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Help moving past padlocks?

Having read the FAQ's you are still unfulfilled and seek more enlightenment, so post your general lock picking questions here.
Forum rules
Do not post safe related questions in this sub forum! Post them in This Old Safe

The sub forum you are currently in is for asking Beginner Hobby Lock Picking questions only.

Re: Help moving past padlocks?

Postby Silverado » 22 Sep 2017 8:30

Ralph_Goodman wrote:My go-to for anything small that falls onto the floor is to take my shoes and socks off. And then I slide my feet along the floor in swooping metal detector type motions in front of me. (It has served me well with many pins, wood floors, grass, and carpets).


This is usually how I find my kids' Lego blocks...accidentally, of course.
"If you are not currently on a government watch list. You are doing something wrong" - GWiens2001
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Silverado
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Location: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

Re: Help moving past padlocks?

Postby Deja vu » 22 Sep 2017 11:52

Silverado wrote:
Ralph_Goodman wrote:My go-to for anything small that falls onto the floor is to take my shoes and socks off. And then I slide my feet along the floor in swooping metal detector type motions in front of me. (It has served me well with many pins, wood floors, grass, and carpets).


This is usually how I find my kids' Lego blocks...accidentally, of course.


Been there and done that!

Nothing like finding a Lego with your feet at 4:00am as you are heading to the bathroom.
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Re: Help moving past padlocks?

Postby AngryHatter » 24 Sep 2017 14:42

billdeserthills wrote:
AngryHatter wrote:Mr. Wizard's 7 pin stack lock is a good value for the money.

You can repin it to your hearts content. Add spools or serrated pins, master pins et cetera - all included.


I don't wanna disparage Mr Wizard,
but I think $50 for his lock is an un-necessary extravagance
Much cheaper to learn how to disassemble any standard pin tumbler
lock and load the pins with a tweezer

There are always cheaper alternatives. I found a 6 stack mortise similar to Mr. Wizards on eBay for $20.
Sometimes cost is not the primary focus.

Quality - the lock is heavy, has heft - my schlage front door is a lighter, cheaper setup than this
Supporting the "buy American" notion
Ease of repinning - with 7 stacks which is unusual, the array of possible configurations makes it an "infinite lock"
Hardware included - pins, springs, setscrews, master pins, serrated pins, spool pins
Shipping is included - not often thought of until you get to the payment page - must have cost in excess of $5 to package & ship

I bought one for my son-in-law when he saw me "in action."
He loves the thing, it's his new toy.
(Been almost a month with it)
He gives me a blow by blow description of his progress.

I think had I bought a standard lock for him, he'd be more frustrated than enthusiastic.
I wish there had been Mr. Wizard locks 40 years ago.
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