femurat wrote:Are you sure it's set? It may feel like it's set but it's actually not. I have an old tesa and it has serrated top and bottom pins!
This may be the case, but also one of the two hypotheses you made could be correct.
I'll try to push it further up. Maybe I'm undersetting it for lack of reach that far into the keyway. I'll try fitting in a higher curve hook.
femurat wrote:Are you sure the lock works properly?
I'm not sure, as it's one of the few in the lot that came without a key, but it looks quite clean.
Also, it has two sides, presumably identical, as it comes from a locksmith's discards. So both would have to be broken.
femurat wrote:Do you have the key? Look at it and get an idea of the bittings/height the pins need to be set to.
No key.
The lack of key, and it being a 6pin TESA, also makes me think it could be way out of my skill level. If it's something like this:
http://www.tesa.es/es/site/tesa/product ... indro-tk6/I don't think i have a chance.
femurat wrote:Try to poke around with the other pins. Feel what happens when you deliberately push each one up.
They just fall back down.
femurat wrote:Try pulsating the tension... Heck, there must be a way!
Hmm. I never tried even making the tension uneven, other than applied and released. I'll try that.
femurat wrote:Good luck

Thanks.
