jbearnolimits wrote:I've spent some time with multiple padlocks now and moved from standard padlocks to "pick resistant" padlocks. I have developed a good feel for the tension and feedback as well. So I am wondering if that would qualify me as intermediate skill level?
I do not think qualification of lock picking skill is determined by defeating marketing claims of "pick resistant" padlocks, because there are no standards for pick resistance in the first place.
jbearnolimits wrote:I mean, I am not James Bond by any means but I don't think I am still a beginner. But with all of the locks and picking methods out there how do you really know how to classify your ability? I've "mastered" a lot of things in my life but the more I know the more I realize I still have to learn.
I classify my ability based on the standard I have personally set for myself. For lock picking, it starts with the Master Lock 3D and ends on the NATO Mersey (14-lever), with 11 other locks inbetween them. Safe manipulation is still a work-in-progress, but at the very minimum is the Sargent and Greenleaf 6730, and somewhere along the way is the Chubb Manifoil Mark IV. The rest, if any, are to be determined another time.