Need help fixing or installing a lock? We welcome questions from the public here! Sorry, no automotive questions, please.
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WE DO NOT ANSWER QUESTIONS ABOUT AUTOMOTIVE OR MOTORCYCLE LOCKS OR IGNITIONS ON THIS FORUM. THIS INCLUDES QUESTIONS ABOUT PICKING, PROGRAMMING, OR TAKING APART DOOR OR IGNITION LOCKS,
by TeleCompter » 12 Feb 2016 13:39
Got this tiny chest at an estate sale, lady there didn't know what was it in and I'm unsure how to get it open without damaging the box. Never picked a lock before but I looked inside the keyhole, it has a tiny hole leading straight into the wood of the box, and has a pin on the left that is on a slanting ")" shape, but I haven't been able to push the pin up or down, any idea how I can get this open? 
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by dhk42 » 12 Feb 2016 14:01
Try pushing the "pin" sideways in the directions a key would turn.
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by TeleCompter » 12 Feb 2016 14:10
Yeah tried that, wouldnt really move it at all
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by dhk42 » 12 Feb 2016 14:24
You might need to overcome some spring tension (or rust - hit it with some we-40).
If the visible thing isn't the operating lever (could be a ward, I guess), then you'll need an L shaped piece of strong wire and you'll need to fish for it. You are looking to rotate it when you find it.
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by jimu57 » 12 Feb 2016 14:41
Bend a tang on a dinner fork and use it as a key.
jimu57
"You haven't failed until you stop trying"
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by Jacob Morgan » 12 Feb 2016 15:53
Is it a tiny chest or a suit case? Is there a manufacturer's name on it anywhere?
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by billdeserthills » 12 Feb 2016 17:20
In my shop I would just sell you a key, these locks are not that well made and can easily be broken--then you'll find there are no replacements
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by kwoswalt99- » 13 Feb 2016 23:33
I'm guessing there's only a spring loaded latch that needs to be pushed to the right. There's likely no locking elements whatsoever, and it's probably not even warded. It's unusual that it doesn't appear to have a post though, as most of those do.
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by mh » 14 Feb 2016 0:43
I think the key would be stamped from flat sheet metal and look like e.g. the second one from the left on the bottom line of this picture: http://static.zoonar.de/img/www_reposit ... f65c96.jpgOr like this: http://m.ebay.com/itm/261735879857Also, it could be that opening the lock is achieved by pushing the whole "keyhole" (the rectangular shaped protrusion) sideways (to the right, or to the left?), and this movement could be enabled / disabled by turning the key. Does that "keyhole" / "knob" move at all? Are there scratch marks from such movement?
"The techs discovered that German locks were particularly difficult" - Robert Wallace, H. Keith Melton w. Henry R. Schlesinger, Spycraft: The secret history of the CIA's spytechs from communism to Al-Qaeda (New York: Dutton, 2008), p. 210
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by Devhad » 14 Feb 2016 16:59
Soooo what was in it? Don't leave us hanging!
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by C locked » 15 Feb 2016 6:29
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