The Complete Book of Locks and Locksmithing, 7th Edition, by Bill Phillips, copyright 2017, ISBN 978-1-25-983468-4, 648 pages, 7 1/4" X 9"
This book is the first locksmithing book that a lot of hobbyists first read, myself included. It is fairly comprehensive, and it is published by McGraw-Hill and is therefore marketed to bookstores, libraries, etc., so it is very attainable.
Contents:
1. Lock history
2. Tools
3. Types of locks and keys
4. Warded locks
5. Lever tumbler locks
6. Disc tumbler locks
7. Pin tumbler locks
8. High security locks
9. Masterkeying
10. Smart Locks
11. Buying and selling safes
12. Keyed padlocks
13. Home and business services
14. Lock picking and impressioning
15. Automotive
16. Opening locked cars
17. Forced entry
18. Combination locks
19. Electrical access control
20. Working as a locksmith
21. Key duplication machines
First, some background on the book. In front of me is a 2nd edition (C.A. Roper 1983), a 5th edition (Phillips 2001), and the 7th edition (Phillips 2017). The first couple of editions were written by C.A. Roper. Then Roper and Phillips co-authored. Then later on Phillips was listed as the sole author.
Compared to the 5th edition, the 7th edition does have an improved section on picking and impressioning (but not without issues), but probably beneath nearly everyone on this website. It also has a new chapter on smart locks--a 10 page chapter that gives a paragraph or two description of some smart locks like the Kevo, Haven, Gogi, etc. Basically a description of each unit, and then the instruction sheet for Kevo. What it does not have is a broad discussion of Bluetooth versus wireless ethernet, how it fits into home automation and networking, security concerns, etc. Unless those ten pages are of interest, buy the 5th edition used and save some money.
Regarding the different editions, the main difference between the 5th and 2nd editions was that the 2nd edition had a chapter on the Schlage wafer lock and that the 5th edition had a lot of cut-and-paste vendor instruction sheets added to it along with some now very dated automotive chapters. All the editions have some merit, but if a new person was starting out they would not really be any worse off with the 5th edition, or even the 2nd. The basic fundamentals are all there in the 2nd edition, and most of the 2nd edition survives verbatim in the 5th and 7th editions. Used on Amazon right now, the 7th edition is running in the low $20's used and $38 new. A used 5th edition is $5 and change, and a 2nd edition is far less than that.
The 7th edition is simply is not a good update over the 5th (and presumably 6th) editions. The 5th edition I bought in 2002. I thought it was interesting and comprehensive, but even then, parts of it seemed dated. And all those dated parts are still there in the 7th edition, 16 years later.
Under locksets it goes over Corbin 900 series, Mag Ultra 700 deadbolts, and Schlage G series (22 pages on Schlage G alone). Someone from the other picking site posted photos of the Schlage G here http://s1155.photobucket.com/user/Altashot/slideshow/Schlage%20G%20series because it was so rare he thought others might like to see it. It went out of production in 1981 and Phillips devotes 22 pages on how to install it 36 years later? Is there really that much new-old stock out there somewhere? But there is nothing on Kwikset SmartKey, Schlage SecureKey, or even how to use a Weiser KIK shim.
Under automobiles it does not cover any technology past GM VATS. It goes over AMC cars. On car opening it does not mention long-reach tools that are popular these days and again, the 2017 edition appears to be exactly the same as the 5th edition. The automotive portion is really a joke at this point, unless one only works on twenty to thirty-year old cars.
The picking chapter was improved, better graphics, but it does something a little bizarre. It does not have one word on how to pick security pins, but then it offers a paragraph of advice a piece on how to pick Assa, Primus, and Medeco. Still nothing about picking security pins, but it goes over how to maybe wiggle the Medeco pins so the sidebar will not be a problem.
The whole edition has a lot of dated content: when was the last time someone installed a Dialoc or a Memorilock? It goes over the Alarm Lock Memorilock but not the Alarm Lock Trilogy. It goes over the Simplex 1000, but has no mention of the severe vulnerability that was discovered to exist some time ago (look up Bosnian Bill or one of the DefCon presentations).
For being the complete book of Locksmithing it seems to completely miss door closers and anything much to do with life safety codes, ADA, etc. The chapter on working as a locksmith makes no mention of the option of being a mobile locksmith, and advertising is mainly concerned about hanging a good sign in front of the shop. The year 2017: maybe time to go over websites, dealing with scammers, how to advertise in the era of smart phones, etc?
The book really does not go into cutting keys by code in detail and while it goes over the Framon DBM-1 flat key duplicator (what locksmith does not have one of those in their van?), it does not mention the Framon #2 or the HPC 1200, much less one of the more recent key machines that are driven by tablets that can decode and duplicate keys to factory spec, or automatically originate them by code.
There is no meaningful discussion of interchangeable core locks. It gives a picture of one, but does not really go into enough detail to actually do anything. The high security locks did not change between the 7th and 5th editions: Primus, Kaba dimple locks, and Medeco. Did not see anything about disc detainer locks, Mul-T-Lock, BiLock, etc., in the book.
Where the book does have value is in a fairly comprehensive treatment of the basics: types of locks, how they work, how to rekey them, etc. Basically what was in the 2nd edition from 1983. Or what is in Rathjen's book http://www.lockpicking101.com/viewtopic.php?f=50&t=63676. Phillip's Locksmithing book http://www.lockpicking101.com/viewtopic.php?f=50&t=63687is just about as good in some respects. My personal recommendation for someone new would be to buy an old course binder from Foley-Belsaw or the Locksmithing Institute http://www.lockpicking101.com/viewtopic.php?f=50&t=63725, which might be found on eBay for less than the list price of this book.
The 5th edition is on my shelf and I plan on keeping it, but I am glad that I borrowed the 7th edition from the library instead of paying for one. Bottom line, if you want the basics in one book then get The Complete Book of Locks and Locksmithing, but get the cheapest one you can find and do not worry about which edition it is.