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작성자 Amee Mitten
댓글 0건 조회 4회 작성일 24-06-06 21:13

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Everything will still be there tomorrow. Lock picking involves fine movement and control, and if you're in a hurry, uncomfortable, frustrated, or distracted you will not make progress. Longer handles are as a rule better in torque tools; the farther from the plug the torque can be applied, the easier it is to detect and control fine movement. Note that the pick should be held mostly by the shaft of the tang, not the "handle." This allows better control and feedback. Figure 3. Holding a pick. Figure 4. Manipulating pins. Picking tools are designed to perform one of two basic functions: manipulating pins and turning the plug. The basic skills of pin tumbler lock picking include selecting the proper tools, manipulating pins through the keyway, applying torque, and recognizing the state of each pin. The three hook picks in this kit are sufficient to manipulate the vast majority of pin tumbler locks found in the US. A few basic tools are sufficient to pick the majority of commonly used locks. This pick is a LAB double-ended "hook/rake" (held for use with the hook end).



It's hard to learn these skills all at once on off-the-shelf commercial locks, but that's what many people who try to learn lock picking end up doing (before giving up in frustration). So when you do something, what is billiards people ask: what hit you? The pick handle should not be making contact with the palm of your hand. First count them, making sure you find all five (or six). Now release torque and try again, but this time lift the pins as little as you can when you test them, while still distinguishing between the two states. Picks probe and lift the individual pin tumblers through the keyway, while torque tools control the degree and force of plug rotation. Using the five or six pin lock, find a pick that lets you locate and lift each pin across its full range of motion without disturbing adjacent pins too much. Hold your pick as you would a pencil when you work the pins.



When you hold a cylinder in your hand you get different feedback from the pins than you do on a real door. And the real world is not an idea, it is not words. And all civilization rests upon language, and ideas constructed of language, and other such signs and symbols of the world as, say, mathematics and musical notation and so forth. The pick design it calls a "rake" is called a "hook" by the rest of the world (it's the kind of pick you'll be using most). These locks add a new challenge: maneuvering the pick. The numbers on the front of the practice locks indicate the keying codes, from the front-most pin stack to the rear-most. I usually find that the very top of the plug, directly in front of the pins, to be a good place to apply torque, but you have to be careful that the tool doesn't touch the front-most pin. Other names for the torque tool are turning tool, torque wrench, torsion wrench, and tension wrench. They require special picking tools to manipulate the tumblers and apply torque.



Tubular cylinders typically have four to eight pin tumblers arranged in a circular pattern around the circumference of the plug. In a lock with six pin stacks with a uniform chance of a pin setting at either shear line, the probability of a picked lock actually opening is only 1/64. Picking techniques for these locks involve the use of special torque tools designed to put torque on only one of the two concentric plugs. You'll notice that it resists more than it did in the previous exercise because its top pin is pinched between the plug and the shell at the shear line by the torque you're applying. See Figures 3 and 4. Once you're comfortable with the AR1 keyway, move on to the "Ilco SX" keyway locks and repeat the exercise. Again, repeat the exercise with the aim of learning to distinguish between these states with as little lifting as possible. It is usually possible to insert the torque tool at either the top or bottom part of the keyway. LAB is a lock pin and locksmith tool manufacturer. Another style of torque tool has two "prongs" that fit in the top and bottom of the keyway, with a cutout between them for the pick.

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