@@Dmaclocksport great channel. I have a UK yale house lock to pick which do you think is best tool 🔧 to do this with? Tried your link to uk lock pickers wouldn't open on my phone
Great idea to pick it in place 👍 That makes life often soo much more difficult... And then the wear and gumming up of the pins... now add a customer wanting into its Van behind your shoulder and the lock becomes impossible to pick open 😂😂
As a near-novice level picker, I always recommend newbies buy a vise because that makes the job a whole lot easier. From experience, in-situ picking is almost always a much tougher game as there's usually something inhibiting you. As a contractor who knows several people who were broken into, I can say that for work trucks and vans this type of door protection is the best. Those kinds of thieves will pass these by as their normal brute-force (and now cutting) techniques don't work. Do get a lock which resists combing and raking attacks as the bad guys are learning about those bypasses now.
I had to open a lock similar that was bolted to a boiler room door as a secondry lock (always a good idea). I had to get into the room and I had misplaced the key. Took me a bit longer to get it open on the door. In the field is nearly always going to be more difficult. 🙂👍
Coincidentally I was just recently watching dark arts on this subject. I think it's always good to pick pins up and down and clockwise and anticlockwise when possible just to mix it up. Plus to you get 4 licks in one 😂. Nice one as always mate and have yourself a fantastic weekend buddy 👌🤜🤛
Great and interesting video! I'm currently working on getting my Master 6271 picked and it's interesting on the comparison. Mine did come with security pins and it looks like it's a different keyway as well.
@@BumpyBonesLocksport thanks. This keyway is open, no security pins and, once the 'security grime' was taken care of, it didn't put up too much fight! 😉👍🏻
@@Dmaclocksport Not a problem you are my go to lock guru lol!iv just been watching your 410 video as mine arrived today.I got the open pretty quick thanks to your video.cheers mate
Long time, no speak my friend- hope you're well. Oh, I'm still mooching about.😉 Nicely done- Mul-T-Pick, Lawlocks, Jimy Longs and Kronos flexes greatfully accepted!🤣 Nice, informative vid.👍 I did eventually get a 'puck lock', myself, (right time, right place and, well you know me- very much the right price!🤣) with those van shackles included and will set them up on a sheet steel 'realish' scenario- just to make life interesting. A question: why would you not approach this with a tapered bok tensioner, from the offset? 😁🔓🤘
@@petew9087 hey Pete, good to hear from you. A tapered tensioner is a good shout. I tend to go TOK out of habit I guess, plus I always forget about my tapered BOK 😁👍🏻
@@billgray7914 100% 🙏🏻 I don't envy locksmiths but do have much respect for them. I'll stick to my comfy chair and vice with a nice cup of coffee to comfort me! 😆👍🏻
@@ralphparks8654a great suggestion. I did try it actually with my Covert Companion combs but couldn't get it to work. In fact, I got the comb pick stuck in the lock for a while! 😁👍🏻
Nicely done! Like you say, picking weathered locks insitu adds a whole new level of complexity.
@@tipenengapuhi 100% 😉👍🏻
@@Dmaclocksport great channel. I have a UK yale house lock to pick which do you think is best tool 🔧 to do this with? Tried your link to uk lock pickers wouldn't open on my phone
Great demonstration of the real world challenges!!
@@jeffandthings77 thanks man 😎👍🏻
Great idea to pick it in place 👍 That makes life often soo much more difficult... And then the wear and gumming up of the pins... now add a customer wanting into its Van behind your shoulder and the lock becomes impossible to pick open 😂😂
@@LockFumbler I do have much respect for locksmiths that have all that added pressure as well as having to pick locks 😁👍🏻
As a near-novice level picker, I always recommend newbies buy a vise because that makes the job a whole lot easier. From experience, in-situ picking is almost always a much tougher game as there's usually something inhibiting you.
As a contractor who knows several people who were broken into, I can say that for work trucks and vans this type of door protection is the best. Those kinds of thieves will pass these by as their normal brute-force (and now cutting) techniques don't work. Do get a lock which resists combing and raking attacks as the bad guys are learning about those bypasses now.
Nice information
I had to open a lock similar that was bolted to a boiler room door as a secondry lock (always a good idea). I had to get into the room and I had misplaced the key. Took me a bit longer to get it open on the door. In the field is nearly always going to be more difficult.
🙂👍
@@roysammons2445 wise words Mr S 😎👍🏻
Amazing stuff my friend, thanks for sharing 👍🍻
@@johndow3490 A walk in the park for you mate, but I'm used to a vice 🤪👍🏻
Coincidentally I was just recently watching dark arts on this subject. I think it's always good to pick pins up and down and clockwise and anticlockwise when possible just to mix it up. Plus to you get 4 licks in one 😂. Nice one as always mate and have yourself a fantastic weekend buddy 👌🤜🤛
@@Nicks-Picks for sure mate. Gotta get ya moneys worth out of the locks! 😁👍🏻
Great and interesting video!
I'm currently working on getting my Master 6271 picked and it's interesting on the comparison. Mine did come with security pins and it looks like it's a different keyway as well.
@@BumpyBonesLocksport thanks. This keyway is open, no security pins and, once the 'security grime' was taken care of, it didn't put up too much fight! 😉👍🏻
Great video Dmac thank u 👊🏻
@@Dotslocks14 much appreciated. Thanks for watching todd
@@Dmaclocksport Not a problem you are my go to lock guru lol!iv just been watching your 410 video as mine arrived today.I got the open pretty quick thanks to your video.cheers mate
@@Dotslocks14 awesome, congrats on your open 😎👍🏻
@@Dmaclocksport cheers mate.it’s sad but it’s exciting getting that first open.I can’t get enough lol.have a gooden pal
Long time, no speak my friend- hope you're well.
Oh, I'm still mooching about.😉
Nicely done- Mul-T-Pick, Lawlocks, Jimy Longs and Kronos flexes greatfully accepted!🤣
Nice, informative vid.👍
I did eventually get a 'puck lock', myself, (right time, right place and, well you know me- very much the right price!🤣) with those van shackles included and will set them up on a sheet steel 'realish' scenario- just to make life interesting.
A question: why would you not approach this with a tapered bok tensioner, from the offset?
😁🔓🤘
@@petew9087 hey Pete, good to hear from you. A tapered tensioner is a good shout. I tend to go TOK out of habit I guess, plus I always forget about my tapered BOK 😁👍🏻
Do it with lock on a outside cooler when it's snowing customers waiting and temperature is at 0deg
@@billgray7914 100% 🙏🏻 I don't envy locksmiths but do have much respect for them. I'll stick to my comfy chair and vice with a nice cup of coffee to comfort me! 😆👍🏻
Is a comb pick not worth a try? The LPL posted a video where every puck lock he had succumbed immediately to that attack.
@@ralphparks8654a great suggestion. I did try it actually with my Covert Companion combs but couldn't get it to work. In fact, I got the comb pick stuck in the lock for a while! 😁👍🏻