I was just thinking about the oft-used analogy of the little balls on a corporate guy's desk that demonstrate conservation of energy. You let two balls go, two balls on the other side respond. One ball, and one ball responds. I have read that this is not the true metaphor for what is happening in a lock being bumped with regard to the laws of physics, but if you have a master pin that without a key in the lock is resting across the shear line so that some is above and some is below, I would think that bumping this lock would cause the top pin to bounce up but the master pin would stay in the exact same place.
Master pins make picking much easier, but could putting a large .120 master pin in the lock make it unusually hard to bump because of the tendency of the force of the bump to be transferred through that pin and into the top pin??