THE starting place for new members. FAQ's, instructions on how to pick a lock, valuable information like product reviews, links to lock picking related sites, forum rules, lockpicking tool vendors, and more. START HERE.
by Gantry » 16 Jul 2018 18:02
Found this rekey kit in a hardware store for the home owner. It was $13 U.S. and can rekey 6 locks. It does come with everything you need to rekey a Kwikset knob or deadbolt but I'm not to sure how well the "average" home owner would do using it, especially on a knob?  What really made me stop a take a picture of it is the bitting on the key! They had 2 of these kits for sale and BOTH had this some type of bitting (different bitting from each other but just as bad). They are on clearance which is probably a good thing... 
-
Gantry
- Supporter

-
- Posts: 151
- Joined: 19 Nov 2006 18:31
- Location: Ocala, FL
by billdeserthills » 16 Jul 2018 20:48
Years ago I used a similar kit to rekey my rental home deadbolts, I'd like to see the victim, err homeowner use the included tweezers to reload some dropped top pins-- Also this is the first kit I've seen that includes a tool to remove the lock cylinder from a knob lock, I bet it isn't easy doing that for the first time...
-
billdeserthills
-
- Posts: 3827
- Joined: 19 Mar 2014 21:11
- Location: Arizona
by stratmando » 17 Jul 2018 7:28
Looks like the Handle also the follower
-
stratmando
-
- Posts: 1221
- Joined: 26 Nov 2005 21:54
- Location: Florida Keys
by demux » 17 Jul 2018 9:59
And as if the bitting wasn't already bad enough by itself, they then go and put the key right in the front of the package in plain view where any old person can go and take a pic and post it on the internet. Darn it, now I need to go and return my "126" do-it-yourself Kwikset rekey kit that I just got the other day to lock up all my really important stuff.  (Just kidding of course.)
-
demux
-
- Posts: 510
- Joined: 27 Apr 2017 11:14
- Location: Indiana, USA
by Gantry » 17 Jul 2018 14:46
demux wrote:And as if the bitting wasn't already bad enough by itself, they then go and put the key right in the front of the package in plain view where any old person can go and take a pic and post it on the internet. Darn it, now I need to go and return my "126" do-it-yourself Kwikset rekey kit that I just got the other day to lock up all my really important stuff.  (Just kidding of course.)
LOL, Very funny Demux!
-
Gantry
- Supporter

-
- Posts: 151
- Joined: 19 Nov 2006 18:31
- Location: Ocala, FL
by jeffmoss26 » 17 Jul 2018 17:34
Those are great for business!
"I tried smoking a blank once. I was never able to keep the tip lit long enough to inhale." - ltdbjd
-
jeffmoss26
-
- Posts: 1090
- Joined: 13 Jan 2012 15:01
- Location: Cleveland, OH
by demux » 18 Jul 2018 9:54
jeffmoss26 wrote:Those are great for business!
Yeah, in all seriousness, I have seen them in a few stores in my area, and my first thought has always been, "Wow, someone buying this who is unfamiliar with the internal operation/maintenance of pin tumbler locks stands a much greater chance of just screwing the whole thing up than of successfully rekeying their lock." Never actually purchased one, I've got a LAB universal set and can do many more locks of many more brands/types than you can with these, and I'd bet that I paid much less per pin on the universal set as well. 
-
demux
-
- Posts: 510
- Joined: 27 Apr 2017 11:14
- Location: Indiana, USA
by AaronBurr » 23 Jul 2018 4:10
They have the same kit on Amazon as well. I recently bought it for the pins, the plug follower (got tired of using cooking spoons), and the cylinder remover. Not for re-keying. As you might expect, the plastic tweezers that come with the package are garbage.
-

AaronBurr
-
- Posts: 6
- Joined: 12 Jul 2018 3:16
- Location: US
by jwrm22 » 23 Jul 2018 11:41
I like it how these are sold in the USA. If I want something similar in Europe they call me a criminal. Seriously I wish I could just go to the hardware store and pick up blanks and stuff like this.
-
jwrm22
-
- Posts: 137
- Joined: 26 Sep 2017 12:27
by billdeserthills » 23 Jul 2018 19:05
jwrm22 wrote:I like it how these are sold in the USA. If I want something similar in Europe they call me a criminal. Seriously I wish I could just go to the hardware store and pick up blanks and stuff like this.
I haven't seen any blanks for sale at my hardware stores See them on E-bay all the time & they don't seem to realize standard key blanks start around .16 cents apiece in the bulk pack
-
billdeserthills
-
- Posts: 3827
- Joined: 19 Mar 2014 21:11
- Location: Arizona
by trogfield » 24 Jul 2018 0:13
I got this kit on Amazon expecting the bidding to be more different, but it turned out to be exactly the same as one in this picture with barely any variation in pin depth. I got it to rekey my brother's practice padlock, but it's kind of pointless because all the pins are the same.
-
trogfield
-
- Posts: 14
- Joined: 29 Mar 2018 19:01
by demux » 24 Jul 2018 9:23
trogfield wrote:I got this kit on Amazon expecting the bidding to be more different, but it turned out to be exactly the same as one in this picture with barely any variation in pin depth. I got it to rekey my brother's practice padlock, but it's kind of pointless because all the pins are the same.
Heh. Knowing how certain companies like to cut any corner possible to make an extra $0.000001, it wouldn't surprise me if there were only some very small number of these that actually existed, and everyone who's ever purchased one to rekey their locks now has the same key. Or the same one of 5, 10, whatever keys. Yet another reason to either learn how to do it right, or bring it to someone who knows how to do it right. 
-
demux
-
- Posts: 510
- Joined: 27 Apr 2017 11:14
- Location: Indiana, USA
Return to Lock Picking 101 - FAQs, Tutorials, and General Information
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests
|