[1584] Diebold 175-70 Safe Deposit Lock

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @junahn1907
    @junahn1907 8 месяцев назад +8994

    lol. That locksmith didn't realize he was in the presence of Bruce Wayne.
    I would have laughed if the smith said "well, I imagine the LPL could, but what are the chances you'd run into him?".

    • @bobloblaw9302
      @bobloblaw9302 8 месяцев назад +241

      That would have been awesome! Great comment. Cheers, Calgary Canada.

    • @liorshalmay73
      @liorshalmay73 8 месяцев назад +487

      lol, if he said so, it would make the story even more entertaining.
      imagine if somehow that locksmith watches this video in the future, and says to himself, wait a minute this story sounds familiar

    • @ihcfn
      @ihcfn 8 месяцев назад +419

      Somewhere a locksmith watching this has just said "Wait? What?"

    • @benedict6962
      @benedict6962 8 месяцев назад +105

      In practice, that would soft doxx him

    • @since1876
      @since1876 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@benedict6962 I mean, no local lockpick would snitch him out. People are generally very respectful of people's privacy. Especially adults who have careers and things to do. But if a person really wants to find out who he is, it is very possible to do so. He does his best to hide his identity, but the Internet is a very powerful tool.

  • @derekbroestler7687
    @derekbroestler7687 8 месяцев назад +509

    As a locksmith of 20 years, thank you for explaining that the locksmith was not wrong in their approach.... A few factors are at play in these situations.
    First, if you're dealing with a new customer you may have no idea what hardware you'll be working on..... Buying every single specialized tool out there, just in case, with no idea of how often you'll use it is a good way to go broke.
    It's better to have an acceptable, reliable, method and the tools for it that will work, quickly, in multiple scenarios.
    Secondly, the lock gods like to throw curveballs.... The minute you buy a really expensive specialized tool because you've had a few jobs recently where it would have come in handy, you probably won't see another job like that for a LONG time. lol

    • @davebloomsness8019
      @davebloomsness8019 8 месяцев назад +72

      I was a Locksmith for 45 years and did have a few banks over the years that I serviced their SD boxes. They all preferred drilling or nose pulling as they didn't want the customer to think that their valuables were vulnerable to quick access. I do admit that having the guard key makes it a lot easier, and the main security of a SD box is the fact that it's located inside the vault, probably with a time lock on it. Anyway, I did enjoy the video. Keep 'em coming. DB

    • @miliket4tom
      @miliket4tom 8 месяцев назад +16

      I totally relate to the curve ball part lol. Working renovation, from times to times I replace appliances for customers. I used to take the old ones (if working) with me to: 1/ customer doesn't have to take it to the dump so they save some dosh, 2/ I get some dosh if another customer wants it and 3/ that next customer can save some dosh from buying brand new (that they don't really need, like if it's for rental). Funny enough whenever I keep those things, it will sit one hell of a long time in my garage collecting dust, THEN after I gave up and threw it out, suddenly I have some customers asking if I have [that exact thing I just threw away]. That happens often enough now I simply throw out everything and just go find some used one on the market if customer requested

    • @E1m0ren
      @E1m0ren 8 месяцев назад +7

      Go broke? What? You can literally see how much all these tools cost and it's not a "business go broke" number or even close to it.

    • @derekbroestler7687
      @derekbroestler7687 8 месяцев назад +63

      ​@@E1m0ren You may be overestimating how much a one person locksmith business makes a year, and UNDERESTIMATING how many specialty tools there are out there for it. I ain't Wal Mart, I'm me... The formula of "Tool cost divided by tool usage" DOES matter.
      You're looking at it as a hobbyist, I'm looking at it as a business. I don't pick or work on locks because I'm looking to be the coolest kid on the block, I do it for money, to pay a mortgage, insurance, taxes, licensing, dealer fees, vehicle and equipment maintenance, inventory costs, unexpected expenses, operating capital, medical coverage, utilities, retirement, and personal income....
      A buddy of mine, who's a full time SAVTA certified master safe tech has a $7000 auto dialer. For HIM that makes sense. I open MAYBE one or two cheap Sentry safes a year. It doesn't make sense for me because even if I COULD charge $300 each, it would take me 24 openings for it to START to turn a profit... There's a Kwikset Smartkey decoder, it costs about $500. It's cool, I don't own one, because on EVERY model of the Kwikset Smartkey system (except the 99170 unless the model has been updated) the cylinder is replicable (and they're cheap wholesale), which means, considering how little residential work I do these days it's cheaper for both me, and the customer, for me to just drill the cylinder and sell them a new one for $15-$25 plus my trip charge..... IF I EVEN need to do that considering that most of the time I can just loid them open even if I have to use an airjack to do it.
      Lets say I open safe deposit boxes and I know that one bank uses this exact Diebold 175-50 Safe Deposit Lock, so I spend the severial hundred on this tool... That's great, until ANOTHER bank calls and they use an S&G, or LeGuard, or ANY other model that tool doesn't work on... Meanwhile that first bank doesn't call me for a year or two. So I can either spend severial thousand to get every single specialty SDB tool (if one is even available).... OR.... I use my $200 nose puller kit which works on ALL of them.

    • @E1m0ren
      @E1m0ren 8 месяцев назад

      You run your own business. You pick your clientele. Don't have a tool to fit that job? Refer them to someone else.
      Buying the tools for the clients you are most likely to service isn't some revolutionary idea dipshit.@@derekbroestler7687

  • @maurice_walker
    @maurice_walker 8 месяцев назад +7918

    "I actually have a pick specifically designed for locks like this."
    Of course he does. If a picking tool exists, LPL has it. If it doesn't exist, he makes it.

    • @Trepex_VE
      @Trepex_VE 8 месяцев назад +293

      You have broken down the entirety of the metal shaping industry to its most base component. Welders, machinists, and smiths usually have more self made tools than commercially made.

    • @captaintalon4485
      @captaintalon4485 8 месяцев назад +74

      Little known fact LPL made the pick Star Lord at the beginning of Guardians 1

    • @andregon4366
      @andregon4366 8 месяцев назад +40

      And if he doesn't have it, it doesn't matter anyway.

    • @rambard5599
      @rambard5599 8 месяцев назад +128

      If it doesn't exist, he and Bosnian Bill make it.

    • @AndyHoward
      @AndyHoward 8 месяцев назад +42

      Tony Iommi (Black Sabbath): "I have a riff for that."
      LPL: "I have a pick for that"

  • @sxanep
    @sxanep 8 месяцев назад +1273

    Destructive method is also better for bank customers.
    As a customer what would you prefer to hear as an answer to "what do you do if I loose my key?"
    "We would have to destructively replace the lock" or "It's OK, we can pick the lock with a special tool in 30 seconds"

    • @cipherthevcuber
      @cipherthevcuber 8 месяцев назад +180

      more like 5 minutes. not everyone has LPL sitting in their office talking about smoking pork shoulders

    • @dahn57
      @dahn57 8 месяцев назад +98

      That's called security theatre

    • @Fenor86
      @Fenor86 8 месяцев назад +42

      "why do you need a key in first place?" - LPL Bank

    • @starchitin
      @starchitin 8 месяцев назад +24

      @@dahn57 Yea, just like TSA

    • @calebcain4729
      @calebcain4729 8 месяцев назад +26

      But since both are true, it's only theater for the customer. The reality of the vulnerability remains exactly the same.

  • @jamesg1367
    @jamesg1367 8 месяцев назад +6572

    Bank manager: "I invited one of the world's most skilled lock-pickers into the safe deposit vault."
    Board of Directors: "You -- what?"

    • @Gulyus
      @Gulyus 8 месяцев назад +811

      "Its okay! He didn't have any red bull cans, special tools, and his hands were tied behind his back! Only managed to pick open three boxes before stopping when I got curt."

    • @jeinnerabdel
      @jeinnerabdel 8 месяцев назад +750

      It's OK, he's a lawyer too...
      HE'S WHAT?

    • @BobBobson
      @BobBobson 8 месяцев назад +325

      Bank manager: "It's fine. His hat is whiter than my undies."

    • @Thexdmattx
      @Thexdmattx 8 месяцев назад +81

      @@GulyusThis thread is gold.

    • @liquidmettle
      @liquidmettle 8 месяцев назад +54

      Describe the plot of Serenity badly 😄

  • @larper8or851
    @larper8or851 8 месяцев назад +74

    Hi, I open safe deposit boxes every single day. Both LPL and the locksmith are correct. It's important to remember that this tool is $400, and only works for 175-70s, but we run into a lot of other locks when we go this. Lots of professional shops are hesitant to buy expensive tools for extremely niche applications, if there's a cheaper way to do more.

    • @Gilfort_
      @Gilfort_ 3 месяца назад +6

      Thanks for providing a number to the tool! For someone who has no idea about all of this (and is just enjoying the videos) "having a specialized tool" could also be a $5 thing :D

    • @Stolas1777
      @Stolas1777 3 месяца назад +2

      I totally agree people see stuff like this and think every locksmith should be able to pick open every single lock. People don’t realize what a vast array of hardware locksmiths deal with. From access control, car keys, door closers, door hardware, locks, hinges, safes, file cabinets, safe deposit boxes, household locks, commercial locks, and probably more I’m not remembering because I just woke up ten minutes ago. And each of those that I just listed have thousands of different parts under each different purview. It’s literally insane how much you have to be familiar with. I have been in the locksmith field for years, now I work for a huge company that does a specialized type of work where I’m only dealing with specific equipment and even then there are over 400,000 part numbers in our database we use for ordering.

  • @hazerdoescrap
    @hazerdoescrap 8 месяцев назад +3595

    "Is this lock pickable?"
    "By a prepared professional? Most likely. By me? Possibly. Within the confines of what you're willing to pay? No."
    NOTHING is scure.... You can only make it Cost Prohibitive. ;)

    • @Wrecker3D
      @Wrecker3D 8 месяцев назад +35

      any lock would be pickable (I'm guessing)... 'if you can make it, you can break it' either forcefully, using strong enough magnets, or picking the pins one by one.... with or without special tools... ok, if the lock was made of tungsten or similar material the destructive method might be a no go 😉-oh yeah, explosives might still work...

    • @mistressabysstress
      @mistressabysstress 8 месяцев назад +119

      @@Wrecker3D All locks are designed with a weakness in that they are made to be opened. If they are designed to be opened then they can be opened wrongly. It doesn't care how its opened only that the particular trigger that it was designed with was satisfied.

    • @CrimSkies
      @CrimSkies 8 месяцев назад +86

      @@mistressabysstressyeah, as a general rule of thumb, the more convenient it is, the less secure. The inverse is true; the more secure it is, the less convenient. Nowadays, hostile invasion is accomplished by targeting the weakest link of security: the user, usually via phishing and/or impersonation. "Wear a hi-vis vest and carry an air of confidence and a clipboard and you can go anywhere you're not supposed to." Don't need to worry about locks if they just open the door for you.

    • @halgerson
      @halgerson 8 месяцев назад +17

      Basically any security measure is meant to stop the amateurs and slow down the professionals (though in the case of LPL, not for very long).

    • @ph0end
      @ph0end 8 месяцев назад +43

      ​@@CrimSkies Probably not an original thing by any means but we had a local radio station arm a fellow with hi-vis and an extension ladder, and sent him to attempt entry at various locations over the course of a few weeks. 'Look busy, don't make eye contact.' It worked every time, including - rather comically - a small river cruise vessel where said ladder was completely pointless.

  • @cameronross4140
    @cameronross4140 8 месяцев назад +60

    My great grandpa was the inventor of this type of lock. He sold the patent and didn’t make much off of it. He was also a train conductor in my home town of Cape Girardeau Mo and still has his train on display in the middle of one of the public parks for kids to play on.

  • @bg6b7bft
    @bg6b7bft 8 месяцев назад +2355

    "Is this lock pickable?"
    If you're willing to pay me _lawyer_ rates, sure.

    • @ulrichkalber9039
      @ulrichkalber9039 8 месяцев назад +26

      Answer too long, might allow voice recognition.

    • @workhard2belazy
      @workhard2belazy 8 месяцев назад +29

      Hey assuming $1000 an hour. it might still be worth it, since he took less than 30 seconds picking. So many another 4.5 mins for the rekey? 1000/12 = $83.33

    • @ulrichkalber9039
      @ulrichkalber9039 8 месяцев назад +84

      @@workhard2belazy where i come from the hours of a craftsman are for every beginning hour.
      1 min = 1 hour billed
      61 min= 2 hours billed
      also travel to the client is billed.

    • @SparkSovereign
      @SparkSovereign 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@ulrichkalber9039yep. And this is so important, because you're not paying for the ten seconds it took to solve the problem, you're paying for the ten years it took to learn to do it in ten seconds...plus the travel time, the mental energy cost of task switching, the amortized risk of when it doesn't go right on the first time, etc.
      A skilled laborer doesn't spend fewer resources than an unskilled one, they just change their distribution in a way that's often advantageous because it compresses a lot of cost into a small amount of elapsed time. But rather than explaining that every time..."here's my rates, minimum fee is x".

    • @zlinedavid
      @zlinedavid 8 месяцев назад

      @@ulrichkalber9039Lawyers usually bill in 6 minute increments.

  • @keeperofstars
    @keeperofstars 8 месяцев назад +252

    That was the nicest way to dance around a "hold my beer Flex" without making anyone upset.

    • @VoltisArt
      @VoltisArt 8 месяцев назад +10

      Remember the last word in the name. LPL's also a professional at making a point.

    • @ryanjohnson4565
      @ryanjohnson4565 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@VoltisArtremember that one part of Star Wars in the trash compactor. There were so many problems with that scene…

  • @irishplayerkc
    @irishplayerkc 8 месяцев назад +1959

    I was a vault locksmith and owned the proper tools to open all safe deposit locks. I opened litterally thousands of safe deposit locks and rekeyed as well. Diebold and Lefebure locks offer picking tools but the rest (Yale, S&G, Mosler) do not offer this feature. Nose pulling is the most common method for opening these locks and for the very old locks for which replacement locks and parts are scarce; we drill the door and pick the lock.
    I would like to see you pick a Mosler Invinceable lock; made in the 1950's

    • @JohnW118
      @JohnW118 8 месяцев назад +289

      My money goes on LPL.

    • @NothingPicksLocks
      @NothingPicksLocks 8 месяцев назад +33

      Send me one please, I'll do it!

    • @derekbroestler7687
      @derekbroestler7687 8 месяцев назад +162

      As an industrial and commercial locksmith of 20 years, THIS ALL DAY. Especially considering that if you're dealing with a new customer you may have no idea what hardware you'll be working on and buying every single specialized tool out there, just in case, with no idea of how often you'll use it is a good way to go broke. Especially since the fates like to throw a twist or two in.... The minute you buy a really expensive specialized tool because you've had a few jobs recently where it would have come in handy, seems to ensure you won't see another job like that for a LONG time. lol

    • @user-yv2sc5qv7x
      @user-yv2sc5qv7x 8 месяцев назад +83

      Same tooling issues in So Many Fields. Broke out a super-secret-squirrel tool just last week ... for the second time in nearly 20 years

    • @clickrick
      @clickrick 8 месяцев назад +91

      @@JohnW118 I doubt he's suggesting that LPL wouldn't be able to, rather than it would make for a most satisfying video to watch it being done by an artist.

  • @DemoniqueLewis
    @DemoniqueLewis 8 месяцев назад +181

    I had a Hackers “Don’t Ask” moment when I considered how he has a door and banker’s key.

    • @VoltisArt
      @VoltisArt 8 месяцев назад +33

      1. He's a skilled locksmith, not just a hobbyist picker. Has thousands of locks, keys to match, and can make the latter as needed, be it by machine or hand.
      2. Since he's also a skilled lawyer, that key was probably one he had made just for this, rather than give away an actual bank's bitting combo.

    • @brucetheloon
      @brucetheloon 8 месяцев назад +28

      Ebay's got sixty six door and key sets for sale right now.

    • @la_scrittice_vita
      @la_scrittice_vita 8 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@brucetheloonLove those. I got a beautiful Swiss set several years ago.

    • @_Ekaros
      @_Ekaros 8 месяцев назад +4

      I'm sure there has been lot of bank vaults that have been dismantled. And that key does not seem too complicated to copy.

    • @webdev217
      @webdev217 7 месяцев назад +3

      I worked for Diebold and copied guard keys and there were not so many different keys. You could probably keep them all on 1 Small key ring.

  • @JintoLin
    @JintoLin 8 месяцев назад +1692

    I like that the locksmith gave an honest answer and didn't just proceed to pick it with out explaining the extra cost of doing so. This video just proves the passion LPL has for his craft which the rest of us get to enjoy and in some cases learn to love it just as much as him

    • @David_Crayford
      @David_Crayford 8 месяцев назад +56

      I am guessing he had a full schedule for the day already and wanted to get it done quickly so he can move on to the next one.

    • @shapowlow
      @shapowlow 8 месяцев назад +77

      Yup and LPL had to use a specialized tool on top of his rare skill. The locksmith probably gave the bank the better option

    • @jhbange
      @jhbange 8 месяцев назад +139

      @@David_Crayford Yep, time is money. I've been a locksmith for 30-odd years, and most entry jobs come down to that. Even if I had the tool, and even if I was fairly skilled with the tool, there's always the chance this lock is going to have something odd about it that thwarts me. Maybe it's broken, maybe there's a key bitting that the pick can't quite handle. But a nose puller and destructive entry? That works every time, takes an amount of time I can quote the customer beforehand, a price I can name beforehand, and in the end the customer has a brand new lock. Now if it was a typical schlage deadbolt, I'd Lishi pick that in 30 seconds becase THAT is the most predictable route. It's all about finding the path of least resistance.

    • @egoncasteel
      @egoncasteel 8 месяцев назад +24

      Yep destructive isn't pretty but its more predictable. Picking and key 5 to 60 min, Pull and replace 20 min flat.@@David_Crayford

    • @neijan2932
      @neijan2932 8 месяцев назад

      Do I miss something or is re-using the lock out of the question anyway? They don't have the key to give it to a client, at least.

  • @Iceflkn
    @Iceflkn 8 месяцев назад +16

    I used to be a vault technician for Diebold and actually worked on this specific lock many times. The destructive means, was always fastest. I could've had that lock opened in half the time it took to pick it, but that's the tradeoff.
    Well done!

    • @webdev217
      @webdev217 7 месяцев назад +5

      Same here. I was I told to make it look hard... obviously a customer that sees that opened in 10 seconds is not going to have a warm and fuzzy for Diebold or the bank.

    • @TheRealWormbo
      @TheRealWormbo Месяц назад

      Half the picking time is the opening part, but what about replacing it? Wouldn't that take more time than just rekeying the undamaged lock?

  • @beratademi3895
    @beratademi3895 8 месяцев назад +1924

    Pretty sure it was a fluke as it wasn't shown twice

    • @garyskeel3236
      @garyskeel3236 8 месяцев назад +102

      Best LPL video comment. This needs all the likes.

    • @mortanicus5871
      @mortanicus5871 8 месяцев назад +41

      Very observant! 🤣

    • @francisp6723
      @francisp6723 8 месяцев назад +21

      Clearly! 😂

    • @GreedRunsall
      @GreedRunsall 8 месяцев назад +66

      I had to watch it twice because it just didn't feel right seeing him only pick it once

    • @johnny5805
      @johnny5805 8 месяцев назад +7

      OP works as a Safe Technician ! 😀 His profession just got burned.

  • @rogerk1710
    @rogerk1710 8 месяцев назад +5

    I’m so happy to hear the LPL call it a safe deposit lock instead of a safety deposit lock. Thanks LPL!

  • @d4gu1t4r5
    @d4gu1t4r5 8 месяцев назад +918

    Can we respect how humble LPL is? He absolutely showed up a locksmith on picking the lock, but completely respect the method that the locksmith used and even calls out that getting someone with the proper tools and expertise would cost just as much money, if not more.

    • @rossstewart9475
      @rossstewart9475 8 месяцев назад +88

      Whilst we can all respect how humble LPL is, I think you perhaps misheard: It was the *locksmith* in the story, not LPL, that made the admission that picking the lock was quite possible, just prohibitively expensive.
      LPL then went on to demonstrate this by opening it using a completely custom fabricated tool for the job.

    • @d4gu1t4r5
      @d4gu1t4r5 8 месяцев назад +50

      @rossstewart9475 You are correct that the locksmith said it would cost more for him to try to pick it. LPL also said that a specialist that would have the tools and could pick would cost much more as well.

    • @livinghypocrite5289
      @livinghypocrite5289 8 месяцев назад

      @@d4gu1t4r5 Well he know how much the hour of a lawyer costs. So most likely he knew that hiring him for that job would be more expensive.

    • @arthuralford
      @arthuralford 8 месяцев назад +52

      LPL didn't show up the locksmith, nor was he being humble. He acknowledged that the locksmith was right-it could be done, but the customer would have to pay more. And it's doubtful the locksmith had the tool LPL used on hand, as 99% of the time a bank just wants it opened, for cheap. In the end, LPL says what the locksmith did works, and the bank is happy

    • @youtubesnamingpolicysucks
      @youtubesnamingpolicysucks 8 месяцев назад +1

      Would have been neat if he brought his tool and offered to let the locksmith try to pick it. I think LPL is in the final design/patent phase and that's why the tool was revealed to us.

  • @RobertShane83
    @RobertShane83 8 месяцев назад +25

    I was wondering why I don't have that pick and I was trained to pull the nose. The pick is specific to the Diebold 175-70 lock and costs roughly 400$. Pulling the nose is going to work on the majority of different lock models and type that I encounter. The tool maybe nice but its price is prohibitive and its use limited.

    • @TTacLLC
      @TTacLLC 5 месяцев назад

      Who makes the pick?

  • @b4ux1t3-tech
    @b4ux1t3-tech 8 месяцев назад +468

    This reminds me of the folk tale of the programmer/sysop/whatever that gets a call in the middle of the night, and goes in to the office l, resolves an issue in thirty seconds, and then goes home and puts in for overtime pay.
    His boss says "What, I'm going to pay you overtime for pressing a couple buttons?"
    And the Mary Sue says "no, I did that for free. You're paying me for knowing exactly what buttons to push, it would have taken your night crew hours to figure out"
    Specialization is expensive.

    • @ssl3546
      @ssl3546 8 месяцев назад +25

      Dude if you're "on call" you're being paid for that time. If you're exempt you don't get overtime. If you're in a position where people will call and wake you up and you'll drive into the office to do something either this is the craziest emergency that's ever happened or you already have an understanding with your boss and HR department as to how you'll be compensated. No company that has mainframe sysops is so cavelier with pay practices.

    • @b4ux1t3-tech
      @b4ux1t3-tech 8 месяцев назад +91

      @@ssl3546 it's a folk tale, friend, it's not a true story. It's a way of justifying how expensive specialized knowledge is in the IT space.

    • @arthurmoore9488
      @arthurmoore9488 8 месяцев назад

      @@b4ux1t3-techIf everything works great "why do we need IT?" If everything goes wrong, "why do we need IT?"
      The tale might be apocryphal, but many industries do work that way. Easy fix for a pro, but good luck otherwise.

    • @mechalith2791
      @mechalith2791 8 месяцев назад +31

      @@b4ux1t3-tech I've seen the same essential format used in a lot of other specialties as well (art, law, etc). I think it's more common these days for people to just go straight to pointing out that they're paying for a result not a duration, which is mostly the same point but with less chance someone is going to start an argument about on-call hours for hourly vs salaried positions or otherwise nitpicking the narrative logic.

    • @WackoMcGoose
      @WackoMcGoose 8 месяцев назад +54

      @@mechalith2791 The version I've always heard was a car mechanic. Looks at the engine, gives it a small tap, immediately fixed. Thousand dollar invoice. "It's $5 for the tap and $995 for knowing _where_ to tap."

  • @-MacCat-
    @-MacCat- 8 месяцев назад +3

    Not only very good at lock manipulation but also exceptional at diplomacy.
    Thanks, as always, for the sharing of your experiences in the world of locks.

  • @donchaput8278
    @donchaput8278 8 месяцев назад +126

    Love the extra explanation of "Well you can but it may not actually be the best choice" I usually try to get the best quality product/service, but within reason. Thanks for sharing the "reason" part.

  • @Z3ZP
    @Z3ZP 8 месяцев назад +4

    Thanks for not dismissing the majority of the trade and acknowlidging the vast expense of a specialist.
    Also props to the locksmith for being clear and saying that it can maybe be picked and saying it how it is.

  • @GuretoSefirosu
    @GuretoSefirosu 8 месяцев назад +274

    I just bought a $14,000 flatbed trailer. The most damage-resistant lock I can find slides up into the gooseneck and locks into place while inside. This prevents drilling, cutting, etc, but if LPL wanted that trailer, it would be picked in thirty seconds.

    • @Pip2andahalf
      @Pip2andahalf 8 месяцев назад +35

      What makes you think it would take him that long? Lol

    • @chriswarr641
      @chriswarr641 8 месяцев назад +143

      @@Pip2andahalf He's gotta explain to the camera what he is doing, and may re-lock it and re-pick it to show that it was not a fluke 😆

    • @Benoit-Pierre
      @Benoit-Pierre 8 месяцев назад +2

      Misspelled. You meant thirteen ... Or three ?

    • @FilmFlam-8008
      @FilmFlam-8008 8 месяцев назад +24

      You used a $14,000 flatbed trailer. It can be opened with a $14,000 flatbed trailer.

    • @arthurmoore9488
      @arthurmoore9488 8 месяцев назад +6

      @@FilmFlam-8008 Give McNally two of them and we'd see a video.

  • @Wheagg
    @Wheagg 8 месяцев назад +6

    I like how LPL was very careful to show his respect of the locksmith and their approach. He just wanted to show what someone with extreme skill could do, and then explained why that isn't done.

  • @godnessy
    @godnessy 8 месяцев назад +485

    "Could you have picked this lock instead?
    "Sure if you have LPL standing beside you haha"
    *Bank manager looks at LPL*

    • @uis246
      @uis246 8 месяцев назад +50

      LPL: "Who?"

    • @61rampy65
      @61rampy65 8 месяцев назад

      And LPL replies: "Yes, but now that you have both seen my face, I will have to kill both of you".

    • @timothyodonnell8591
      @timothyodonnell8591 8 месяцев назад +35

      LPL takes his anonymity extremely seriously. I'm certain he would not have given his identity away to someone he does not already know and trust.

    • @uzlonewolf
      @uzlonewolf 8 месяцев назад

      @@timothyodonnell8591 Eh, he's done talks at conferences before. I'd give it 50/50.

    • @sleblanc
      @sleblanc 8 месяцев назад +20

      @@timothyodonnell8591 I imagine LPL standing behind the other locksmith, whipping out his phone camera, starts saying "This is the Lock Picking Lawyer, and today, I'm going to show you how a locksmith would typically get into a bank safe deposit box".

  • @SadPuppySoup
    @SadPuppySoup 8 месяцев назад +20

    I really thought this would take longer. From my past knowledge of locksmiths I've used I always asked why they don't pick the locks instead of drill them and I always got the answer "this is not the movies we don't pick anymore" even when I just locked myself out and my key was in site on the hook inside. I have since learned to pick my walmart quik set on my house about as easy as using the key, thanks to you and your tools. I'm learning disk locks from old vending machines, very fun hobby.

    • @denisohbrien
      @denisohbrien 8 месяцев назад +6

      conversely, after locking myself out my business (and an hour commute away) i called a locksmith to gain entry, he drilled and replaced the lock in , ohnestly 2 minutes? i was happy to pay his fee. as it was a drop compared to a days lost earnings. now by this point i was fairly proficient as a hobby picker, but i needed in there right now. few years later I do the same, was easier to borrow a drill from another local business (a cafe of all things) and drill the lock myself than find someone with a pick set or a bench grinder and old style wiper blades! so in practical terms, destructive entry is fast and consistent.

  • @terrytexas8257
    @terrytexas8257 8 месяцев назад +50

    I really respect a person who can see other ways of doing something and explaining it all without bashing someone elses tried and true method. Good Job - LPL!

  • @spirotek
    @spirotek 8 месяцев назад +8

    The reason bank vault technicians don't pick locks is that it shakes the customer's confidence in the bank to protect their valuables if we can enter their box in seconds with no indication it has happened. As an industry we always destroy the lock.

  • @Dustins_Woodworking
    @Dustins_Woodworking 8 месяцев назад +89

    I really appreciate that you didn’t cast shade on the other locksmith or the destructive technique he used. Thanks for your honesty and professionalism.

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 8 месяцев назад

      Or he removed most of pins to impress naive morons (saw how lock "opens" halfway through pins?) and the kid crowd here totally bought it as "professionalism"...

    • @alan_davis
      @alan_davis 8 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@KuK137no mate.

    • @Rhewin
      @Rhewin 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@KuK137 I’ve seen about 5 locksmiths in the replies here. None of them are accusing him of that.

    • @jamesmerkel1932
      @jamesmerkel1932 8 месяцев назад

      ​@KuK137 tell me you're new here and an idiot without telling me you're new here and an idiot 😂 at least your honest with your user name

  • @georgeedmund
    @georgeedmund 8 месяцев назад +4

    This is a great tool ,I use it regularly . The sources of replacement sd locks are drying up and are getting expensive . This system lets you open quickly with no damage and if you walk with a precut pair of keys you can reset the lock in minutes ,complete the job in a single visit and get paid . Happy days all around!

  • @rowenagrinsam8261
    @rowenagrinsam8261 8 месяцев назад +47

    That locksmith is a professional
    LPL is Legendary

  • @Gamer3427
    @Gamer3427 8 месяцев назад +3

    Big respect to that locksmith for explaining that while it could be picked, it wasn't worth it. I feel like quite a few would have just said it couldn't because they either weren't able to, or wouldn't want to.

    • @Rhewin
      @Rhewin 8 месяцев назад

      A lot of LPL fans don’t get that a locksmith’s job isn’t to sit around picking locks all day. As he says at the end, it takes a specialized and highly skilled technician to pick a lock like that. You can pay for expertise for the sake of saving the lock, or you get the exact same results with a new lock for less.

  • @Turtle_1976
    @Turtle_1976 8 месяцев назад +801

    The manager didn’t just ask you instead of calling a locksmith?!

    • @jrrarglblarg9241
      @jrrarglblarg9241 8 месяцев назад +579

      Legal, insurance, banking laws….

    • @ItsTrinton
      @ItsTrinton 8 месяцев назад +219

      it's funny but 1)probably a national bank and not in the manager's authority 2)insurance would probably have rules about this.

    • @mungtor
      @mungtor 8 месяцев назад +192

      Yeah.. there's a lot of liability there. Unless LPL is a bonded locksmith (which is possible, I guess) the action of him even putting a pick in a lock he doesn't own could be illegal regardless of whether he opens it or not.

    • @Turtle_1976
      @Turtle_1976 8 месяцев назад +59

      Oh, I had already figured all of those reasons out. I just thought it was a fun off the cuff thing to say! 🙃

    • @hazerdoescrap
      @hazerdoescrap 8 месяцев назад +76

      "Licensed, Bonded, Insured"..... Once you have Permission you can do things but if something 'goes wrong' those other bits become SO important to keeping yourself out of lawsuits and 'debt free'....

  • @Roxas13XIII
    @Roxas13XIII 8 месяцев назад +8

    I think the answer to any "Is it pickable" question can be answered with the following:
    "Does it have a mechanism to accept a working key/passcode? If yes, it can be picked."
    After all, what is a key but the fastest picking method? If a key exists, it can be mimicked. The only "pick proof" lock is one that cannot be opened. Even then, a big enough "boom" can bypass any lock.

    • @DuraLexSedLex
      @DuraLexSedLex 8 месяцев назад +1

      The key is the most consistent method that works without any form of specialized knowledge that allows the lock to be used again, not necessarily the fastest.

  • @ChaseddiHondo
    @ChaseddiHondo 8 месяцев назад +31

    I think your friend immediately got the gist of it when you answered "I'll make a video out of this."

  • @drmarx8793
    @drmarx8793 Месяц назад +1

    I'm a locksmith now after watching your videos for years now. Hooby is now job and I appreciate your approach in explaining the reality of the job. You are truly gifted and learned many skills. some times people forget the work and research it takes to make it look so easy. In the field having all tools for clean approach isn't always possible or feasible. But i still try if no time pressure before drilling. its cheaper for the customer, and i get a kick out of it. ;) there are still a few tools from your shop I want, but I'm barley breaking even with all the tools, gas and replacement parts in the beginning. But I still love the job. Thank you for inspiring me over the years and for all your great content! esp Christmas, i look forward to the new one :) Have a great day :)

  • @BigMikeECV
    @BigMikeECV 8 месяцев назад +132

    Interesting timing for your video. My mother died five years ago, and a few weeks ago my siblings and I learned she had a safety deposit box in Petaluma. We have no idea where the key is so I made arrangements with the bank manager to have the box opened by a locksmith. My brother and I made the three hour drive and talked about how life could be if there were a bunch of 50-year old IBM stock certificates in there. It took the locksmith nearly 30 minutes to drill the lock out and open the box. I paid $125 and then we took the box to the viewing area. It was empty.

    • @mnorth1351
      @mnorth1351 8 месяцев назад +35

      LPL got there first.

    • @JamesJamersonIsAGod
      @JamesJamersonIsAGod 8 месяцев назад +13

      Ughh that’s frustrating! Not even some sentimental item in there just completely bare? That’s odd honestly. I wonder if someone emptied it out?

    • @terry_willis
      @terry_willis 8 месяцев назад

      @@mnorth1351 😄😄

    • @creativecraving
      @creativecraving 8 месяцев назад +5

      That story is really cool! Is say you got your money's worth. 😊

    • @chandlee3968
      @chandlee3968 8 месяцев назад +2

      Worked an estate case with two safe deposit boxes. One had old car titles, the other had 100K in cash.

  • @michaelmcgarvey3314
    @michaelmcgarvey3314 8 месяцев назад +15

    As someone who specifically does this, those locks are like 35 bucks, and you can open them in 20 seconds destructively. Its definitely way less skilled but cheaper for every party involved. Very cool to see one picked though, always wondered if you could, Thanks LPL

    • @Rhewin
      @Rhewin 8 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah but all the hobbyists in the comments are telling me that you’re just lazy for using the standard professional method lol.

    • @mattymerr701
      @mattymerr701 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Rhewin except someone pointed out this tool works for only one specific model of one specific brand of deposit box lock and the tool also costs $400, so it probably isn't laziness.

    • @Rhewin
      @Rhewin 7 месяцев назад

      @@mattymerr701 I know it’s not. Read my comment again.

    • @webdev217
      @webdev217 7 месяцев назад

      5 to 10 seconds!

  • @pgbollwerk
    @pgbollwerk 8 месяцев назад +7

    I love the explanation and the honesty of the locksmith’s response.

  • @RealCadde
    @RealCadde 8 месяцев назад +3

    Before people start yammering on about how easy this was to pick. Don't forget that most banks have all these safe boxes inside a vault behind a much more secure vault door where the whole vault is encased in concrete, steel and other materials to make it particularly difficult to break in without either running out of time or making so much noise that you are caught.
    The safe deposit boxes are there to prevent someone from opening a box that isn't theirs and shuffling the contents around or over to theirs or their pockets.

  • @kaasmeester5903
    @kaasmeester5903 8 месяцев назад +31

    I'd like to see the internals of that lock; that mechanism to allow re-keying sounded interesting.

  • @MenkoDany
    @MenkoDany 8 месяцев назад +1

    Incredibly fair, level-headed and discerning video. Thank you for bringing reasonableness to an otherwiser unreasonable internet discussion.

  • @pemj7360
    @pemj7360 8 месяцев назад +22

    Hi my friend. I live in the UK. Average rate for a call out on a locksmith is about £150--£200 pounds not including new lock . I've these smiths turn up drill a lock and often make a mess . Now I'm not a professional locksmith but have been picking locks for on and off 20 years. And have picked quite a few lock outs in less than 5 minutes. Or simply because of a lost key . I think I'm in the wrong trade .

    • @YouRich92
      @YouRich92 8 месяцев назад

      A friend had locked herself out of her appartment by pulling the door. I was called for help but hadn't her spare key. Meanwhile a locksmith which worked previously for us was already on site.
      He took a look at the door, trying to put pressure on it with his foot. "hum... really good quality door". Then he took a X-Ray and 20 seconds later the door was open...
      50 bucks quickly earned but without any damage. That what a true professional do. Don't destroy unless no other any option is available.
      On the other hand I know some building that have X-rays hidden in the some utility cupboad in the stairway. Some are planning ahead ;)

  • @dfloyd888
    @dfloyd888 8 месяцев назад

    I like the simplicity of clever locks, and the security they provide. There have been some very well made safe locks using levers, including 15 or more levers and mechanisms to detect pressure on the bolt, to help mitigate picking.
    One of the simplest and most effective designs were pay phone locks.

  • @rudyreyes828
    @rudyreyes828 8 месяцев назад +65

    As a Diebold safe technician, we all had that tool when the lock first came out.

    • @veccio
      @veccio 8 месяцев назад +1

      When was that just out of curiosity?

  • @dragon002247
    @dragon002247 8 месяцев назад +1

    It’s really nice how the LPL doesn’t put or talk down about the locksmith technician’s decision to destructive open the safety deposit box and focus on the difference between the technician pay/ time/training and a more professional experienced locksmith with the tools to do the job. Always great videos and cool to watch you work. Makes me want to go take training at Lock-masters in Tennessee.

  • @Pip2andahalf
    @Pip2andahalf 8 месяцев назад +37

    “Maybe”
    LPL: “Hold my pork shoulder”

  • @PVTHighspeed
    @PVTHighspeed 8 месяцев назад +4

    You’re the Bob Ross of RUclips! Your videos are so calming!

  • @robertboudrie2234
    @robertboudrie2234 8 месяцев назад +44

    Banks like to tell their customers "only key" and "If you lose both copies, we have to have the box drilled or the lock destroyed at your expense". The problem with a bank using a picker is that it destroys the illusion that the bank cannot surreptitiously enter a safe deposit box because "you have the only keys".
    I wonder if the FBI ever uses a pick like to service a warrant that contains a provision that the bank may not inform the customer the box has been opened.

    • @VoltisArt
      @VoltisArt 8 месяцев назад +3

      I cannot imagine precedence for the latter case. By the time warrants are issued for search of specific items like lockboxes or computers, a suspect has generally already been notified and is: being arrested / already arrested / on the run and said containers are considered abandoned. Covert investigations are generally limited to information and items shared with other parties, until enough evidence is collected for an arrest. At that point, there's no need to hide the search.
      Closest thing I can imagine is a private mailbox being used for drops, but those are open on the back and require no picking, only managerial access. (Ripe for "stupid criminal" cases...)

    • @robertboudrie2234
      @robertboudrie2234 8 месяцев назад +5

      @@VoltisArtAlthogh rare, there are sneak and peek warrants.

    • @cnrienzo
      @cnrienzo 8 месяцев назад

      UHMMM, there are a LOT of warrants issued pursuant to DHS investigations that are 'you can't tell the target' warrants.@@VoltisArt

    • @somebodyelse6673
      @somebodyelse6673 8 месяцев назад +6

      @@VoltisArt - It reminds me of the recent case where there was a warrant for the structure HOLDING safe deposit boxes, but explicitly not the boxes themselves. So of course for 'safe keeping' they confiscated all the boxes, and had to open them to inventory the contents so it could be returned to owners.
      Turns out that was the plan from the beginning, to do an end run around having to get warrants for the boxes. Warrants aren't the protection against bad investigation that the general public assumes they are.

    • @Bigfoothawk
      @Bigfoothawk 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@robertboudrie2234
      More unconstitutional BS.

  • @ericgoldman7533
    @ericgoldman7533 8 месяцев назад +2

    One of my old managers once told me, "You can generally only pick at most two of these three qualities in a good (i.e. a product or service)- price, quality, and speed".
    You can get something that's both fast and high quality, but you're going to be paying a higher price for it. If you want a lower cost, then you're going to have to sacrifice on either the quality of the good, or the time taken for it to be created, delivered, executed, or otherwise rendered.

  • @RepLicanT00100
    @RepLicanT00100 8 месяцев назад +4

    I should clip that last part and send it to clients who sook about the pricing on some invoices..
    💯% correct, one will rarely get more than what you pay for. In all professions .

  • @scofab
    @scofab 8 месяцев назад +4

    Class act not blowing the "pro" locksmith outta the water at the bank.
    Well done as always, thanks and regards.

    • @aditsu
      @aditsu 8 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah he could've been like "hold my beer, lemme show you how it's done" 😂
      But that would have been super rude.

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen 8 месяцев назад

      Many banks prefer paying for a new cylinder over customers asking "Wait, so these can be picked in 30 seconds?". Many locksmiths understands this too, and will hence give a vague answer in the presence of a non-bank-executive.

  • @GhengizKanye
    @GhengizKanye 8 месяцев назад +4

    Honestly this channel has done 2 things for me. I now have a very weird obsession with lockpicking and i also dont even bother locking things anymore

    • @karls4777
      @karls4777 8 месяцев назад +1

      My father's favorite saying about locking his tool box at the steel mill. " Locks keep honest people honest. If someone really wants it, they will get it."

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen 8 месяцев назад +3

      Then you took away the completely wrong lesson. Locks are time delays that, hopefully, makes the thief go elsewhere. You just did the "Airbags and seat belts don't save lives 100% of the time, so I've decided to use neither" argument with locks.

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen 8 месяцев назад

      @@karls4777 While true at face value, be careful not to extrapolate that into "locks are useless anyway". They still ward off opportunistic theft (and lots of lowlifes are on the lookout for opportunity every minute they are awake), and if the lock is more trouble in "hourly wage" than what it protects, thieves will look for greener pastures everywhere.

    • @_Ekaros
      @_Ekaros 8 месяцев назад

      I just go and buy Abloy. Knowing that well at least it won't be picked at site(for anything beyond classic) even if you can break the lock or the thing attached to.

  • @darkgtptitan
    @darkgtptitan 4 месяца назад +1

    The speed at which you picked that was awe inducing. Just wow...im speechless over here.

  • @KentuckyReef
    @KentuckyReef 8 месяцев назад +7

    The “locksmith” took long enough for you to stand around talking about smoking pork, among other things. Meanwhile this entire video with you explaining the process is only 4:08😂

  • @blahhotel1499
    @blahhotel1499 8 месяцев назад +3

    Locksmith here. The pick resistance and required security features varies region to region. In my particular region, most safe deposits boxs require false gates at every other position, bar the correct bitting. Lpl is very skilled to be clear, however there was no false gates to be heard there, and those make ot significantly harder to pick. Great video tho, you do a great job at painting a more realistic view of locksmiths

    • @Speedbird9L
      @Speedbird9L 8 месяцев назад

      I’m curious. Is it possible to have a lock with false gates that is also rekeyable, like this one?

    • @blahhotel1499
      @blahhotel1499 8 месяцев назад

      @@Speedbird9L yes, i believe there are brands that provide such. I'm not familiar with this particular system, but i learnt about resetable lever locks with false gates in college

  • @Gravedigger933
    @Gravedigger933 8 месяцев назад +10

    A destructive approach also ensures to the customer that the original key will no longer work under any circumstances. It's give peace of mind that a lost/stolen key is useless.

    • @Carlos-ux7gv
      @Carlos-ux7gv 8 месяцев назад +2

      But he just showed you can rekey the lock easily.

    • @Gravedigger933
      @Gravedigger933 8 месяцев назад

      @@Carlos-ux7gv Doesn't give the same peace of mind. It's till the same lock.

  • @T-Bag13
    @T-Bag13 8 месяцев назад +23

    If the bank manager was your friend, why didn't he just ask you in the first place?

    • @purebreedbiker
      @purebreedbiker 8 месяцев назад +23

      Most likely because hes not a professional lock smith and probably wouldn't have the correct insurance for it

    • @Squishrug
      @Squishrug 8 месяцев назад +22

      Insurance, plus you don't ask friends on jobs so stringent about security because that leaves room for the bank manager to be lenient about a shoddy job. It's the principle

    • @MJFGOYANKEES
      @MJFGOYANKEES 5 месяцев назад

      Because LPL bills as both a locksmith AND a lawyer. 💰

  • @lukemeck
    @lukemeck 8 месяцев назад +1

    Mad respect for the fact he does his videos in one run and no breaks without a mistake! Takes balls to be able to do it that well!

    • @Leffe192
      @Leffe192 8 месяцев назад

      My idea of a lawyer is that they often need to prepare well and then perform well when "the camera is rolling". Otherwise. It is four minutes long. He probably has more fun reshooting it a couple of times than to patch it in editing.

    • @gubx42
      @gubx42 8 месяцев назад

      As he mentioned several times in previous videos, he is prepared, so it is very likely that it is not his first attempt. He does that to keep the videos short and interesting.

    • @lukemeck
      @lukemeck 8 месяцев назад

      @@gubx42 I'm aware it likely isn't the first take um saying it's the fact it's just 1 long run no brakes that is impressive

  • @JPatterson61586
    @JPatterson61586 5 месяцев назад +1

    This reminds me of an anecdote my grandfather would tell all the time.
    A steam engine broke down, the piston completely seized. So the master machinist traveled out to the rail yard.
    He doesn't say a word to the engineer, or the conductor or even the yard mechanic. He walks up to the locomotive puts his ear to the piston and then taps a couple of places with a small ball peen hammer before picking up a small sledge and tapping a single spot on the side of the engine.
    He then gets the fire going, opens a couple values and viola the engine is fixed.
    The engineer is livid, screaming about how much time and money was wasted waiting for the machinist to come out and spend less than an hour fixing it, why should the line have to spend thousands of dollars for such an easy fix.
    The machinist grins and simply says, "The line pays me $500 to come out here and do this not because of the difficulty of the job, but because of the knowledge I have. Yes, anyone could hit this with a hammer. Your yard mechanic easily could remove and replace the engine. But the day you lost waiting on me, saved you four days waiting on parts and two more days waiting for them to be put in. They could have paid the mechanic sixteen hours to do this job at $30 an hour or me $500 for an hour of my knowledge."
    The moral is, knowledge is more valuable than time because in the long term, knowledge will save time.

  • @metallicasnake
    @metallicasnake 8 месяцев назад

    Your competence is one of the best things to see. Thank you for what you do.

  • @martinb2262
    @martinb2262 8 месяцев назад

    I think you summed it up perfectly. If you want a well skilled professional that takes a caring and professional manner to his work, thats also backed by years of experience and expertise then you will ultimately pay for it. If you just want the job done then the standard of that will be to depth of your wallet or budget.

  • @FlatEarthDisciple
    @FlatEarthDisciple 8 месяцев назад +1

    You know, you never disappoint.

  • @logosgal
    @logosgal 8 месяцев назад

    I found your videos around the time I started working at a bank & I've been hoping for a safe deposit video the whole time! Thank you for your insight, definitely worth the wait!

  • @Cobb
    @Cobb 8 месяцев назад +2

    I like the guys answer of it's possible but too expensive for me to try. Seems fair and honest.

  • @GabrielGarcia-xi1wx
    @GabrielGarcia-xi1wx 4 месяца назад +1

    Been locksmithing for 20 years and yes we can’t focus on perfecting picking at a doctorate level because it does not make enough money compared to the laundry list of other things we do.

  • @Matthews_Resume
    @Matthews_Resume 8 месяцев назад +1

    The past comments alluding to LPL picking a bank vault suddenly become more realistic.

  • @Xelioo7
    @Xelioo7 8 месяцев назад

    Mad respect for the time, tools, and knowledge.

  • @TakuroSpirit
    @TakuroSpirit 8 месяцев назад

    Bank manager friend and lock-picking friend is quite possibly the most dynamic duo of all time.

  • @calebcain4729
    @calebcain4729 8 месяцев назад +1

    This does make me think that the whole double-key system is just security theater.
    Ostensibly, the two key system is so that you know that nobody at the bank can get into your box without your approval, but this video shows that it's no more secure from bank staff than having them carry all the keys themselves and supervise who takes out each box.
    If you want something that only you have access to, you need to control the room, not just the box, and a 2 key system doesn't do that.

  • @donjean6590
    @donjean6590 8 месяцев назад +1

    Personally I would have love to see this picked with out the specialist tool.
    To really drive home the point.
    I do appreciate taking the time to talk about the different approaches and why it matters.

  • @Lock_Secrets
    @Lock_Secrets 8 месяцев назад +1

    Крутой у вас инструмент 👍

  • @GrumpiestKevin
    @GrumpiestKevin 8 месяцев назад +2

    I wonder if the destructive method is used as well because it gives the client more confidence in the lock? If you are a bank owner and somebody comes in, pulls out a tool and unlocks it within minutes (seconds?) are you going to think "this locksmith really knows their stuff" or "holy crap that lock sucks!"

  • @haactgaming9687
    @haactgaming9687 8 месяцев назад

    My favourite educational channel!😊 I would pay extra for your time!

  • @FirstPersonNewf
    @FirstPersonNewf 8 месяцев назад

    Always such a gentleman. Respect.

  • @omgitsz-man7893
    @omgitsz-man7893 8 месяцев назад

    As a locksmith, well put LPL! My approach tends to be non-destructive until there’s just enough time to quickly get in destructively specially on after hours jobs as they are quite expensive and people don’t want to pay a tonne extra if I keep trying to pick

  • @GoldsPersonal
    @GoldsPersonal 8 месяцев назад

    I understand why it isnt practical for you to make a video on it but would love one more about bank vaults. I worked in a bank and have seen the locksmith come drill the safe deposit boxes. Glad you made a video about this. cool stuff

  • @TheDevilockedzombie
    @TheDevilockedzombie 8 месяцев назад

    This entire video, from the story to the picking made me grin ear to ear the entire time

  • @Airsofthunter112233
    @Airsofthunter112233 8 месяцев назад

    love the added insight into why it may or may not be done using certain techniques

  • @niospartan
    @niospartan 3 месяца назад

    The tools you show off are like high end tools a mechanic would need for their job but for lock smiths. If i were one id have a back pack with compartments for all these tools.

  • @eduardotvz
    @eduardotvz 8 месяцев назад +1

    Im from Brazil. I would like to say tannks. Tanks to you , more than one time i could pic a lock for my own. Last week i lost keys of home and evan drunked i got in in a non destructive way.

  • @jsca0420
    @jsca0420 8 месяцев назад

    I just bought the FNG. I'm hooked. Lock picking is the coolest thing ever. I just started trying to pick random locks around my house. So much fun

  • @matt_stl
    @matt_stl 8 месяцев назад +1

    I think that's one thing a lot of people don't think of too often. If a tradesperson is very good and experienced they will likely be expensive by the hour but you're not paying for their time, you're compensating them for the years of learning and experience they have gained as well as any natural skills they may have, along with tools and materials. Hourly is just how they happen to bill customers. So many people get angry when paying a plumber $300 and they clear your drain in 15 minutes. I made these numbers up I don't know the going rates it was just an example...

  • @sytuma
    @sytuma 8 месяцев назад

    Have that exact tool and use it often. When i first purchased it i sat down with a bag of about 70 sets of keys so I wouldn't get used to the same pattern. The problem with this tool and the one for the LeFebure 7700 lock (even faster) is customers get upset sometimes it was too fast. Nose pulling is the only way to go on alot of locks. For some older banks it is less expensive to drill a small in door to pick it and repair the door than to source and replace a 80 to 100 year old lock.

  • @paulrozinski1488
    @paulrozinski1488 8 месяцев назад

    A number of years ago, I had to gain access to a safe deposit box that hadn’t been opened in about 20 years. Opening both locks was only a minor obstacle( a little Liquid Wrench spray) but opening the door was a challenge because the dirt in the perimeter of the door fused itself to the face of the box. It took a needle bottle of alcohol and a small hammer to tap the dirt loose. It took over 30 minutes to open,

  • @GenomulUman
    @GenomulUman 8 месяцев назад

    Mister, you are fantastic!
    I am watching you with so much pleasure from Romania.
    I have no interest in this domain, but your videos are (for some reason) such a delight.

  • @bigjeep2195
    @bigjeep2195 8 месяцев назад

    LPL always knows the actual correct key cuts when picking.
    That makes a HUGE difference.

    • @zlinedavid
      @zlinedavid 8 месяцев назад

      He’s actually done some videos where people have sent him locks in packaging that is marked in such a way that you can tell if it had been opened in advance. Meaning, no prior knowledge of the lock. And it’s taken him maybe 10 seconds longer.

  • @resurgam_b7
    @resurgam_b7 8 месяцев назад

    I appreciate that you didn't demean the guy using the destructive method. Despite some jibing at him in the comments, it is important to realize that just because something can be done in a certain way that seems better, doesn't mean it is always the ideal method and we should mock people for accomplishing a task by other means.

  • @nathantron
    @nathantron 8 месяцев назад +2

    LOL. "I'm the worlds greatest lockpick. I am also friends with a bank owner, and was allowed in the vault on a whim." 4D Chess for a heist in the making haha.

  • @michaelbuzbee
    @michaelbuzbee 8 месяцев назад

    I want to quickly say thank you for your view of the destructive method. All but the tiniest fraction of the internet would have the opinion that sounds something like this: "Any locksmith worth a flip could pick that in under a minute, saving you a fortune".
    Maybe I shouldn't read so many comments on the internet, but it was nice to finally hear some logic for once and not hateful emotion.

  • @1a1u0g9t4s2u
    @1a1u0g9t4s2u 8 месяцев назад +1

    Another great video. Appreciate the trouble you go to and ensure the best view is towards the camera. Would like to see your picking skills when the assortment of locks are picked while in real world positions i.e. padlocks on gate latches for example, even if done with a mock up. Thanks for sharing.

  • @VicJang
    @VicJang 8 месяцев назад

    Great video LPL. And very fair comment about the destructive method too. In the real world setting, lock owners can only find so many locksmith with excellent techniques, so a more general approach does make sense for the general public.

  • @Jay-zm3bx
    @Jay-zm3bx 8 месяцев назад

    That's why i Love watching your content! Literally second's to pick it with your tool! 😮

  • @alexadelaide
    @alexadelaide 8 месяцев назад

    LPL showing mad respect to his fellow lock aficionado

  • @isaiahnapier8290
    @isaiahnapier8290 8 месяцев назад +2

    would love to see how you organize all your locks keys and tools

  • @Kisai_Yuki
    @Kisai_Yuki 8 месяцев назад

    As typical, usually the answer for "can it be done this (less destructive) way" the answer has to be "Yes or Maybe, but you aren't going to want to pay that cost", similar answers exist in server administration, and automotive repair. There are ways to fix the symptom, and there are ways to fix the problem, and fixing the symptom doesn't mean the problem has gone away. You can pick the lock once, but that doesn't mean you will also be able to rekey it if the picking process fails and have to destructively enter it anyway. That's often why a lot of businesses do things inefficiently and expensively, because cheaper/faster options lead to higher costs later.

  • @gersonrendon2188
    @gersonrendon2188 8 месяцев назад

    Tbh LPL is always right when it comes to these topics. The locksmith could have charged more had he invested time and money learning how to pick and rekey a bank safe lock but then again he was there just hanging with his friend and the locksmith was actually working. When you get 5-10 calls a day and have to travel long distances in between each job you just don't have the same time as someone who is a retired lawyer picking locks in his free time and making videos. LPL buys or even designs a tool and it's paid off the second he uploads a video while a locksmith charges in the tenths or few hundreds per service. I've worked as a locksmith for 4 years and have never been called to pick a bank safe. Not saying it's not worth it just saying it's not something that makes little financial sense. It's not some sort of ego battle of who knows how to pick the most locks. Plus locksmiths nowadays spend a ton of time and money in equipment to program car keys and whatnot.

  • @apollolux
    @apollolux 8 месяцев назад +1

    That looked like a very simple but extremely specialized tool for this job. I wouldn't be surprised if a locksmith would've charged double or even triple the price of destructive entry.

  • @robmack4010
    @robmack4010 5 месяцев назад

    There is a lot of paperwork involved in opening safe deposit boxes. I have the "Destructive Kit" and would go in and sometimes open hundreds of boxes. There are two ways to get in. Some locks you pull the nose or core and others you use screw and screw that into the lock and pull, the back of the lock will split. These are made out of soft brass so they are designed to do this. There is a lot of regulations on accessing SDB's. That customer who lost his key was probably charged $500 USD. That is a standard fee. Pays for the lock and the tech's time. I am not a locksmith but have been do to the different schools on vaults, time locks, Safe Deposit. The door and nose puller can be purchased from Lockmaster.

  • @mjears
    @mjears 8 месяцев назад +1

    I suspect the vault story might have been made up to give this picking a proper backstory. Otherwise LPL might be giving away his identity to at least one person. I wouldn’t want to destroy something to replace it if someone handy could just pick it. Then again, LPL makes it look SO easy, I bet hardly anyone else can do it that fast.