by Squelchtone » 30 Jun 2013 10:21
Hi and thanks for your question.
The main reason there are different length top pins is to help balance the pins stacks in the lock so the key inserts smoothly with equal spring pressure across the whole lock, this also helps with even wear over the life of the pins and cylinder.
I would say that most people use a plug follower to trap the existing top pins and old springs up in the bible, and only dump out the key pins and repin a lock leaving the top pins and springs that were already there for the old key combination, this is the quick way, but may not be the right thing to do since if a 3 cut is suddenly a 9 cut on the new key, the key may not work smoothly, the pin stack may not be high enough to keep the spring out of the plug (someone please verify this, I'm speculating), the spring may become too compressed and stop performing it's job in a pin stack that is too tall, or some other reliability issue may present itself.
If you know how to take a lock apart and you have a pin kit with the proper top pin lengths available to you, I'd say go all the way and repin it to spec.
Hope this helps,
Squelchtone
