@@BoredLockpicker You said it, quite a joke. Meanwhile, I found someone selling a few on eBay. Even show the innards. Looks a lot like regular disc detainer locks.
With the Abloy locks, there's no shackle spring because the grub screw that retains the core is covered by the shackle when it's locked. When opened, you can access the grub screw from that side of the padlock to remove the core. That's with the modern ones, of course.
Hi there bored lock picker, i ordered a tibbe lock to practice on but when imserting the pick it opens and closes the lock without even touching rhe wafers 😂😂.. what do you think is happening?? Thanks in advance
Very easy. Pick it and while it’s pick rotate all of the as far as they will go. Let it come back to home position then just start where ever your four cut is and read the numbers starting at the face of the lock back in a straight line. My email is in the description. Email me if you need to me. My email is in the description
@@johnmcdonagh3774 the fours you use for tension are your known cuts. So whatever numbers line up with the fours are your cuts. 1-6 starting at the lock face going back
I love it for Lishi practice. I have two. The other I keep in my van. Occasionally it’s hard to lishi a lock on a car so you can pull it and do it in the van in the vise
@@BoredLockpicker I've never used a Lishi on a car just the pin tumbler ones and I gotta say it makes it very easy so someone with zero or little experience could open the lock
Good explanation of what you are doing and why!
Thanks man.
Are you able to open up one of the old tibbe locks? Just wondering how the innards look compared to a disc detainer lock.
I probably can
@@BoredLockpicker Would be interesting if you could. But not something critical.
@@BoredLockpicker LPL just uploaded a vid on picking a Ford tibbe lock. He discovered something interesting about the OEM locks. Very easy to open.
@@two_tier_gary_rumain wow! just watched it. crazy how bad those things are
@@BoredLockpicker You said it, quite a joke.
Meanwhile, I found someone selling a few on eBay. Even show the innards. Looks a lot like regular disc detainer locks.
Are you sure you're reading it in the correct order, I thought pin 1 was nearest the head of the key?
Yes I’m sure. Turn the knobs and look which positions on the tool move
Sorry, not related to this video, but do you know WHY lock companies make dead core padlocks? Like pros and cons? I can't find info anywhere.
Can you explain what you mean by 'dead core'?
@@two_tier_gary_rumain A lock with no springs. No spring when you turn key, no spring to push up shackle. Master Lock 570
@@noahway13 Ah, like all the disc detainer locks.
Dead core locks are usually key retaining. They don’t spring back to where the key can come. I don’t any other reason
With the Abloy locks, there's no shackle spring because the grub screw that retains the core is covered by the shackle when it's locked. When opened, you can access the grub screw from that side of the padlock to remove the core. That's with the modern ones, of course.
Hi there bored lock picker, i ordered a tibbe lock to practice on but when imserting the pick it opens and closes the lock without even touching rhe wafers 😂😂.. what do you think is happening?? Thanks in advance
Sounds like you’re turning it to lock. Any tibbe key will lock any tibbe lock
@@BoredLockpickerit turns to unlock also without touching wafers both directions thank you
@@simonmg6797 whats the bitting on the key
@@BoredLockpicker121232 thank you
Does this unlock a 02 connect ?
I don’t know. What key blank does that vehicle use
My key is quite old not sure as I ain’t locksmith
There’s an email address in the description. Email me a picture of it.
Can you help me I'm find the tibbie hard to decode
Very easy. Pick it and while it’s pick rotate all of the as far as they will go. Let it come back to home position then just start where ever your four cut is and read the numbers starting at the face of the lock back in a straight line. My email is in the description. Email me if you need to me. My email is in the description
@@BoredLockpicker Thank you for your feed back greatly appreciated so go along the of the number 4 cut is it
@@johnmcdonagh3774 the fours you use for tension are your known cuts. So whatever numbers line up with the fours are your cuts. 1-6 starting at the lock face going back
@@BoredLockpicker what does that mean at the face going back
@@johnmcdonagh3774 start with wheel closest to the lock and read back to the end of of the pick
I want to get a little vise like that. I don't need it I just want it I guess lol
I love it for Lishi practice. I have two. The other I keep in my van. Occasionally it’s hard to lishi a lock on a car so you can pull it and do it in the van in the vise
@@BoredLockpicker I've never used a Lishi on a car just the pin tumbler ones and I gotta say it makes it very easy so someone with zero or little experience could open the lock
@@Westhelockpicker I Mostly use automotive ones