horsefeathers wrote:How many trading lockies use this?
None as this was never on a commercial market to purchase. And if others have made one they should have made a guide so we all could know what the exact gap distance would be.
I would fall over laughing if I seen a pro using this.
cumbersome? For normal locks try using a quarter as a tension wrench. Actually flat (regular) screwdrivers have worked better. For tubular locks? Well you could take a fork from your kitchen silverware drawer and bend the tongs and save yourself a bunch of time!!
This is not the most ideal tool in the industry. Steve Hampton already (indirectly) admitted that has he never had these mass produced.
I guess something else that motivated me to build Steve's dragon is the amount of frustration building up when I was trying to pick a tubular lock and having t-wrench problems; and all the while thinking "If I only had that dragon this would be a whole lot easier"!! Well now I know different and am not so aggravated when picking a tubular lock.
But now I have one, and used one, it will probably sit in the drawer with my bump keys.