I love that he cuts the key and then uses it to open the lock all in one continuous shot. Like no matter how skilled he shows us he is, he still wants to make sure no one can claim he's doing camera tricks.
If you’ve seen his over 100 videos on lock picking & the difficulty of some of those locks, then there’s no doubt. He don’t need the key making m/c to open this simple lock.
Slower than picking, but a nifty solution for replacing a lost key without destroying the lock. Probably only economic for expensive locks, in a commercial application.
@@lairdcummings9092 It's also worth noting that the Quikset Smart Key system is reykeyable without effort, if you have the current key all you need is a new key, so for taking possession of a premises this sort of action is perfect, no new locks needed.
Nah, check out his video on the Bowley lock. He tried pretty damn hard to get into that one and failed so bad he didn't even show an attempt on camera.
You wouldn't hear it, all he has to do is record from that camera, and slowly insert it I to the lock. The video can be read and a key can be made away from the house
I'm impressed at how in intuitive that key-cutting machine is to use. Just from watching you use it without explanation, I think I'd be able to successfully cut a key too!
A few years back I bought a second hand motorbike from a city a few hundred kays away. While driving back, the keys fell out of the ignition without me noticing. I called the local locksmith (in the town I'd stopped for gas) and he arrived with a small toolkit. He took out a flashlight and started to peer into the lock. He then produced a blank key and what looked like a pair of pliers. He then, from sight alone, proceeded to cut me a brand new key in under 10 minutes by hand. I believe it was this event that provoked my interest in non-destructive openings and lead me to become a subscriber of a lock-picking channel...
You sir found a real locksmith and that could actually do motorcycles lol I'm in the industry so.. I can say there's less guys out there that know how to do what he did.. good job finding a real locksmith lol
This is the locksmith you recommended to your friends. An artisan that is honest. Any lower skilled locksmith skips to the destruction of the lock and charges you for a new one with installation.
Driving to college in the 80s I locked my keys in the car. I called a locksmith to get me in. After he was done I showed him how my keys were on the dash board. He said if I let him try something he would cut my bill in half. We proceeded to look at the keys trough the window and used a handheld key cutter and made a key. It didn't work on the first cut so he eyeballed it again and made one modification and it worked.
I'm sure he had some practice in with this lock and cutting the key, (knowing what cuts to make before the video) but regardless it's still impressive!! Practice with this one single lock would just make it so you could do it with any of these locks in that amount of time....
That lock popping open with the freshly-made key is one of the most satisfying things I've ever seen on this channel - thanks for sharing that process.
The part of this I found the most interesting was actually the key cutting machine. I've never seen one up close and overhead before. Some years ago I dabbled at making my own keys with a set of blanks, gauges and a hand nibbling tool. It was frustrating, laborious and, in my hands at least, I had a high error rate with incorrectly cut blanks outnumbering my successes. Your machine embarrasses my pitiful efforts.
@@jimmysparks315 I tried again since leaving the earlier comment and, using the Albert Lebel method with my Lishi nibbler tool - take smaller bites, be patient and be prepared to sacrifice lots of blanks as I practice - I had more success. It's still tricky to cut Yale and similar blanks (the formats usually found here in the UK) with that tool, but it can be done.
@@DxBlack based on timing I believe it's possible for a comment to show as unedited as long as there are no replies to it yet - possible (although unlikely) kult had watched the video, loaded the old comment, and had it edited prior to him typing a response. In any case, that's all I have for you today. If you have any questions or comments about this comment, please reply below, and as always, have a nice day.
Lmao as weird as that is at a glance, I'm pretty sure he's said he does professional lock picking, so it's no weirder than a Blacksmith having a Forge or a carpenter having a jigsaw
@@Adrian-dl9nb could, but it's more that his lawyering knowledge keeps him in the know on what's legal and what isn't, what loopholes exist and such. Once he's in prison, that knowledge doesn't help him very much anymore now does it? ;)
@@adtrlthegamer7449 Pretty much, but then again how many thieves are going to use a specialized camera and then to cut a key and have the equipment laying around to do so? The decoder camera cost over $340 alone? Unless they are very professional and something very valuable behind the door, or gate which if it is then sure be way more secure then just a pad lock? Unless they not looking to steal but break into in for other reasons like to go after someone and don’t want to force entrance Plus locksmiths already use devices similar or decoder tools already.
Yeah, if someone uses a wifi camera on your door, then has one of these machines to cut a key...I have bad news for you. They're getting in your house no matter what...it doesn't matter what kind of lock you have.
@@PanduPoluan welp color me surprised he's actually a lawyer. Welp that doesn't mean he isn't currently a locksmith. Well he technically is just not a professional. But I was talking professional not as a hobby.
Hey, everybody needs a hobby. If you're interested in busting into peoples houses, you might as well have a defence strategy planned to keep out of jail
The more I watch this channel the more I realize that locks are truly there to keep the honest people honest. Anyone intent on getting in can quickly do so in numerous ways, without having to break the door down or attempt to kick it in. Think I'll invest in some maglocks with hidden proximity sensors (or something along those lines) and leave the regular locks as dummies so nobody will even know about the maglocks.
yep fro all the shit masterlock gets 99% of theives will just cut it or Break around the lock. So yes masterlocks are crap. but also masterlocks are cheap and deter the vast majority.
Yeah, but no. This video was basically him cutting a key for a lock. Take the key making out and it's really no longer than any of his other videos. lol
These are kind of required for a professional locksmith. When I can get a garage built I can then start stocking up for running my own business, and I've one eyed up.
The way he immediately uses his freshly cut key to unlock the padlock literally without saying anything actually made me laugh. Oozing confidence he is!
@@AdamLaRosa I prefer to deconstruct videos on You Tube. So many channels are completely fake. Actually LPL is one of the genuine channels with real content, so you may even get to see that first cut of the key not working here (that's if it ever happened). But there are many people putting out stuff pretending it is real and what is more the retarded portion of their viewers believe it is real! It is my job to help expose and educate these people. So rather than "revelling in mysteries" , I expose the fakers. It's just a different approach. I'm not saying your approach is wrong, but life would be boring if we all did and acted the same!
@@PreservationEnthusiast A lot of channels will also make videos that are modeled after TV and pretend like they got it perfect on the first try. Take FaZe for instance, trickshots take many tries when the enemy is just standing still and for the most part the other players are likely trying to out gun the FaZe boys.
As an expert in 3D printing and CNC technology I'm surprised that you folks haven't caught up. For the fun of it, I 3D printed a working key for one of my locks. If you have the numbers for a particular lock it should be possible to "add" a blank key object file with each of the correct cylinder offset object files then slice/print the resulting toolpath file. You could either print it on a metal (or even plastic) 3D printer or mill it using a CNC machine from metal, for example.
That's why I felt uncomfortable watching this video I don't use padlocks my buildings are lag bolted shut over the last dozen years I've found a couple lag bolts partially unscrewed thieves are lazy and a dozen 4 inch lag bolts takes some time to unscrew unless you use a cordless drill I rarely open these buildings except during growing season
I started getting into keys and locks more while working maintenance for an apartment complex where we have to rekey smart locks every move out. Doing some deep cleaning in the spare garages i found a second key cutter, the boss was really purging all the "junk" and we didn't need 2 so i got to keep the other one. I've only broke locks and replaced them when a key goes missing but I love the videos and look forward to trying to learn how to really pick a lock.
And this isn't a copy, it's a perfect new key. Copies degrade with every generation of copy but this is a key origination machine that is usually used when repining a lock
Just discovered your channel and my mind is blown! Here I am thinking of an episode of the A-Team when the crew had to take an impression of a key in order to replicate it and it worked, that blew my mind as a 9-year old kid and that memory still sticks with me today lol! Love your channel and you have a new fan!
You did get to see just about everything it does though. Set the position and cut the depth. He was a little artsy going left and right of center by a millimeter or so on each position so I'd like to hear him talk through it, too.
Seems pretty intuitive; a cutting burr, a burnishing wheel, and a pair of feed screws associated with an exchangeable template card. A bit more advanced than the old key cutting machines I used as a kid, but recognizable.
It looks really simple, I expected something much more complex actually. It seems that the right knob controls the side to side movement, which is shown by the bottom needle (and the blue card gives a scale to let you know in front of which position you're at). The bottom knob controls the "depth" of the cut, shown by the top needle. If you want to do a 4 cut in position 3, put the bottom needle to 3, then the top needle to 4, and then move the key side to side a bit (shown by the smaller lines on the bottom scale) to make the cut wide enough.
@@robertkribs9513 you can see the left and right of each position marked on the scale. You probably have to make the cuts wide enough, or the key would bind a lot.
because he owns a channel dedicated to lockpicking with millions of followers and is probably the best lockpicker in the world? i mean it makes perfect sense
Probably because he has a machine shop in his basement as well; see the videos of LPL and Bosnian Bill making the original prototypes of the infamous disc detainer pick
in fact the human brain is main to hold about 4 information at the same time max, numbers when defined as indiviual information are hard to remenber because you can't manage more than 4 at once but if somhow you get them to be one single information it becomes really easy. for exemple : 5184 is hard to remember, but things like "2077" or "1945" "2020" have the same amount of numbers yet it's easier to remember since it realates to a single information : a year. also a simple trick to help you get up to 5 information at once is to consider the fifth one as an "intruder" like the one which is different from the rest. fin a similarity among the 4 information you remember and then th fifth one is the one which doesn't have this similarity. also it helps when you are counting number, on a dice fo exemple, the hardest face to identifie quickly is th 5 since you're brain can't recognise it and count it immediatly. the 6 is easy since you can see 2 ligne of 3 and admitedly the 5 having such a particular shape is easy enought but anyway and easy way to identifie the noumber of element when they are 5 is to identifie a first pack od 4 and then you see that there's only one left, so 5. brain is stupid and can't manage past 4 but brain is so stupid you can trick it in doing things that it can't normaly do.
ive been wanting to be a lock smith as a job for a little while,and now that i know its barely 1300$ to get that machine and camera, It would completemy basic kit for my truck. Thanks so much L.P Lawyer.
Cool gadgets, I remember when a young teen about 40 years ago and my parents would occasionally take away my car key. Being a defiant kid and handy with tools, I then drew around the actual key on a sheet of aluminum and marked the grooves. I rough cut then hand filed a key cutting key slots with my Dremel tool and a guide, after a bit more filing the key worked perfectly! I just wanted to see if I could do it and I did, lol. 😎👍
My first car, a 61 Buick Special, the ignition switch would turn without a key. It had a lock position, but I never used it. I also would always lock the door by reaching through the vent window and pushing the handle forward.
This video shows a Dutchman in a kilt doing the same thing in about a minute with only a file and a magnifying glass. ruclips.net/video/Bj9KEmLWRek/видео.html
When 4 of your favorite RUclips creators mention the LPL in their videos, you know you have found the gold standard for a person who knows locks inside and out. And two of my favorite RUclips creators are electrical engineers, one is a farmer and the last one is a movie critic. Love to see a more detailed video of the key cutting machine. That was awesome. Thank you for a great video!!
That key cutting machine is amazing. I love the analog gauges/template card system. And of course the camera is beyond cool. A friend and I in college (he did the actual hard parts like making the key) obtained a key blank to a dorm room key of another guy on our floor who my friend wanted to play a practical joke on by re-arranging all of his furniture, and either he or I also took some high quality photos of the kid's dorm key. Since all of our keys used the same blank, my friend was able to work out a real dimensions scale to figure out how deep to cut each notch on the key. He ended up making his own template in Adobe illustrator and basically replicated the key gauge here without knowing anything about keys/locks. He then filed it down by hand, and tried it on the door and it didn't work. He was about to say "oh well, it was a fun experiment", when I took the key and jiggled it around a bit which caused it to immediately turn.... I was damn impressed. Think I already posted this comment but this makes me think of that story again and one of the things that really got me interested in how this stuff works!
I'm shocked at how user-friendly that key-cutter is! I've always felt like there would be some arcane knowledge required to cut keys, just like how I thought that about lock picking before subscribing!
The crazy thing is you can order specially-made files that profile key steps just as easily. You can do this with a file, a bench-vise, and a ruler if you take your time.
When I was working for an Oldsmobile dealership , The parts department had a hand operated key cutter that a depth gauge that could be set for whatever pin was being cut . With a squeeze of the handles a new key could be made using some code that was in a manufacturers manual. AND ....it was cordless!
I love the elegance with which you express yourself. You say a lot without being wordy, and are very precise in your descriptions, without resorting to overly complex vocabulary. If you smack someone down, you never accuse them of being idiots, you merely point out their 'unforgivable oversights', and you never, ever use hyperbole. I really do enjoy the clarity of thought and expression in your videos.
I also like how when he was cutting the key he didn't speed it up or add copyright free music to help people's attention span. If the point is that he's making the key, the viewer has to sit through it, and I was just mesmerised by the whole process.
@@jcmartinez7527 There definitely are locks he can't pick. At least not yet. As a Finn the newer Abloys come to mind but there are probably tons more. Or if he knows he can pick them, it would seem strange not to publish it. But yeah I 100% agree with you that 2 mins for LPL = practically unpickable for everyone else.
Nothing about the kwiksets is particularly difficult... The main issue is that since they’re so common, you can break into a place, find a key, put in an identical core to the broken core, and be out... All in 1/10th the time it took you to read the MIT lockpicking guide however many years ago that was
@@Aardvarko At first glance, it looks like cheating. But after your question, I'm not sure anymore. After all, the picking of the lock is not a magic trick (i knew, hard to believe on LPL channel), but an engineering task and it does not matter how it was solved.
The Stuff Made Here lock uses a Schlage key (An SC1 or larger).. the camera only fits in Kwikset locks (KW1's). I checked.. no such tool exists for Schlage.
I do have a feeling that he won't be able to straight pick it, and so will instead figure out a bypass (such as this one). Though from my recollection of the Stuff lock, the camera method might not be able to see where the pin gates are.
I'm guessing it'd be possible by modifying the blank. But now iWant as a non-destructive tool for looing inside gadgets without taking them apart. I'd thought about using a CCD from a phone, but this looks even smaller. Suspect it's origins are medical & developed for laproscopic examinations.
I think this camera picking only works on Smartkey locks. The design of the lock allows you to see things that most locks hide. The camera trick wouldn't work on other kinds of locks because all you would see is the face of the pins.
Man I love the sound of a key machine... It reminds me of when I’d go to the hardware store with my Dad as a child when he’d have spare keys cut. I was always so fascinated with these machines. I guess this fascination is what brought me to the LPL all of these years lately in a way. Thank you for all of the great content!
It's not a special machine to a locksmith. It's like if you went to a car shop and they had a hydraulic lift. You KNOW they have one, then they tell you they have one that comes with lots of nice features and accessories. Would it be weird to find out your small grocery store had an automotive hydraulic lift with nice features? Absolutely. It is still a little surprising that someone who isn't a professional locksmith has one though.
As a locksmith I prefer to drill the core of smartkey lock, it takes less than a minute. ( Smartkey core are really cheap, so I leave the deadbolt and only replace the core that I drilled) than if client had many copies of their Keys in circulation, I take their existing keys and rekey the lock in 30 seconds since its smartkey. At the end its faster and less expensive for the customer since we charge Time. It usually takes about 15 minutes to complete these calls Also where I live it can be -30° so client and I really wants to be done as quickly as possible
I love that he cuts the key and then uses it to open the lock all in one continuous shot. Like no matter how skilled he shows us he is, he still wants to make sure no one can claim he's doing camera tricks.
Josef, totally agree, I was going to say the same thing. The man knows his stuff!
He's a lawyer. So...
If you’ve seen his over 100 videos on lock picking & the difficulty of some of those locks, then there’s no doubt. He don’t need the key making m/c to open this simple lock.
Tony D. Over 1000
I'm 100% sure that he does a run test for all his videos or maybe two takes if something goes wrong
This must be the most effort LPL has done to open a lock!
Got tired of opening locks with thin pieces of metal and bubblegum so went the other way and put in a crap ton of effort to open it cleanly
Slower than picking, but a nifty solution for replacing a lost key without destroying the lock.
Probably only economic for expensive locks, in a commercial application.
@@lairdcummings9092 It's also worth noting that the Quikset Smart Key system is reykeyable without effort, if you have the current key all you need is a new key, so for taking possession of a premises this sort of action is perfect, no new locks needed.
@@benisted1614 so... Reproduce just one key, and you can then easily re-key the entire house?
Nifty!
Nah, check out his video on the Bowley lock. He tried pretty damn hard to get into that one and failed so bad he didn't even show an attempt on camera.
Finally, the one device LPL has never used to open a lock: The key.
He is the lock _picking_ lawyer, not the lock _using_ lawyer
@@64_Tesseract Surely it's more the lock (ab)using lawyer... and in this example a key using lawyer?
@@AdventureKyles :)
@@rjayeda1 I didn't even checked it, but anyway im gonna say no
😝
Man I don't know what's scarier. Hearing him say 3 is binding or him creating a key right outside your door
You wouldn't hear it, all he has to do is record from that camera, and slowly insert it I to the lock. The video can be read and a key can be made away from the house
@@hardcodedsoftware4212 no I dont think you understand he has to do it right outside of your door
"Let me in or else!"
"YEAH? Or else what?"
*grinding sound*
"...oh god no"
Like he said, he could just file down a blank right then and there. There's nothing that can stop him for long.
Just don't use such outdated simple locks on your house.
LPL so dedicated to trimming fluff he's showing actual like movie spy tech AND cutting a new key in about 5 minutes total
But he forgot to blow on it...they always blow on it in the movies.
Weaker men would have made this video 20 min long
Love it
The name's Wright. Phoenix Wright.
Thousandth like
I feel like LPL is just showing off his toys in this episode.
Do you suggest that LPL is Joker?
I watched again looking for toys, but only seen tools of the trade ;)
@@kvozart8437 or a smoker?
Sponsored by us viewers of course,
This video must have been filmed awhile ago. This tool is old
I'm impressed at how in intuitive that key-cutting machine is to use. Just from watching you use it without explanation, I think I'd be able to successfully cut a key too!
I love the analog gauges, works darn well.
@@Ratzfourtyfour Same. I generally prefer analog over digital any day of the week. At least, for a lot of things.
It looked very satisfying to use.
I wanted one immediately, I already have a standard key cutting machine but man that looks nice.
I tend to disagree. I was waiting for him to cut the fifth slot but he never did, so that's my intuition right out the window.
A few years back I bought a second hand motorbike from a city a few hundred kays away. While driving back, the keys fell out of the ignition without me noticing. I called the local locksmith (in the town I'd stopped for gas) and he arrived with a small toolkit.
He took out a flashlight and started to peer into the lock. He then produced a blank key and what looked like a pair of pliers. He then, from sight alone, proceeded to cut me a brand new key in under 10 minutes by hand.
I believe it was this event that provoked my interest in non-destructive openings and lead me to become a subscriber of a lock-picking channel...
You sir found a real locksmith and that could actually do motorcycles lol I'm in the industry so.. I can say there's less guys out there that know how to do what he did.. good job finding a real locksmith lol
This is the locksmith you recommended to your friends. An artisan that is honest. Any lower skilled locksmith skips to the destruction of the lock and charges you for a new one with installation.
*led
@@Invertedworldx fewer
I use to pick those with street cleaner brush metal left in street.
Driving to college in the 80s I locked my keys in the car. I called a locksmith to get me in. After he was done I showed him how my keys were on the dash board. He said if I let him try something he would cut my bill in half. We proceeded to look at the keys trough the window and used a handheld key cutter and made a key. It didn't work on the first cut so he eyeballed it again and made one modification and it worked.
Damn, that's so nice of him.
I expected a prank where he smashed the windshield and handed you your keys.
@@donkremer6019 🤣🤣
Nice, a show of skill AND half price.
He was his father since he charged you less for more work, plus an extra key 😂.
He made an entirely new key in under 3 minutes to unlock that lock.
What a legend
The fact that he manually made it using a paper with lines for measuring the cuts is impressive, he must be very proud.
@@Pycran oh 100%
I'm sure he had some practice in with this lock and cutting the key, (knowing what cuts to make before the video) but regardless it's still impressive!! Practice with this one single lock would just make it so you could do it with any of these locks in that amount of time....
Cops are still going to use bolt cutters and a battering ram. "Non-destructive entry"? Where's the fun in that!
@@geraldfrost4710 its a great way to get into an object to place a bug without anyone noticing.
That lock popping open with the freshly-made key is one of the most satisfying things I've ever seen on this channel - thanks for sharing that process.
I've been a locksmith for over ten years and it's still just as satisfying as ever.
The part of this I found the most interesting was actually the key cutting machine. I've never seen one up close and overhead before. Some years ago I dabbled at making my own keys with a set of blanks, gauges and a hand nibbling tool. It was frustrating, laborious and, in my hands at least, I had a high error rate with incorrectly cut blanks outnumbering my successes. Your machine embarrasses my pitiful efforts.
Hand nibbling tool? I always use a set of needle files.
At least you tried... 10/10
@@jimmysparks315 I tried again since leaving the earlier comment and, using the Albert Lebel method with my Lishi nibbler tool - take smaller bites, be patient and be prepared to sacrifice lots of blanks as I practice - I had more success. It's still tricky to cut Yale and similar blanks (the formats usually found here in the UK) with that tool, but it can be done.
@@bikkies 20/10 !
Most locksmith here have this and I witnessed this in action several times when I order duplicates for my keys
I'm suddenly reminded of a scene from Police Squad:
"Who are you? How did you get in here?"
"I'm a locksmith, and... I'm a locksmith."
😂🤣🤣
He was asked "Who are you?" - Not " What are you?".
Thereforesound funny at first sight, but is bonkers at 2nd.
@@kulturfreund6631 ...he literally has what you said in his unedited comment.
@@kulturfreund6631 Umm, you might want to read again lol
@@DxBlack based on timing I believe it's possible for a comment to show as unedited as long as there are no replies to it yet - possible (although unlikely) kult had watched the video, loaded the old comment, and had it edited prior to him typing a response. In any case, that's all I have for you today. If you have any questions or comments about this comment, please reply below, and as always, have a nice day.
"I just happen to have a key cutting machine in my garage."
Lmao as weird as that is at a glance, I'm pretty sure he's said he does professional lock picking, so it's no weirder than a Blacksmith having a Forge or a carpenter having a jigsaw
I'm like
"Of course he does"
I do, it's awesome. I make keys for my whole family.
But just imagine watching video recording of a guy coming out of your house with your Tv and door lock
That took me tf out.
He's a lawyer to keep himself out of prison. He's a lockpicker in case he doesn't.
That's funny because you could argue the opposite in a very similar way.
@@Adrian-dl9nb could, but it's more that his lawyering knowledge keeps him in the know on what's legal and what isn't, what loopholes exist and such. Once he's in prison, that knowledge doesn't help him very much anymore now does it? ;)
You may want to hire his services next time you build a dinosaur park. I don't know, might keep the velociraptors away from the tourists.
@@TheNefastor spare no expense!!
If he was locked up, he'd just pick his way out..... Unless they sealed him in the cell with packaging🙃
Kwikset: we finally made a lock that LPL considers decently pick resistant
LPL: let me show you how to make a KEY for it
Kwikset: *Takes a sip of water before spitting and screaming out.* "OH COME ON!!?"
@@adtrlthegamer7449 Pretty much, but then again how many thieves are going to use a specialized camera and then to cut a key and have the equipment laying around to do so? The decoder camera cost over $340 alone? Unless they are very professional and something very valuable behind the door, or gate which if it is then sure be way more secure then just a pad lock? Unless they not looking to steal but break into in for other reasons like to go after someone and don’t want to force entrance
Plus locksmiths already use devices similar or decoder tools already.
@@thetechgenie7374 Ok.
@@thetechgenie7374 the point is, there is literally no lock that is unpick able given minimal effort
Yeah, if someone uses a wifi camera on your door, then has one of these machines to cut a key...I have bad news for you. They're getting in your house no matter what...it doesn't matter what kind of lock you have.
" I just happen to have a key machine in my garage"
Why am I not surprised?
I'm pretty damn sure he is or was a lock smith.
@@TheNameTag He was a lawyer...
@@PanduPoluan welp color me surprised he's actually a lawyer. Welp that doesn't mean he isn't currently a locksmith. Well he technically is just not a professional. But I was talking professional not as a hobby.
@@TheNameTag He is a professional. He does make money off his hobby. You just watched it.
@@bhume7535 I've never seen an ad on any of his videos so as far as I know he doesn't make any money of off youtube
Dude is now at the point where he doesn't even pick the lock anymore, he just makes a new key
...and somehow that is the *slow* way to open locks for him.
@@matejlieskovsky9625 but, its better in the long run if the lock needs to be repeatedly used and someone else needs to be the one getting in and out.
And so he became a master of keys in the matrix
He gave that lock the PS3 treatment.
I literally laughed out loud
"I just happen to have a key cutting machine in my garage."
I'm starting to think this guy might not really be a lawyer 😂
Hey, everybody needs a hobby. If you're interested in locks, you might as well get key cutting machine or two.
Hey, Everybody needs a hobby. if you're interesting in busting into peoples houses, you might as well cut key using a key cutting machine or two.
Hey, everybody needs a hobby. If you're interested in busting into peoples houses, you might as well have a defence strategy planned to keep out of jail
well he already needs a license to own a lockpicking kit
Possibly he worked his way through law school in a lock Smith's shop
The more I watch this channel the more I realize that locks are truly there to keep the honest people honest. Anyone intent on getting in can quickly do so in numerous ways, without having to break the door down or attempt to kick it in. Think I'll invest in some maglocks with hidden proximity sensors (or something along those lines) and leave the regular locks as dummies so nobody will even know about the maglocks.
They’re also there to dissuade thieves who are looking for quick and easy entry.
yep fro all the shit masterlock gets 99% of theives will just cut it or Break around the lock. So yes masterlocks are crap. but also masterlocks are cheap and deter the vast majority.
Thats why I have cameras and a sig sauer 2020 9mm.
It would appear that LPL has been banished to the Garage after yesterdays video. Well played!
💀💀💀💀💀
LOL I had to go look at yesterday's video. OH MY! 😅🤣😂🤣😅
😂😆😂😆😂😆
This is probably the slowest this man has ever opened a lock.
Time to open 10000000 locks with this method so it can save him time
@@CyIinder Turns out LPL made a universal masterkey. He doesn't even need to pick locks anymore, he just whips out his key.
Yeah, but no. This video was basically him cutting a key for a lock. Take the key making out and it's really no longer than any of his other videos. lol
5 minutes to cut a key, that is admireable even for pick times
@@JamesPhillipsOfficial the commitment is commendable
“I just so happen to have a device that makes keys”
Sir, you are the key.
If they ever make another Matrix movie, LPL will play the Key Maker...but it will only show his hands.
@@Dwayne_Bearup Keymaster from Ghostbuster.
Yeah, and he’s a self-made man. Where do you think he made himself?
ruclips.net/channel/UCjWpq0YajYbpMFQQKuGkMbA
This has been a huge help to me as a locksmith, no longer do I need to drill every smartkey I come upon.
Remember, never tell your customers that a broken window is cheaper than a locksmith.
@@runed0s86 Replacing a window is more expensive. Depending on the window it can cost more than just buying the camera and key cutter yourself.
This channel just keeps on getting better and better.
Its always at it best
Agree
The best, this man is a magician, when it comes to locks and keys.
Yes! LPL wastes no time, and such videos can't possibly be done better.
LPL for Commander In Chief of the United States!
This is usually what happens when there's the quality to watch, learn, listen to, and understand.
LPL: “I happen to have a machine for cutting keys in my garage”
Everyone: of course you do 😅
My thought exactly
These are kind of required for a professional locksmith. When I can get a garage built I can then start stocking up for running my own business, and I've one eyed up.
Literally what I said... out loud.
Anyone else surprised that Bosnian Bill didn’t help make it?
@@cwaldrip coming soon... 😏
The way he immediately uses his freshly cut key to unlock the padlock literally without saying anything actually made me laugh. Oozing confidence he is!
If it didn't work the first time, he could retry the key and edit the video. That's the cut you will never see.
@@PreservationEnthusiast perhaps, but let's just revel in the theatre and mystery of it all shall we :)
@@AdamLaRosa I prefer to deconstruct videos on You Tube. So many channels are completely fake. Actually LPL is one of the genuine channels with real content, so you may even get to see that first cut of the key not working here (that's if it ever happened).
But there are many people putting out stuff pretending it is real and what is more the retarded portion of their viewers believe it is real! It is my job to help expose and educate these people.
So rather than "revelling in mysteries" , I expose the fakers. It's just a different approach. I'm not saying your approach is wrong, but life would be boring if we all did and acted the same!
@@PreservationEnthusiast A lot of channels will also make videos that are modeled after TV and pretend like they got it perfect on the first try. Take FaZe for instance, trickshots take many tries when the enemy is just standing still and for the most part the other players are likely trying to out gun the FaZe boys.
Same. My reaction was just a hearty chuckle. The way he shoots the videos are fantastic
As an expert in 3D printing and CNC technology I'm surprised that you folks haven't caught up. For the fun of it, I 3D printed a working key for one of my locks. If you have the numbers for a particular lock it should be possible to "add" a blank key object file with each of the correct cylinder offset object files then slice/print the resulting toolpath file. You could either print it on a metal (or even plastic) 3D printer or mill it using a CNC machine from metal, for example.
This guy reviewed a camera, made his own key and opened a lock in 5 minutes
Most 'renown reviewers' of anything, don't even go past the "Hi", "the sponsor..." and "unboxing" in this time.
@@HuatengChen And don't forget to smash the like button and ring the bell!1!
that is indeed how it went down.
With Editing.
thats like 3 20 min videos for other youtubers
This man went from lockpicking to literally making the key lmao
I see a man of a bad game with culture
And so do you
A key that opens many locks is a master key.
A lock that opens with many keys is a Masterlock.
@@mariokarter13 lol nice one XD
And the "Lawyer" part is here just for show at this point...
It’s like a colonoscopy for a lock.
This comment is so underrated! =)
would of been nice if it worked in under 10 seconds 👍👍
Waiting for the lock picking proctologist channel...
That's why I felt uncomfortable watching this video I don't use padlocks my buildings are lag bolted shut over the last dozen years I've found a couple lag bolts partially unscrewed thieves are lazy and a dozen 4 inch lag bolts takes some time to unscrew unless you use a cordless drill I rarely open these buildings except during growing season
A colockscopy
Even as a watched video from his key-cam, I guessed every single depth incorrectly.
Glad I wasent the only one lol .
same damn
Interesting. Interesting. The moment he unlocks the lock with his new key: ridiculous smile. Nice one. Again.
Me: Nothing ever surprises me on this channel.
LPL: Let me open a padlock with a key
I’m still learning
My god gordon! What are you doing here? You are late!
@@awhahoo They're waiting for you in the test chamber, Gordon.
Why does this comment make me laugh 😂
@@PanduPoluan cause it’s ironic. A lock picking channel opening a lock with a key
Imagine SWAT stacked up outside of your door when you hear the key grinder fire up
Um no they just bust it down with the battery ram.
@@4Thug2Life0 Lmao, battery ram...
@@4Thug2Life0 whooosh
“I’m gonna load a Kw1 blank.”
@@Someone-ll1rc im crying
I started getting into keys and locks more while working maintenance for an apartment complex where we have to rekey smart locks every move out. Doing some deep cleaning in the spare garages i found a second key cutter, the boss was really purging all the "junk" and we didn't need 2 so i got to keep the other one. I've only broke locks and replaced them when a key goes missing but I love the videos and look forward to trying to learn how to really pick a lock.
That was faster than the hardware store can copy a key for me 😂
That was faster than I can *find* my keys...
That's faster than I can remember I lost my keys
And this isn't a copy, it's a perfect new key. Copies degrade with every generation of copy but this is a key origination machine that is usually used when repining a lock
But he didnt copy any key..
😀😃😄😅😅😂🤣💩🙋
This channel never gets old!!!!
True!!
This channel is five years old. 😁
True 🔥
Agree!
I'm just looking for some advice.
Do you think he'd be interested in doing a job with a €2,500,000 cut?
“Who are you, and how did you get in here?”
“ I’m a locksmith, and I’m a locksmith.”
w h e e z e
Nice Police Squad reference, well done
I am a locksmith's locksmith.
why did you cheat on me?
he's a locksmith and he's a lockpicker
oh
- State your name, rank and intentions!
- The Doctor, doctor, fun.
Just discovered your channel and my mind is blown! Here I am thinking of an episode of the A-Team when the crew had to take an impression of a key in order to replicate it and it worked, that blew my mind as a 9-year old kid and that memory still sticks with me today lol! Love your channel and you have a new fan!
Am I the only one who wants to see an educational video on the Keyfile machine? Looks pretty interesting
You did get to see just about everything it does though. Set the position and cut the depth. He was a little artsy going left and right of center by a millimeter or so on each position so I'd like to hear him talk through it, too.
Seems pretty intuitive; a cutting burr, a burnishing wheel, and a pair of feed screws associated with an exchangeable template card.
A bit more advanced than the old key cutting machines I used as a kid, but recognizable.
It looks really simple, I expected something much more complex actually. It seems that the right knob controls the side to side movement, which is shown by the bottom needle (and the blue card gives a scale to let you know in front of which position you're at). The bottom knob controls the "depth" of the cut, shown by the top needle. If you want to do a 4 cut in position 3, put the bottom needle to 3, then the top needle to 4, and then move the key side to side a bit (shown by the smaller lines on the bottom scale) to make the cut wide enough.
Absolutely!
@@robertkribs9513 you can see the left and right of each position marked on the scale. You probably have to make the cuts wide enough, or the key would bind a lot.
"We have little spacers that help you find the correct depth for each of the sliders. We won't be needing those."
This is mission impossible level lock picking...
Not saying I could do it but it looks like something anyone somewhat familiar with the lock could do
You could take a panorama picture / video and then you have the lock as a whole picture
The spacers might come in handy if you don't want to have your phone out.
@@niccis1982 They don't work so well. "So we have a very narrow 1, a really fat 4, ..."
Small brain: break the lock
Big brain: pick the lock
Galaxy brain: manufacture a new key
..LoL..
LMFAO
Under rated comment
micro brain: break the door
Universe brain: manufacture a new lock
I always looked a lock pickers as like magicians, but 1:41 of just watching you do this you have made years of fog make absolute sense
Translate to English.
This is the Locksmithing Lawyer, and what I have to today is the making of a key.
The making of the key made my day.
Hi, this is the law talking locksmith guy
The Lawsmithing Lock Lawyer wants to know your location.
Locksmithing is just Lv.2 Lockpicking.
"pfft, I bet LPL can't pick my lock"
okay I'll just make a key then
"wh...what?"
Can't wait till he gets stuff made here's lock
@@JyeKelly what ? Edit: nvm the comment further on this page made it more clear what was meant.
👍👌👏ruclips.net/channel/UCjWpq0YajYbpMFQQKuGkMbA
@@JyeKelly me either, the greatest crossover since infinity war
LPL: turns on key cutting machine
RUclips subtitles: [applause] [music]
I am AMAZED at how bad the voice to text function is!
😂😂😂😂😂
A real banger
The camera was the most amazing part to me. I didn't know that we had cameras that were that small!!
I'm not sure the camera was in the key. I suspect there's a fiber optic system in the key and the camera is in the bulky black handle.
Surgery
"i cant open this lock, what should we do?" "just....look inside to see what the combo is..."
LPL: *I just so happen to have a special machine in my garage*
Why am I not surprised?!
because he owns a channel dedicated to lockpicking with millions of followers and is probably the best lockpicker in the world? i mean it makes perfect sense
"I'm shocked, SHOCKED, that there's lock-smithing going on in here! (nods head towards LPL's garage)"
ruclips.net/video/SjbPi00k_ME/видео.html
;D
SaltyPuglord hahaha fantastic
Next I will open this safe with a postage stamp
Probably because he has a machine shop in his basement as well; see the videos of LPL and Bosnian Bill making the original prototypes of the infamous disc detainer pick
This was LPL taking the panoramic route to open the lock while being lazy on a Saturday morning.
"I could pick this open, but that takes too short a time"
Exactly my thoughts lol
Well, you cant monetize a 10 sec long video on youtube.
@@xanhfei good point
@Will Wallace what if you add another one after video so you can put another ad and double the profit.
Sometimes my genius is almost freightening.
This gives you a key so you can just come back and use the lock as you see fit.
I like how when hes cutting the key the subtitles translates to:
[Music]
[Applause]
Rewatched the video with the CC turned on. Not disappointed
I mean it is less grating than some actual music
Lock company: "This lock is so secure it can only be cut with a lightsaber."
LPL: "Wait a second, let me check my garage..."
"I just so happened to have a new lightsaber in my garage"
Lock company: *nervous sweating *
I mean, those exist now. Kinda. ruclips.net/video/xC6J4T_hUKg/видео.html&ab_channel=HacksmithIndustries
LPL: Hold my beer
@@hawktitan7896 Good to see someone else got in with the Hacksmith link, I half expected I'd have to do it myself.
Infinity war is the most ambitious crossover, hacksmith and LPL: hold our beers
That key cutter has a sound that’s somewhere between creepy and relaxing.
Kwikset: “If we can’t beat him, we may as well join him”.
Pick the lock : ❌
Creates a duplicate key after scanning the lock : ✔
* insert drake's meme here *
This is the lockscanning lawyer...
I looked at the title and I was thinking: WHY would a camera company also own kwikset?
Thanks for all the likes!
:D
No, it's the camera that owns kwikset!
No no, the Wifi Owns Kiwkset Tiny Camera, you guys dont get it
to lock the camera
Clearly the wifi camera is operated with a kwikset smart key.
Yeah... swap "owns" with "pwns" and it would make sense.
You have a very calm, thorough way of speaking in your videos, it's nice then again communication is key.
This is the guy that gets a call to be recruited in a heist team, while he's on a heist mission trying to lock pick a bank vault.
I think there is a wrong word there...he wouldn't be just "trying".
U think where he gets money for law study
He has actually stopped being a lawyer, because he is now a security consultant/lockpicker full time
That explains why he doesn't bother to make the video 10min long
Someone get me a LPL payday dlc
That's probably one of the coolest machines I've seen, the fact that it's marked by a dial is so satisfying....
yeah, lots lathe in old hand crank style used simular way to tell dept and things
I’m just impressed someone can remember 5 numbers that long
person man camera woman tv
Another genius. How many of you are there. This one even can recite in randomised order.
in fact the human brain is main to hold about 4 information at the same time max, numbers when defined as indiviual information are hard to remenber because you can't manage more than 4 at once but if somhow you get them to be one single information it becomes really easy. for exemple : 5184 is hard to remember, but things like "2077" or "1945" "2020" have the same amount of numbers yet it's easier to remember since it realates to a single information : a year.
also a simple trick to help you get up to 5 information at once is to consider the fifth one as an "intruder" like the one which is different from the rest. fin a similarity among the 4 information you remember and then th fifth one is the one which doesn't have this similarity.
also it helps when you are counting number, on a dice fo exemple, the hardest face to identifie quickly is th 5 since you're brain can't recognise it and count it immediatly. the 6 is easy since you can see 2 ligne of 3 and admitedly the 5 having such a particular shape is easy enought but anyway and easy way to identifie the noumber of element when they are 5 is to identifie a first pack od 4 and then you see that there's only one left, so 5.
brain is stupid and can't manage past 4 but brain is so stupid you can trick it in doing things that it can't normaly do.
@@Skaelya lmao no
... none of y'all have memorized things like your phone number or license plate?
ive been wanting to be a lock smith as a job for a little while,and now that i know its barely 1300$ to get that machine and camera, It would completemy basic kit for my truck. Thanks so much L.P Lawyer.
I feel like the creator's three-year-old son asked him "why don't we just make a key with a camera and-" and his dad just yells "genius"
I imagined David Wallace and his kid (from The Office) saying this!
If it works and its stupid, its not stupid
I imagine at this point, LPL doesn't even have to walk, he just sorta levitates from lock to lock, transcendentally enlightening them
He floats like Yogi Bear on the stink lines coming out of a picnic basket
What a fanboy
@@noahway13 man cranky people are sad.
I'm surprised the locks don't just immediately open out of embarrassment.
Hahahahhahaha
"I find a little bit easier to just slide it in" -LPL
I was gonna say, that’s what she said.
A line for a April 1 episode
no preparations?
No lubricant needed 🤣
Said all moms...
Cool gadgets, I remember when a young teen about 40 years ago and my parents would occasionally take away my car key. Being a defiant kid and handy with tools, I then drew around the actual key on a sheet of aluminum and marked the grooves. I rough cut then hand filed a key cutting key slots with my Dremel tool and a guide, after a bit more filing the key worked perfectly! I just wanted to see if I could do it and I did, lol. 😎👍
Hell my first car, a 48 chevrolet, the key would turn with a dime. The tolerances weren't very tight on those.
My first car, a 61 Buick Special, the ignition switch would turn without a key. It had a lock position, but I never used it. I also would always lock the door by reaching through the vent window and pushing the handle forward.
5 minutes, you showed us what the lock looked like inside, how to cut a key and then opening it. Well done!
This video shows a Dutchman in a kilt doing the same thing in about a minute with only a file and a magnifying glass. ruclips.net/video/Bj9KEmLWRek/видео.html
@@andypughtube That's cool, thanks!
When 4 of your favorite RUclips creators mention the LPL in their videos, you know you have found the gold standard for a person who knows locks inside and out. And two of my favorite RUclips creators are electrical engineers, one is a farmer and the last one is a movie critic.
Love to see a more detailed video of the key cutting machine. That was awesome.
Thank you for a great video!!
'LPL' will be an addition to Dictionary revisions the World over next year : meaning 'Man who casually disrespects Locks'.
The "Stuff Made Here" channel just made a lock which he thinks is unpickable. Which lock picking RUclipsr do you think they mentioned? You're right.
"I find it a little bit easier just to slide it in and stop at the correct location." - LockPickingLawyer, 2020
This quote is also usable in some other context...
Bet he's told that to Mrs. LPL before 😂😂😂
...'swat she said.
That’s what she said!! 😂
@@OtakuUnitedStudio nice one, I'm officially dead
Who would have thought a channel about picking locks would be so fascinating?
That key cutting machine is amazing. I love the analog gauges/template card system. And of course the camera is beyond cool. A friend and I in college (he did the actual hard parts like making the key) obtained a key blank to a dorm room key of another guy on our floor who my friend wanted to play a practical joke on by re-arranging all of his furniture, and either he or I also took some high quality photos of the kid's dorm key. Since all of our keys used the same blank, my friend was able to work out a real dimensions scale to figure out how deep to cut each notch on the key. He ended up making his own template in Adobe illustrator and basically replicated the key gauge here without knowing anything about keys/locks. He then filed it down by hand, and tried it on the door and it didn't work. He was about to say "oh well, it was a fun experiment", when I took the key and jiggled it around a bit which caused it to immediately turn.... I was damn impressed. Think I already posted this comment but this makes me think of that story again and one of the things that really got me interested in how this stuff works!
Did the joke work out?
how did he find the key code though
If he saw keys to a half dozen rooms he could probably figure out the master also, or have a good idea of where to start.
Pretty cool story. Good times!
@@davidhoekje7842, in my dorm I'd take apart my own room's lock and measure the wafers to figure out the master. (Several decades ago.)
The gold standard lock picker owning the gold standard key cutter in his garage equals a legend.
I'm shocked at how user-friendly that key-cutter is! I've always felt like there would be some arcane knowledge required to cut keys, just like how I thought that about lock picking before subscribing!
The crazy thing is you can order specially-made files that profile key steps just as easily. You can do this with a file, a bench-vise, and a ruler if you take your time.
When I was working for an Oldsmobile dealership , The parts department had a hand operated key cutter that a depth gauge that could be set for whatever pin was being cut . With a squeeze of the handles a new key could be made using some code that was in a manufacturers manual. AND ....it was cordless!
The counter guy at our GM dealership had the cut depth numbers memorized. He'd cut you a fresh key just by looking at your key for a second.
This must be the hardest lock LPL picked coz he used a *KEY*
But it was a key he made.
@@TheaterGeek2007 yeah so he had to make a key for it. but maybe he could have opened it without having to make a key.
pretty sure he picked one of these in an earlyer vid
To be fair, I think this was more about the tool than the lock.
Stick to using a city rake. rumble rumble rumble, oh, broke it.
That sure is a quality tool. I like the HPC key machine also.
@Conor And it does depend on what you are getting access to (and the cost/risk of using a brute force attack)
I had my pinkie finger get stuck against the blade as a apprentice. Lucky it was on the standards LW4 blade and not a thinner blade!
This is probably my favorite video of yours so far.
This is some cutting edge technology.
Ha!
lol nice pun! 😂
Hehehe
This comment cuts deep
@@leonthayne literally made no sense and wasn't even a pun
The key cutting machine part was honestly so cool.
Stock prices skyrocket for Kwikset: A lock that took LPL many many minutes to get into. (Including off camera time.)
Well he can probably pick it much faster he was just showing this new device out.
I love the elegance with which you express yourself. You say a lot without being wordy, and are very precise in your descriptions, without resorting to overly complex vocabulary.
If you smack someone down, you never accuse them of being idiots, you merely point out their 'unforgivable oversights', and you never, ever use hyperbole.
I really do enjoy the clarity of thought and expression in your videos.
yeah reminds me of the old PBS Motorweek show's presenter
I guess he learned that in lawyer school
I also like how when he was cutting the key he didn't speed it up or add copyright free music to help people's attention span. If the point is that he's making the key, the viewer has to sit through it, and I was just mesmerised by the whole process.
Add.. no silly obnoxious background music. Thank you
From the title, I was expecting a lock with an extremely small security camera built in that would record any attempt to open or pick it.
SAME
Same
Same
Yes, but... no! LPL, after all!
Same lol
That key cutter is so simple... I love it. CNC guy here.
2021: "This is the keymaking lawyer"
LPL, home security consultant.
LPL: This is the LPL and the Kwikse-
Me: *cancels Kwikset order*
The kwikset smart keys locks can be brute forced rather easily too.
To be fair, there isn't a lock LPL cant unlock. I say if he takes more than 2 minutes picking a lock open, its un-pickable for most people
@@jcmartinez7527 There definitely are locks he can't pick. At least not yet. As a Finn the newer Abloys come to mind but there are probably tons more. Or if he knows he can pick them, it would seem strange not to publish it. But yeah I 100% agree with you that 2 mins for LPL = practically unpickable for everyone else.
@@jcmartinez7527 I bought a deadbolt that he couldn't pick. But I did see a video of a locksmith picking it.
Nothing about the kwiksets is particularly difficult... The main issue is that since they’re so common, you can break into a place, find a key, put in an identical core to the broken core, and be out... All in 1/10th the time it took you to read the MIT lockpicking guide however many years ago that was
Nifty combination.
Nice to see some tools other than your standard picks, hooks, and tension wrenches.
"It's not breaking and entering, I had a key"
-LPL after getting caught in the defendants apartment
This might be how he will beat the "Stuff Made Here"' lock
You think he'd stoop that low?
@@Aardvarko At first glance, it looks like cheating. But after your question, I'm not sure anymore. After all, the picking of the lock is not a magic trick (i knew, hard to believe on LPL channel), but an engineering task and it does not matter how it was solved.
Do we see Stuff Made Here's key? Lpl can recreate it. If Stuff rekeys the lock, I don't think LPL's camera will work in his lock.
The Stuff Made Here lock uses a Schlage key (An SC1 or larger).. the camera only fits in Kwikset locks (KW1's). I checked.. no such tool exists for Schlage.
I do have a feeling that he won't be able to straight pick it, and so will instead figure out a bypass (such as this one). Though from my recollection of the Stuff lock, the camera method might not be able to see where the pin gates are.
Now THIS is cool. Would love to see this in a cylindrical "key" so we can see inside more unusual locks.
Its Microsoft Bob!!!
I'm guessing it'd be possible by modifying the blank. But now iWant as a non-destructive tool for looing inside gadgets without taking them apart. I'd thought about using a CCD from a phone, but this looks even smaller. Suspect it's origins are medical & developed for laproscopic examinations.
Hey Microsoft Bob, please help me do my taxes.
"This is the camera lockpick Bosnian Bill and I made"
I think this camera picking only works on Smartkey locks. The design of the lock allows you to see things that most locks hide. The camera trick wouldn't work on other kinds of locks because all you would see is the face of the pins.
Man I love the sound of a key machine... It reminds me of when I’d go to the hardware store with my Dad as a child when he’d have spare keys cut. I was always so fascinated with these machines. I guess this fascination is what brought me to the LPL all of these years lately in a way.
Thank you for all of the great content!
That is pure hardcore genius.
LPL: "I just so happen to have a special machine in my garage..."
Me: "Where does he get those wonderful toys?"
probably builds them himself
Honestly: were you suprised?
It's not a special machine to a locksmith. It's like if you went to a car shop and they had a hydraulic lift. You KNOW they have one, then they tell you they have one that comes with lots of nice features and accessories. Would it be weird to find out your small grocery store had an automotive hydraulic lift with nice features? Absolutely. It is still a little surprising that someone who isn't a professional locksmith has one though.
Got one in my truck along with a key duplicator
@@benjaminwilliams2859 at this point, he should be a locksmith, but it doesn't pay as much as youtube and lawyering. it pays well thoughm $75/hr
Stuff made here: here an unpickable lock
LPL: Here a key with a tiny WiFI camera
gotta pick that stuff made here lock
Trading Places: RUclipsr Edition. 😂
LPL with the fancy electronics...
And StuffMadeHere with the lock set...
Yes pls everyone spam LPL new vids with "do Stuff Made Here lock"
@@riskobrooks9862 he is apready gonna do it.
@@riskobrooks9862 ruclips.net/video/_7vPNcnYWQ4/видео.html
"This is the LockPickingLawyer and welcome to my new channel KeySmithingLawyer. Today we're..."
As a locksmith I prefer to drill the core of smartkey lock, it takes less than a minute. ( Smartkey core are really cheap, so I leave the deadbolt and only replace the core that I drilled) than if client had many copies of their Keys in circulation, I take their existing keys and rekey the lock in 30 seconds since its smartkey. At the end its faster and less expensive for the customer since we charge Time. It usually takes about 15 minutes to complete these calls
Also where I live it can be -30° so client and I really wants to be done as quickly as possible
As the son of a locksmith, the sound of that machine brings memories!
Same, reminds me of cutting key copies at my job at a hardware store back in the day.
"The is the Key Copying Lawyer..."
*ahem* Key Cutting Lawyer
Good news: Mrs LPL did not kill him after that last video he posted. Thanks goodness!
Well, don't be TOO sure just yet. He could have several videos set to auto-release at the appropriate times.
Why would she kill _him_ and not the person who sent the stuff
But she is probably inspecting any package addressed to him for awhile.
"...I just so happen to have a special machine in my garage..." Naturally. Three thumbs up.
The disc detainer pick that the LPL and BosnianBill made is now in stock on sparrows!
thanks for the tip, I've been waiting for it forever ! Order placed, weehaaa !
Was... lol...
The correct name for it is "The Pick That BosnianBill And I Made™".
I got one thanks for the heads up
@@phalcon23 Still is, just ordered one myself.