Thanks a lot for this video, it always amazes me how abus can sell locks at such a reasonable price after all the effort that goes into making each individual one. Abus are industry leaders for sure.
Hobby Picker yeah I must say I do wonder the same myself sometimes. I suppose when a company has been a round for such a long time they know what works and what doesn't. Plus they're a family company so not having to pay all their profits each year to public shareholders
@@Nothingbutpadlocks I know they are an "Amish" type of family too but didn't know they were not PLC floating on the market. Either way, all my Abus padlocks are superlative additions in my collection. Get a Titalium 64TI/50 (wetter) its a really cool padlock, also, I haven't been able to pick open yet.🤩
@@bluracer766 So what? All you cheerleaders never seem to comprehend that these lockpicking youtubers like LPL are doing it in their homes, not in the real world.
So the SZP keyway has a slightly different shape. They then patented the shape of the key. So technically the mechanism is the same but the key shape is different, including the entry to the keyway on the lock. All it really means is that that anyone who decides to copy an SZP key without authorisation is acting illegally. It just adds a tiny bit more copy protection and deters rogue locksmiths. In fact, if you have two Granit locks with key code 457687 and one is a SZP... then the SZP will open the standard lock but the standard key wont open the SZP lock. This can be used to form basic masterkey systems cheaply. Same mechanism, just a Z shaped plate on the entry to the keyway prevents the standard key from entering it. Hope that helps :)
Not almost unpickable. They are totally pickable. The lock is still very recommendable because it takes an experienced hand to open one of these with a pick and they are physically very resistant to attacks.
LPL _did_ pick a Granit open but probably after many hours of disassembly-assembly and study first. I have a disc detainer lock-pick and I can't feel anything as the lock is soooo damn smooth and has false gates.
Nice to see an almost start to finish product being made👍👍😎
Really interesting video, thanks, & have a great week.
Thanks! Have a great week yourself!!!
Thanks a lot for this video, it always amazes me how abus can sell locks at such a reasonable price after all the effort that goes into making each individual one. Abus are industry leaders for sure.
Hobby Picker yeah I must say I do wonder the same myself sometimes. I suppose when a company has been a round for such a long time they know what works and what doesn't. Plus they're a family company so not having to pay all their profits each year to public shareholders
@@Nothingbutpadlocks I know they are an "Amish" type of family too but didn't know they were not PLC floating on the market. Either way, all my Abus padlocks are superlative additions in my collection. Get a Titalium 64TI/50 (wetter) its a really cool padlock, also, I haven't been able to pick open yet.🤩
Yay! A new video! More of these please
Awesome product
Great video thanks for posting 👍
Very cool my friend
Wow!! Looks impressive!! I would love to check these out to see if it’s all true
Great video, cool to see it all made.🍺✌😎🇦🇺
Nice
Very cool
lockpickinglawyer: Hi
ABUS engineers: Oh f*&k
lol stop that bullshit, that phony can't even touch the 37rk80
@@juanbaclavab yes he could and that locked has been picked here in TH-cam.
@@bluracer766 So what? All you cheerleaders never seem to comprehend that these lockpicking youtubers like LPL are doing it in their homes, not in the real world.
@@LXT43 was just saying he's 4 real.
Very interesting video my friend👍😊👍😊😎✌
Awesome
What's the difference between the normal plus keyway and the new szp keyway that isn't available in the USA
So the SZP keyway has a slightly different shape. They then patented the shape of the key. So technically the mechanism is the same but the key shape is different, including the entry to the keyway on the lock. All it really means is that that anyone who decides to copy an SZP key without authorisation is acting illegally. It just adds a tiny bit more copy protection and deters rogue locksmiths. In fact, if you have two Granit locks with key code 457687 and one is a SZP... then the SZP will open the standard lock but the standard key wont open the SZP lock. This can be used to form basic masterkey systems cheaply. Same mechanism, just a Z shaped plate on the entry to the keyway prevents the standard key from entering it.
Hope that helps :)
Not almost unpickable. They are totally pickable. The lock is still very recommendable because it takes an experienced hand to open one of these with a pick and they are physically very resistant to attacks.
Only with the specialized disc detaining tool no way with a regular pin pick 😊
Dank Schoen
Lock picking lawyer will pick that lock in less then a min
What does he do when I surprise him from behind with a baseball bat?....LOL!
LPL says hi
LPL _did_ pick a Granit open but probably after many hours of disassembly-assembly and study first. I have a disc detainer lock-pick and I can't feel anything as the lock is soooo damn smooth and has false gates.
No. LPL's cheerleader says hi. Abus says "get lost" !
When you buy the best padlock, and then realise that what you shackle it to, then becomes the weakest part of the system.. 🤣
The opposite of made in China
Nein! Nein! Nein!
You could've used an Abus hasp 5.15 instead of the crappy lucky bag one shown.