Lock Picking 101 Forum
A community dedicated to the fun and ethical hobby of lock picking.
       

Lock Picking 101 Home
Login
Profile
Members
Forum Rules
Frequent Forum Questions
SEARCH
View New Posts
View Active Topics


Live Chat on Discord
LP101 Forum Chat
Keypicking Forum Chat
Reddit r/lockpicking Chat



Learn How to Pick Locks
FAQs & General Questions
Got Beginner Questions?
Pick-Fu [Intermediate Level]


Ask a Locksmith
This Old Lock
This Old Safe
What Lock Should I Buy?



Hardware
Locks
Lock Patents
Lock Picks
Lock Bumping
Lock Impressioning
Lock Pick Guns, Snappers
European Locks & Picks
The Machine Shop
The Open Source Lock
Handcuffs


Member Spotlight
Member Introductions
Member Lock Collections
Member Social Media


Off Topic
General Chatter
Other Puzzles


Locksmith Business Info
Training & Licensing
Running a Business
Keyways & Key Blanks
Key Machines
Master Keyed Systems
Closers and Crash Bars
Life Safety Compliance
Electronic Locks & Access
Locksmith Supplies
Locksmith Lounge


Buy Sell Trade
Buy - Sell - Trade
It came from Ebay!


Advanced Topics
Membership Information
Special Access Required:
High Security Locks
Vending Locks
Advanced Lock Pick Tools
Bypass Techniques
Safes & Safe Locks
Automotive Entry & Tools
Advanced Buy/Sell/Trade


Locksport Groups
Locksport Local
Chapter President's Office
Locksport Board Room
 

Threaded Chambers Issues

Picked all the easy locks and want to step up your game? Further your lock picking techniques, exchange pro tips, videos, lessons, and develop your skills here.

Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby Korver15 » 7 Sep 2015 1:41

Really struggling getting a feel for my Assa V10 threaded chambers with the new assa pins. I can progressively pin up to 4 and then I can never seem to get the 5th pin. I just cant get a handle on what kind of feedback/sounds I am exactly looking for. Anyone have an insight? :mrgreen:
User avatar
Korver15
 
Posts: 102
Joined: 15 Apr 2015 15:05
Location: Northwest, IA

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby Squelchtone » 7 Sep 2015 9:23

threaded chambers?

do you mean counter-milled plugs done at the factory so the top spool pins get stuck? or did you thread your hollow chambers yourself using a tap and die for some home brew project?
Image
User avatar
Squelchtone
Site Admin
 
Posts: 11307
Joined: 11 May 2006 0:41
Location: right behind you.

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby GWiens2001 » 7 Sep 2015 10:52

Do you mean the countermilled pin channels in the plug?

Gordon
Just when you finally think you have learned it all, that is when you learn that you don't know anything yet.
User avatar
GWiens2001
Site Admin
 
Posts: 7550
Joined: 3 Sep 2012 16:24
Location: Arizona, United States

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby Korver15 » 7 Sep 2015 11:14

GWiens2001 wrote:Do you mean the countermilled pin channels in the plug?

Gordon
Squelchtone wrote:threaded chambers?

do you mean counter-milled plugs done at the factory so the top spool pins get stuck? or did you thread your hollow chambers yourself using a tap and die for some home brew project?


Upon closer examination of the plug it seems that, while it looks like threads, it is in fact multiple counter milled rings. So yes, this is what I am struggling with. :)
User avatar
Korver15
 
Posts: 102
Joined: 15 Apr 2015 15:05
Location: Northwest, IA

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby GWiens2001 » 7 Sep 2015 12:29

You will have to turn the plug backwards slightly to get them to set. It is very difficult to learn, but it can be done.

Gordon
Just when you finally think you have learned it all, that is when you learn that you don't know anything yet.
User avatar
GWiens2001
Site Admin
 
Posts: 7550
Joined: 3 Sep 2012 16:24
Location: Arizona, United States

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby kwoswalt99- » 7 Sep 2015 13:33

For locks that don't provide much feedback, I like tension wrenches that fit very tightly in the keyway.
kwoswalt99-
 
Posts: 1218
Joined: 17 Mar 2015 15:35
Location: Somewhere.

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby Korver15 » 7 Sep 2015 13:45

GWiens2001 wrote:You will have to turn the plug backwards slightly to get them to set. It is very difficult to learn, but it can be done.

Gordon


But how do you know which is the binding pin? It seems that I just push up on some pins, I believe I set a couple, and then cant find which to push up on. I hypothesized that if I would rotate the plug to a location before the edges of pins enter the countermilled chamber, while still allowing pins to be set, I would be able to get feedback, but this doesn't seem to be the case. With the new assa pins that distance between those two points is even smaller, so it seems they fall down if I release pressure.

kwoswalt99- wrote:For locks that don't provide much feedback, I like tension wrenches that fit very tightly in the keyway.


Do you make your own tension wrenches? I have a dozen or so bought wrenches, but while some fit snug there seems to always be a little play unless I force one into the keyway.

Sorry for the ramble, I'm just seeing if it relates and if anyone can discern how I should improve.
User avatar
Korver15
 
Posts: 102
Joined: 15 Apr 2015 15:05
Location: Northwest, IA

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby kwoswalt99- » 7 Sep 2015 14:53

Yeah, I make everything myself. Even though I've never played with one of these, intead I would try finding the binder, and continue past to the shearline before I set the others. I don't know if a pin will set at the shear line without setting the other pins first though.
kwoswalt99-
 
Posts: 1218
Joined: 17 Mar 2015 15:35
Location: Somewhere.

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby Korver15 » 8 Sep 2015 19:53

kwoswalt99- wrote:Yeah, I make everything myself. Even though I've never played with one of these, intead I would try finding the binder, and continue past to the shearline before I set the others. I don't know if a pin will set at the shear line without setting the other pins first though.


What do you use to make them? What thicknesses? Then to actually get it into the keyway do you file it down?
User avatar
Korver15
 
Posts: 102
Joined: 15 Apr 2015 15:05
Location: Northwest, IA

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby kwoswalt99- » 8 Sep 2015 20:29

Do you mean what materials, or what tools? I don't measure the thicknesses, I just make them as I need them, and simply fit them to the lock. My materials vary widely, sometimes I just pick up stuff off the street and make picks and wrenches out of them.
kwoswalt99-
 
Posts: 1218
Joined: 17 Mar 2015 15:35
Location: Somewhere.

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby Squelchtone » 8 Sep 2015 21:20

Korver15 wrote:
GWiens2001 wrote:You will have to turn the plug backwards slightly to get them to set. It is very difficult to learn, but it can be done.

Gordon


But how do you know which is the binding pin? It seems that I just push up on some pins, I believe I set a couple, and then cant find which to push up on. I hypothesized that if I would rotate the plug to a location before the edges of pins enter the countermilled chamber, while still allowing pins to be set, I would be able to get feedback, but this doesn't seem to be the case. With the new assa pins that distance between those two points is even smaller, so it seems they fall down if I release pressure.

kwoswalt99- wrote:For locks that don't provide much feedback, I like tension wrenches that fit very tightly in the keyway.


Do you make your own tension wrenches? I have a dozen or so bought wrenches, but while some fit snug there seems to always be a little play unless I force one into the keyway.

Sorry for the ramble, I'm just seeing if it relates and if anyone can discern how I should improve.


simply put, more practice. It feels like you might be trying to rush your way into picking an ASSA, those things are no joke, so take your time and if it takes you the next year to open one fully pinned, then thats what it takes, it's not like, Master lock, then Schlage, then ASSA Twin, for some folks it takes a few years of beating all the other locks before you move up to that level.

unpin the whole lock and remove the side bar pins and springs and side bar. pin up 2 pin stacks, then shift which 2 pin stacks are pinned up until you can easily figure out by feel and feedback which one is setting and which one is getting stuck in the top pins. Examine your top pins and if they are only spooled on one end, flip them over so they are no longer spooled and pick the lock to shear with those in the lock and again, only 2 pin stacks at a time and shift which chambers have those 2.. example.. pin up 1 and 2, 1 and 6 , 2 and 3, 2 and 5, 5 an 6, etc. then and only then add another pin stack. And if you want to know what a set pin is like and what a pin caught on the counter milling feels/looks like and how much rotation the plug gives, then just pin up 1 chamber and move it around from from to back of the lock to see if its the same feel/rotation be it in pin stack 1 or in 3 or deep in 6. If the plug turns and keeps turning, then obviously you set that one pin correctly and the lock is picked. If you lift the pin and the plug does not turn, then it's underset, stuck on a spool, or overset. (I know this is obvious stuff, but might as well get it down on paper)

I think too many people pin up progressively in order of pin stack 1, then 2, then 3, then 4 until the whole lock is pinned up.

Keep practicing, there are no easy answers or tips we can provide to tell which one is the binding pin. Only you can know that, in person, in front of the lock, as you're picking it.

Squelchtone
Image
User avatar
Squelchtone
Site Admin
 
Posts: 11307
Joined: 11 May 2006 0:41
Location: right behind you.

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby FarmerFreak » 8 Sep 2015 22:48

Korver15 wrote:But how do you know which is the binding pin?

Push the key pin up until it makes contact with the driver pin. Then gently push it up another 5 thousands of an inch. Was it springy? If so, it isn't the binding pin. If it didn't budge at all, it is the binding pin. If you can't detect the springiness on a correctly set pin, you need more practice feeling for the springiness.

To get practice, take a lock that you can already single pin pick. Set some of the pins, not all of the pins. Then feel the pins. Feel the set pins and the binding pins, and the non-binding non-set pins.

No excuses. Finding a binding pin when there is a spring on the other end of it is always the same. Kwikset to Assa, it makes no difference.

NOTE: Finding the binding pin and setting all the pins are two completely different problems. :twisted: For each Assa cylinder, If you haven't spent 30+ minutes trying to pick it. Then you haven't even started.
FarmerFreak
 
Posts: 737
Joined: 21 Apr 2009 11:58
Location: SLC, Utah

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby Korver15 » 8 Sep 2015 23:59

Squelchtone wrote:simply put, more practice. It feels like you might be trying to rush your way into picking an ASSA, those things are no joke, so take your time and if it takes you the next year to open one fully pinned, then thats what it takes, it's not like, Master lock, then Schlage, then ASSA Twin, for some folks it takes a few years of beating all the other locks before you move up to that level.
Squelchtone


Me rushing is probably the case, but I will say that I worked my way passed American locks. I repinned and repinned Americans making it harder. When I got bored with those I read the many posts about what to get after that and most said pick a high security lock. I read Open in 30 Seconds acquired some Medecos, non sidebar Assas, the V10, Mul T Lock classics, evvas, trioving, basicly anything that I knew was harder than american :D. And I have been able to pick many of them consistently.

FarmerFreak wrote:No excuses. Finding a binding pin when there is a spring on the other end of it is always the same. Kwikset to Assa, it makes no difference.


Does that still apply when the pin falls into the countermilled chamber then it seizes up the cylinder? Or is there always some form of feedback that I have to develop a refined feel for?

Maybe I have been accidentally using the wrong terminology :?

I greatly appreciate the posts keep the critiques coming! :D
User avatar
Korver15
 
Posts: 102
Joined: 15 Apr 2015 15:05
Location: Northwest, IA

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby Korver15 » 9 Sep 2015 0:04

But yes I do understand that practice is the key. But knowing what to feel for makes the practice more efficient 8)
User avatar
Korver15
 
Posts: 102
Joined: 15 Apr 2015 15:05
Location: Northwest, IA

Re: Threaded Chambers Issues

Postby Squelchtone » 9 Sep 2015 7:38

Korver15 wrote:But yes I do understand that practice is the key. But knowing what to feel for makes the practice more efficient 8)


let me restate it in another way.. we cannot tell you any more over the internet what to feel for when an Assa twin spool pin catches the countermilling than for an NFL quarterback to tell someone on an internet forum what the grip on the football should feel like to throw a perfect pass. With practice you wont have to ask what to feel for, you'll just pick the lock and go, oh, that's what the feels like when it's set properly, or oh that's what it's like when it catches on a spool.

make sense?

Squelchtone
Image
User avatar
Squelchtone
Site Admin
 
Posts: 11307
Joined: 11 May 2006 0:41
Location: right behind you.

Next

Return to Pick-Fu [Intermediate Skill Level]

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 18 guests