intraining wrote:I greatly appreciate all the replys. Its has cleared up a few things that would have wasted alot of time and gotten me nowhere.
When it comes to lockpicking, do I need to take a course or be licensed to use/carry picks with me. I live in southern ontario. We also deal with alot of office stuff like file cabinets and desks where they loose their keys
When I'm called to deal with cabinet lock issues, before even thinking about picking I grab for my set of standard keys and master keys. Many manufacturers of office furniture use standard, off-the-shelf master-keyed disc tumbler cam locks. I have master keys for the locks Steelcase uses (mostly Chicago but also some Timerline) and the ESP and associated knock-off locks used by Hon and a number of other families of furniture. There is a great write-up done by MacGyver101 here:
viewtopic.php?f=9&t=51566 that describes how these work in the context of Haworth office furniture.
Barring a true master, I have a few "jiggler" keys that are just regular run-of-the-mill disc tumbler keys I've found will open lots of locks they're not intended to, just with the right technique. Everyone likes slightly different keys, but I'm partial to the CH751 key along with the 3 keys that come with MidAtlantic A/V products (front door, rear door and rack drawer).