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Ultrasonics, The ultimate lock pick?????

When it comes down to it there is nothing better than manual tools for your Lock pick Set, whether they be retail, homebrew, macgyver style. DIY'ers look here.

Ultrasonics, The ultimate lock pick?????

Postby Peaky » 18 Nov 2004 6:58

After watching yet another hospital documentry on sky i noticed that the type of ultrasonics that doctors use for pregnant women are being used in a lot more differant uses and it was commented on how cheap they are becoming and how fully portable ones are being used. This got me wondering whether anyone has ever tried using one of these machines to see inside a lock whilst tring to pick it. I dont know whether it will 'see' through the wood or even the steel side of the lock but it seems like a good idea if it means you can see what levers you are lifting and to what height. Maybe somone on here has medical experiance or does/has worked in that envoiroment and can tell what the limitations of these machines are. Obviously low cost to a doctor could mean £80k but it may be worth looking into (not found one on ebay yet :lol: ) the newer ones have a pencil type probe and a small potable screen.
Peaky
 
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Postby pinky » 18 Nov 2004 7:01

all you need is a picture of the lock in your head, as long as you know whats in their and how it works, you can achieve a similar result.
if not carefull you can weigh yourself down with kit that takes 20 mins to set up before you begin picking.
pinky
 
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Postby Peaky » 18 Nov 2004 7:11

Very good point, theres also the problem of relying on technolagy that can let you down which leaves you out of practice for doing it the proper way. oh well it was only an idea.
Peaky
 
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Postby TOWCH » 18 Nov 2004 11:14

I think higher security safe locks use resin wheels to defend against this type of attack.
TOWCH
 
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Postby sj » 18 Nov 2004 19:28

I think the problem with this is ultrasonic waves only travel through liquid well. That is why doctors use a gel or pad between the detector and patient. With a cylinder lock it may work because there is solid material, but I doubt it since the whole thing would resonate rather than there being distinct pressure waves. With lever locks it wouldn't work at all since there is a big airgap between the door and the levers. X-rays do work and that is what resin wheels are needed to defend against. Two new technologies out are millimeter wave imaging and X-ray backscatter which might be more promising against resin wheels, but are expensive.
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Postby drv » 20 Nov 2004 22:58

I doubt this would work on steel

Remember Faraday's cage
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Postby sj » 21 Nov 2004 6:19

I doubt it would work on steel too, at least not without significant modification to the hardware. But it's not to do with Faradays cage, that is only for electromagnetic radiation, not sonic.
sj
 
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Postby oli-the-picka » 26 Nov 2004 20:20

In theory a high enough, powerful enough ultrasonic 'frequency' can melt steel, i was thinking of a device which causes more havoc than a standard vibrating pick by reall really giving it a shake! Just a thought
oli-the-picka
 
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Postby Romstar » 27 Nov 2004 5:21

Stick a piezo transducer on the lock, shove in a tension wrench, and tell the customer to stand back.

Way, WAY back. Then, hit the sonics. Use sub-sonic, not ultra sonic. The low frequency will resonate better, and you won't have all the dogs in the neighborhood howling.

If you don't open the lock, you'll probably break a window at the very least. :twisted:

Good luck.
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Postby Buggs41 » 27 Nov 2004 8:51

And you might be able to communicate with a submarine at the same time. :D
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Postby Romstar » 27 Nov 2004 16:37

Are they still using E.L.F. for submarines?

I better get myself a really, really long wire. :lol:

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Postby Buggs41 » 27 Nov 2004 17:17

I believe the Navy still has the antenna in northern Wisconsin. Not sure if they use it at all anymore. Now they use the E-6 ( Boeing 707 ) for most of the comm. stuff.
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Postby jason » 28 Nov 2004 5:50

When I was at University, one of the lecturers was experimenting with "infra-sound" (ultra low frequency). He set the kit up and one of the cleaners came in hit and tinkered (why??) - apparently they blew out a couple of windows (and their job)
sledgehammers make excellent back up picks!
jason
 
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Postby ne0nerdz » 7 Dec 2004 15:16

i know they use that method in the SAS , using a sort of mini radar system to locate pins in a lock. i checked the price but the mini radar thingies cost 2000 ponds sterling, about 4000 dollars, see if any of you guys can find it
thats unpossible!!
ne0nerdz
 
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Postby toomush2drink » 7 Dec 2004 15:19

"mini radar thingy" so how would that work and how do you know they use that ?
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