My house came with Schlage SecureKey rekeyable garbage cylinders that I found to be very easy to pick, and also very fragile.
I'm in the process of replacing them with standard 5-pin Schlage cylinders. I bought them pre-keyed to my existing key code for convenience, and I also bought some security pins with the plan of upgrading them before installing.
To my pleasant surprise, they all came with 4 spool pins installed.
To my unpleasant surprise, they are also all ridiculously easy to pick in the CCW direction. Wiggle a city rake in there a few times and they essentially just fall open.
I upgraded one with two serrated pins to match the longest bottom pins. Still easy to pick in the CCW direction.
BUT, also impossible for me to pick int the normal, CW direction, which is the direction needed to open the deadbolt.
This is comforting, but confusing.
I've read online that some locks are easier to pick in one direction than another, and that it often has to do with the peculiarities of a given lock (thus the reason for plug spinners).
However, all of the Schlage cylinders that I bought exhibit the same tendency, regardless of the top pins installed. Easy in CCW, impossible (for me) in CW.
So maybe this has to do with the peculiarities of this particular keying? They're all keyed alike. Does that mean that I'm lucky to have this keying?
Or could it be "by design" in the Schlage cylinder, and the same for any keying?
I've looked inside, and everything seems to be symmetrical, but maybe I missed something.