Basically, I'm someone that's interested in the mechanical operation and defeat of locks, not so much their standalone collectability, so if this is a lock that's better suited for a collector, I'd want to get it into their hands rather than abuse it like I would

First, while reading a Corbin-Russwin manual on pinning them, I found out they were actually patented in 1889 - much earlier than I thought - which got me thinking about the logo…I've never seen this exact one before, but similar ones seem to date from the early 1900's. It's a 5-pin master ring, and all 5 chambers have ball bearings in them (dating it to pre-1950's, if I'm not mistaken). It's dirty, scuffed, etc, but is operable. No key.
I picked it open (hit the change key shear line, not the master) once, just to test for operability. Plug was already slightly deformed from use at the top of the keyway, so I didn't feel too bad about nesting a prybar up there. Before I gut it, clean it, re-pin it, etc, I just wanted to make sure I'm not destroying something that would be a nice piece in someone's collection. Photos below.



