View Single Post
  #443   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
Califbill Califbill is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Oct 2012
Posts: 3,510
Default Had to share this story

wrote:
On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:46 -0600, Califbill
wrote:

wrote:
On Sat, 01 Nov 2014 15:01:23 -0400, KC wrote:

Again, I agree. Youtube all you want, then try it. I tried to Youtube a
lock for our trailer, the technique, perfectly applied failed miserably.
When I was a kid I decided that since I kept losing house keys, I would
just make a pic set and learn to pick the locks around the house. I was
always pretty good with tools and such, had a friend who helped me make
the tools (his dad did locksmithing) but never actually had success with
a 5 pin houselock and rakepick...

Lock picking just takes the touch,. Once you get the hang of it, you
can do it.
You put tension on the cylinder and probe each pin, feeling for the
spot that it lines up, when you get them all, the lock turns.
A high quality "pin" lock, where the tolerances are tight, can be
tough, those with the wafers like a desk drawer lock are trivial.
They have vibrating picks that are a lot easier to use

Or you just make a bump key ;-)


Some of the door locks are really hard to pick, as they have a notch in the
pin to defeat the pressure method. But lots of locks are easy to pick.
When I started at NCR we all made lock picks to open registers that the
customer lost the keys, and we did not want to go to the office to get a
copy.


The IBM register locks were the wafer design and very easy to pick. I
imagine NCR used the same type of lock.
I think we only had about 12 keys anyway. I carried 2 on my key chain
that opened about half the registers in Ft Myers.


I still have a ring of about 50 different keys. Over the years the keys
were different sizes.