Showing posts with label lock pick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lock pick. Show all posts

Monday, November 2, 2020

Master Lock F25 and WB Padlock Lock Picking

 

Master Lock F25 Padlock Lock Picking (and a WB padlock)





The Master Lock F25 is a warded padlock with a variable height shackle. I did not have the key, and I did not have any warded picks, so for fun I modified a different pick I've never had reason to use.


I bought a $14 two-pick disc detainer lock pick set. One is shaped like a + sign and works great, the second one has a HUGE square end that hasn’t fit into any lock I’ve come across. So, I took the second huge disc detainer pick (not the nice "+" shaped one) and cut the unusable thick "flag" off the end.


 

Then I bent the wire tip 90 degrees.

 

Then I cut the blue handle down and ground down the silver tube part down. This gave me extra length. I could have just removed the blue handle part entirely.

 



This made this especially to pick/bypass this Masterlock F25 warded lock. The F25 has a zig-zag keyway and has a wedge thingy that grabs the indent on the inside of the shackle. There are indents on both sides of the shackle, but only one side of the lock. This way you can place the removable shackle in either way left/right. What is bad is that there is only one wedge-shaped locking thing so it’s much easier to pick than if there was one on each side!



Looking inside the left shackle hole shows the locking mechanism. The right side is a smooth hole which place no part in locking this lock.

 


The tolerances on the shackle are tight. A padlock shim would work—but there is not enough room to slide one in-between the shackle and the hole it goes into. You would only need to shim one side of the shackle, but you wouldn’t know which side. I consider this padlock to be basically shim-proof.  


The shackle has multiple indents so you can lock it as tall or short as you want. There are four height levels for the shackle to close down to. That’s actually a pretty nice feature!



 


How do you pick this lock?

 

I used this modified pick to probe the inside of the lock about halfway down and found the "clicky" spinning part deep down inside. The shackle isn’t spring loaded, so you have to balance holding the spring-loaded wedge open without going to far—and then gently pull the shackle out; or let gravity do it with the shackle facing the floor if there isn’t too much rust.

 

If you imagine the lock with the keyhole facing the sky and looking down inside there are “ledges” which are the wards. These are non-moving. The second or third one down has the moving spring loaded release mechanism underneath it. Poke the pick into the lock and let it rest on the middle ledge (ward). Carefully move it just underneath so you’re scraping the underside of this ward. Rotate the pick like a key and push and hold the release mechanism to free up the shackle. Scary simple once you figure it out!

 

 

Yes, it’s pretty easy with the right tool. In my case I didn’t have any warded lock picks at the time so I made this pick—for fun! A quicker solution would have been one of those Four-For-Three-Dollars Harbor Freight pick sets with the orange handles. The one with the 90-degree bend at the tip probably would have worked just as well. But it might have been a little too long. When I made me 90-degree bend I made the bent tip about half the width of the keyhole. That way I knew it would fit inside and be able to spin.

 

Luckily, this lock only has one release mechanism. If it had one on either side I would have needed a “T” shaped tip instead of a “7” shaped one. In that case an unmodified disc detainer pick with the square paddle at the end may have worked. Alas, Master Lock did not build it that way. Still a nice lock though. But it’s one you can bypass/defeat without even needing a tension wrench.

 

I like my solution better because it was more fun.

 

The wards are non-moving obstacles. You can just work above or below them. They just keep you from being able to jam a popsicle stick or something like that into the lock and turning it. 

However, if you split a popsicle stick in half lengthwise you can twist it gently but firmly in the lock, you would see where the non-moving wards leave an indent and then cut slots in those places: boom, now you have a wooden key for that lock! 

Of course, you’d want to transfer that pattern to something stronger than a popsicle stick, like a stiff piece of plastic or metal. As long as you spin anything that is the width of the keyhole (or half it’s with and hold it carefully) without jamming against a ward it should open the lock.


A quick post script: the demonic WB padlock.



This lock had me beat. It was on my desk for a week. I would fiddle with it on and off in between other projects. The shackle is really long, but also bent. The side of the lock is bulged out a little. I havd no key for it. I figured maybe it was broken?


Then i accidentally put the tension wrench in backwards and tensioned it COUNTER-clockwise. It basically opened right up with almost zero effort! Lefty-loosey-openy!!


I put tension on it and put a simple pick i to the keyway and it turned. Mo effort. Essier to pick than my transparent plastic practice locks.


When all else fails...

Sunday, July 28, 2019

PADLOCK SHIMS THE EASY WAY


PADLOCK SHIMS THE EASY WAY







In my video above I use a lock pick tool called a "padlock shim" or padlock shim pick.

These are available on Amazon and eBay for around $3 per set of three different sizes, a pair each size.


Some things to remember about padlock shim picks:


  1. Don't stick them straight down on the latch mechanism. This will ruin the tip and get you nowhere fast.
  2. You put the shim on the opposite side of the latch and then slide it around side-ways to pick the latch.
  3. Some padlocks (like the one in my video) have two latches. One on each side of the u-latch. So you will have to use two shims.
  4. Usually one side will be easy: just slide the shim down into the body of the padlock and then slide it around the u-latch sideways until it goes under the latch.
  5. The other side might be harder: slide the shim down, but not all the way down. Then jiggle the u-latch while sliding the shim sideways but also a little up and down to sneak it under the other latch.
These shims are cheap online! Buy a set to practice with. If you use them correctly you should have no wear on the pointed tips of the shims, but you will eventually get wear on the sides of the shims. These are a "consumable" item: they get worn out. Buy a set cheap online, practice, then you can try cutting your own from soda cans or roof flashing from the hardware store. The shims I have are a little stiffer than soda cans. They're closer to the thickness and stiffness of roof flashing, which you can buy at places like Home Depot. The only problem is that it comes in like 40' rolls.

The $50 shims from companies like "HFC" come with instructions warning that they too will wear out quickly. The shims have to be soft enough to work. So, buy the cheapest shims you can find that won't take forever to arrive. In the end they'll all wear out quickly--the super cheap ones usually come with nice rubber grip thingies, but they're not really necessary if you eventually learn to cut your own shims cleanly without jagged edges.

Spring loaded shackles can easily be opened with these shims, but they're not good for Stationary Ball Bearing (BB) type padlocks. Most padlocks that have bodies made from laminated layers of thin rectangles of steel are usually the easy to open shackle type.

For attempting, try and see if the lock is actually operational. If it's all rusty and the u-latch doesn't jiggle it might be rusted shut: time for some Liquid Wrench spray.



I write in a conversational style and use the pronoun "you" in place of "I" just as a personal authorial idiosyncrasy, this is NOT a how-to manual for high voltage electronics, lock picking, radiation handling, etc. 

Did you know (and I'm not a lawyer) that just possession of locksmith equipment in certain places by an unlicensed person is a crime? That, like pocket-knife laws these laws can vary not only by state, but by each city you travel through? Research your laws (all the cities you go in and your state and county laws) if you want to become a sport-picker (or actual locksmith).


There must be a whole wing in every prison filled with dudes who are all like "but some guy on the internet said it was okay!" 




I wonder, is it a cat-burglar alarm or a cat burglar-alarm? Is it a cat that meows when a burglar is around or an alarm that lets you know a cat-burglar is close by? Do they steal cats? Meow!