TOSL Project. A community project to "build a better mousetrap".
by dls » 20 Mar 2011 20:38
try this one for size. take the front of the plug with two pins and cut it off now replace it with a hardened steel one with two pins. leave a small gap for a spring then add a couple of more pins to the remainder of the plug the one key must pass through both plugs and turn them at the same time. in normal operation it will act as a normal key but in picking you would have to try to tension both plugs together, the inner keway could be slightly different to the outer to prevent the same tensioner being used which would mean that you would have to turn the outer first which would block the inner. so why the spring between the plugs? the outer plug would be able to move in and out slightly,when bumping the outer plug would move inwards slightly and if it had serrated pins it would jam in the barrel due to the axial load temporarily jamming the bumpkey. the hardened outer core could also have a second set of top pins at 45 degrees to allow it to be turned with shorter 2 pin key to the 45 position to prevent bumping and slow picking yet another advantage is that if someone wanted the barrel could have a weak point at the joint of the two plugs to reduce the risk of snapping
When picking starts to hurt take your finger out
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dls
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by vov35 » 20 Mar 2011 23:21
eh... what about using a special tensioner to just pick the back section of plug? 
The BiLock isn't the first bump proof pin tumbler because it isn't a pin tumbler. And it's called a shear line, not a "sheerline".
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by Poff » 21 Mar 2011 10:24
vov35 wrote:eh... what about using a special tensioner to just pick the back section of plug? 
Adding a side bar would require you to pick both.
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by dls » 21 Mar 2011 13:46
ok by bypassing the front plug and just turning the back one you going to block the keyway or trap the pick as soon as the plug moves the smallest amount ,im assuming that we would be using a tough profile here with little tolerance for misalignment of the two plugs. the reason for the extra pins in the back plug is to make it no easier than a normal 6 pin to pick if the outer happens to be bypassed.
as for the side bar it would tie the two plugs together and stop the spring loaded anti bump function, independant plugs is what im after the outer plug is not there as part of the main pinning thats why there are 6 pins in the inner plug its there to frustrate picking, prevent bumping, prevent snapping and add some drill protection. oh and the other idea of turning the outer to a blocking position.
When picking starts to hurt take your finger out
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dls
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by TORCH [of KCK] » 13 Jul 2016 17:49
Hey, Just signed up, & 1st time in any forms. You ARE on to something.
Reason for coming into here, Is what & where you started with.
That is... You need to incorporate 4 more elements, To the lock.
Difference between yours & mine, (Starting off) I'm set on 3 @ 2 pin plugs.
Now, the additional elements are: * front detent retainer * rear detent retainer * limitation bar * trap wafer(s)
(Between work & grind - still taking sweet time making prototype)
Dropping the tension wrench, is the subconscious screaming open before you can.
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TORCH [of KCK]
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by Daltonj21 » 13 Jul 2016 22:35
I think people call this a split core.
Success is the ability to go from one failure to the next without any loss of enthusiasm
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by mh » 13 Jul 2016 22:45
If you add sidebars to a split core, you can make it a 360 degree free spinning design, like the Chinese Yuema design - http://locktechinc.com/news/?p=670 - which is pretty cool 
"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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mh
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by TORCH [of KCK] » 14 Jul 2016 3:59
Just to clarify myself, I do not call a side bar, a limitation bar.
My use of a limitation bar Is to limit : * Degree of angle of front plugs * prevent the bypass of the front plugs
My use of a ft. & rr. Detents Is used for total plug retention * restriction directional travelS * restriction distances of travel * & just plainly hold plugs in.
Dropping the tension wrench, is the subconscious screaming open before you can.
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TORCH [of KCK]
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by TORCH [of KCK] » 14 Jul 2016 4:13
And FYI
I'm using a 6 pin (Non mortise) Schlage lock, As prototype.
So "dls" If you can complete yours, Before I.... mine, more power to you.
Dropping the tension wrench, is the subconscious screaming open before you can.
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TORCH [of KCK]
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by Squelchtone » 14 Jul 2016 12:19
TORCH [of KCK] wrote:So "dls" If you can complete yours, Before I.... mine, more power to you.
Just a heads up but last time dls wrote in this thread was 2011. He was on earlier this year but not since April. You stumbled upon a thread that has been dormant for 5 years.
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