Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Pin tumbler locks offer the most security for their price.
The Americans are into pin tumbler locks in a big way.
First open your front door and check for a pin tumbler lock on it.
Another method of picking pin tumbler locks is with a pick gun.
This vibrating effect will sometimes open pin tumbler locks - instantly.
Unlike conventional pin tumbler locks, all of the pins are exposed to the eye.
The most commonly used lock today is the pin tumbler lock.
I once picked a pin tumbler lock using a borrowed roach clip and a hairpin.
Pin tumbler locks, commonly called 'Yale locks', are very common for fastening doors.
This was the pin tumbler lock.
To successfully pick a pin tumbler lock, your sense of touch sould be honed so that both hands feel the tools.
Since they are generally easier to pick than most pin tumbler locks, you will be 75 per- cent master after fooling around with these mechanisms.
High-security pin tumbler locks may contain specially made pins to make picking them more challenging.
(For example the tumblers in a pin tumbler lock.)
It is associated with the pin tumbler lock, which is often known as the Yale lock.
This type of lock is similar to the pin tumbler lock and works on a similar principle.
The pin tumbler lock.
Tubular cylinder locks are pin tumbler locks arranged on a circular plane.
Use the shaft of the pick if you have to when working the frontal pin of a pin tumbler lock.
Master keyed pin tumbler locks are generally easier to pick open because they have more than one shear line or breaking point in the pins.
The pin tumbler lock uses a set of pins to prevent the lock from opening unless the correct key is inserted.
Wafer locks are picked in the same way as pin tumbler locks, but you must compensate for the smaller dimensions.
Pin tumbler locks can easily be identified by peering down the keyway and locating the first round pin.
As a rule, though, wafer locks need less play with the tension wrench than with pin tumbler locks.
Unlike a wafer tumbler lock or a pin tumbler lock, this mechanism does not use springs.