by schoolglutton » 9 May 2005 14:45
When I first was learning about picking I always raked the pins with a rake pick and then went back to pick the remaining ones with a hook pick that I could see hanging down. Since then, I've found a way, for me at least, that works a lot better. I saw it in a video, can't take any credit. You may find the technique something you like as well.
The first crucial part is your tension wrench. You only want to apply about a pound of pressure. Apply too much and you'll be there all day with sore finger. Those pins won't be able to find the shear line if their little pin lives depended on it.
Even though I don't rake very much anymore, I do use a rake pick, the one with a bunch of teeth on it. The motion I use is a little different. It's more of a rocking. I make sure the pick gets all the way to the back of the cylinder in the lock and then start a rocking motion. Imagine a sea saw going up and down and that's what the pick looks like. I have my fingers only touching the end of the pick and doing that sea saw motion as I go from pin to pin in a general region. Just remember, go easy on that tension wrench. This doesn't sound as sophisticated as working individually from pin to pin with a hook pick, but it gets the job done. Before when I was doing it the other way it could take me 15-20 minutes sometimes. This way has varied from seconds to only a few minutes for the cylinder to turn. Give it a shot and see if it works for ya.