugging away, picking on me! You will end up on bypass or with rigor mortise. - GWiens2001
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fgarci03
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by Luissen » 9 Apr 2013 4:47
fgarci03 wrote:I don't own any masterlocks so I can't tell you how many spools they have. About the cheap one giving you hell, it happens to me. I have cheap 4 and 5 pin locks that give me hell to pick, but I can pick an American Padlock with serrated pins/spools in under 3 minutes most of the times. The cheap chinese are very difficult to me because of the extreme tight keyway mainly. But their feedback is also not very accurate... The world is full of strange things 
I've been given hell by "Gooldor" and "Tri-circle" locks because the keyway, but mechanically, they're not particularly well made. When I broke my Tri-circle 261's keyway, I raked it accidentally with the back of my long hook
If it works, it ain't wrong!  -GWiens2001
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by GWiens2001 » 9 Apr 2013 5:38
The cheap padlocks, whether they are from a discount dollar/euro store, Walmart, or grocery store frequently have a plastic shell. That can make things difficult, especially if you use too much tension. Took one apart in this thread. Did so for fun. But please keep the discussion away from destructive entry if you look at that thread! Gordon
Just when you finally think you have learned it all, that is when you learn that you don't know anything yet.
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by HorizonSon » 12 Apr 2013 13:42
Have yet to receive my purchased picks. However; I've been practicing, and had a bit of a "break-through" last night.  My success rate has gone WAY up, and time taken WAY down: "Slow is smooth, smooth is fast." The little Masterlock seems to have two spool driver pins in position 2 and 4. I'm successful (on average) about 1 out of 5 attempts; and get a "false set" 2 or 3 times out of 5, from the spool pins. The cheap Wally-World lock needs an incredibly light hand. It does not appear to have security pins. Though; between the rough pins and weak springs, I have next to no feedback  Granted, I am using a modified bobby pin, LOLz... My success rate is about the same as the Masterlock: roughly 1 of 4~5 attempts.
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by fgarci03 » 12 Apr 2013 14:24
You said you get a false set 2 or 3 times out of 5. I may be wrong, but you sound like to reset everything when that happens. Is it what you do?
When you get a false set from the spools, it actually gets easier to pick the lock. You need to find the pins which are in false set and properly set them. To do it, you need to try to lift each pin a little bit more, and decrease the amount of tenstion a little bit. When you do it, 1 of 3 things may happen: nothing at all (which means it's a set pin, so leave it alone); feel the pin lift further without any setting (which means this was a setted pin and you have used to much force to lift it further and have oversetted it); or feel a small counter-rotation in the plug (which means it's a spool). This is what you should be looking for. Keep lifting it untill it clicks and returns to a false set. Do that as many times as necessary untill there are no more spools.
In the process you may feel some already setted pins falling down. That means you setted them with the wrong binding order (it happens with spools) and need to set them again after setting that spool. So not everytime you set a spool after the false set, it returns to false set.
It's not necessary to always use light tension, I use medium tension to find the binding pin and decrease it while I lift it untill it sets. The only thing you need to watch out for now is not oversetting the pins.
Go ahead, keep plugging away, picking on me! You will end up on bypass or with rigor mortise. - GWiens2001
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fgarci03
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by HorizonSon » 12 Apr 2013 17:04
Thank you for the excellent advise  It sounds like I'm on the right track, based on your reply. As for not resetting the pins. The #4 is a spool AND the first to bind  So I usually release tension to a full reset. Though; I have "backed off and continued" when the #2 spool was "false set"  I've only successfully done that 2~3 times thus far. The cheap Wally-World lock has a very tight binding order  I am happy to report that I am getting them (on average) on my second or third attempt as of today  Think I need a few new locks, as I now know these two, too well :p
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HorizonSon
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by fgarci03 » 12 Apr 2013 21:04
HorizonSon wrote:I've only successfully done that 2~3 times thus far.
My advice is for you to keep getting to that false set on purpose and practice what it feels like to properly set it. The amount of tension and lift force needed. HorizonSon wrote:Think I need a few new locks, as I now know these two, too well :p
Absolutely agree! With new locks you find new challenges and always learn something new. Even if they are easy ones. So, expand your confort zone, and in a few months you'll be picking most locks right out of the box HorizonSon wrote:I am happy to report that I am getting them (on average) on my second or third attempt as of today 
Congratulations on that! 
Go ahead, keep plugging away, picking on me! You will end up on bypass or with rigor mortise. - GWiens2001
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fgarci03
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