So I've just realized that the most challenging lock I own, with the exception of a Bell style lock I've had 0 luck with and a couple that are flat impossible with the tools I currently have available (too paracentric for my fat picks), is a Master. But not just any Master. It's one of those plastic safety lockout locks. And I suppose a good chunk of the difficulty is a fluke of the bitting and binding order. The first binder is a very low cut pin (4 or 5 I think) with a 0 cut spool (maybe a serrated spool) right behind it and a 1 cut right behind that. That plus the paracentric keyway and my fat picks (side note, I've got some 0.015" hooks coming in the mail) makes it really tough.
So I've got two questions. Given that these things really aren't all that expensive - this was cheaper than my #5 - why is Master still selling the locks we all love to make fun of so much when they could drop this core in them and have decent locks? (semi-rhetorical). And also why is the only decent Master core I've come across in a PLASTIC lock?
Second and less rhetorical, has anyone gutted one of these things? I'm very curious what's in them but I'm reluctant to destroy my lock just to satisfy my curiosity.