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Yes Islington locksmith they are normally secure fast here as well normally just decode with your tool very happy but paint the doors green for whatever reason, thanks for your help with this anyway sure I'll get in there's always a way.
I have a Willenhall for practice and it won't overlift because of an awkward high belly lever. 2in1 does it fine though. Try overlifting from the front of the pack. Can't get it to work the first lever's gate isn't near the stump when all the rest are bang up against it. Opened this sitex door today over lifted easy enough like some of you lads said thanks for the help. Have seen a similar method used to bounce the locking dog out of the way but not the levers. I heard it would also work on self-locking pin tumbler locks, which back then only locked on the toe. They were uncommon in the 1950's, but they began to appear in the 60's, though not many. Hitting the toe side of the body near the top, again not something I ever tried. The point of rotating up the lever padlock about horizontal is that when the levers unlock, the bolt will drop by gravity.
Extruded brass locks, the combination of the weight of the body + the shackle spring will make the body drop down as soon as the bolt is clear of the shackle notch by inertia, before its supporting spring pushes it back into the shackle. One of the Islington locksmith team thinks in the twenties/thirties US locksmiths could unlock loose cylinders in the hand by holding with the pins underneath and 'rapping' the cylinder on the wooden bench whilst maintaining slight finger pressure on the back of the plug to push it out, with thumb on the front to prevent it moving far enough for the pins to relock. Then the plug was turned off-centre before pushing out with the follower. Only later was the inertia idea applied to locks in situ. They were then still using many lever and warded locks, pin tumbler locks were not yet the only sort in widespread use, so working on pin tumbler locks was less urgent. No, it really looks like a restricted keyway, RKS (Restricted Key System) as it has the oval shaped top. The 3G135 had a round top and a cranked slot (as mark said) Here’s a side by side, first is a 135, and yours (3G110 RKS)
Have not much to go on here - but came across a lock on a warrant which I had never come across before. Basically it was a Black glossy cased 3" deadlock with a 7g keyway with curtain. The first thing I thought was Securefast but it wasn't as decoder was too wide. It was similar in colour & size to a Banham ie larger than a normal sized deadlock and had a hardplate (which Banhams don't) Tried picking it but was made even worse because the door looked like it had been kicked in a little and may have bent the bolt. I know not a lot to go on but any ideas what it may have been. How did you know it was Banham sized? Did you get it open? If the Securefast decoder was too big then it can't of been a 7g keyway, either 7.5g or 8g. The 8g 5L Gibbons came in black branded as Sovereign and had hardplate but it wasn't glossy and is normal size. The Morgen lock comes black as Sterling and is 7.5g but that's the same size as an Era. Islington locksmith team please note. |
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