The most insecure thing about this lock is that it can be decoded in full view of witnesses without arousing suspicion. It just looks like you are entering the combination legitimately.
All you have to do is say your eyesight is not the greatest, so it takes a few tries get it right. On these type locks, the 8-9-0 all together can be easily confused, as can the 5-6.
@@wictimovgovonca320 That would be suspicious if you feel you have to excuse yourself for not getting in. Nobody will pay attention to you as you decode it. Yes, if someone asks then you can explain your poor eye sight or you could just tell them to not look at your code.
This guy should be in jail making locks for his ass belt cover not to be raped. These videos should be considered illegal. But u stupid look at him like a God.
At a school where I worked they had this thing called BreakoutEdu which is an educational "escape room box" puzzle thing that uses multiple locks that you're supposed to solve using clues to figure out the combination. When the company came in to demonstrate the device, our box was locked with 3 different wheel locks with numbers/symbols/etc that we were supposed to solve using clues hidden in the room. We were paired up with another individual and then set to race to see who could solve their lock box first. I asked my partner if they wanted to do it the hard way of finding clues and solving it or if they wanted me to just open the locks. We agreed that I'd just open the locks and it went pretty much like this video. We were done in under 2 minutes and the demo team were a bit annoyed at us. Edit: To clarify, we went back and did it the right way later on. I ended up using BreakoutEdu in my classroom later on and just added a rule that no picking or brute force solving was allowed. It was all good in the end.
I don’t know. Solving the puzzles and working out the clues sounds like a fun game. It’s not like they planned to test pick proof locks, they planned to design a game and what you did sounds like a bit of a jerk move.
@@glockenrein Yes, but looking out for exploits (and patching them as deemed necessary) is also a part of game design. Though, personally, I would go back and solve legitimately later because that sort of puzzle is my kind of thing.
@@floopyboo No. The problem was either: - you for being there, when you had no intention of doing it properly - your teachers or parents forcing you to be there, when you had no intention of doing it properly Not the demo team, that likely lacked the legal justification to _prevent_ you from being there.
I read the comments and its obvious that a lot of people do not understand what just happened. LPL changed the combination while the lock was in the default combination of 0-0-0-0 by turning the reset on the bottom of the lock. You can only turn the reset if you have the right combination which was 0-0-0-0 before he changed the numbers.
Something perhaps less obvious, is that eyes aren't even needed for this decode. He could have reopened the lock after setting the new combo without ever turning it back over.
He opened the shackle before he changed the combo. That is super obvious and the entire reason he scrambled the lock. Of course he's going to change it from the default combo. Otherwise, what good is the video?
It's amazing how often when I scramble my gym locker, I reach every time close enough to the right combination (like -1, 0, -1 or +8, +8, +8 for example)! Apparently I move each wheel the same amount of time!
I've sometimes had trouble explaining how a *tiny* change in a piece of software can have a *disastrous* and large security implication. I think this is the first lock that provides a direct mechanical demonstration of the same principle...
You might try pointing people at the Debian OpenSSL fiasco, if they still don't believe you. "Hey, I fixed this compiler warning in OpenSSL and upstream rejected the patch. Let's see if anyone notices."
“I now have a lock to which I do not know the combination.“ I‘ve no doubt that other phrases have been spoken more often, however, I doubt that any have been spoken with more irony or less meaning than this. The skill that LPL shows almost daily amazes me, even after years of watching his videos.
This just jarred a memory for me. As a young kid, I had a cheap inline bike lock with a similar wheel-combo setup. I distinctly remember fidgeting with it often and being able to feel the difference in play in the wheels, and soon discovered that if I did it enough it would accidentally open. I know realize I was inadvertently using this technique 40 years ago! :)
I had one of those super cheap bike locks they sold like crazy back in the 70s-80s, with the cheap chain inside the semiclear color plastic "anti scratch" tube, with the four big wheels on the outside middle of the lock. You could tension those by simply pulling on the chain, and spin the wheels till you felt them "fall into place". So easy to decode!
I remember being an asshole 5th grader who figured out how to decode those cheap 4 number inline bike locks on my own (around 1994).... everybody had them so I would find two people who had the same color lock, decode both, swap them and relock the bikes....
@@wrlprchnx I was slightly more advanced, I had modified a masterlock key by filing the wards and sanding it flat, and so it basically opened any masterlock it would fit into. And I did the same thing, switching kids' padlocks. Stand back and watch as all the kids got on their bikes and left, eventually leaving just those two. They'd get to talking, and try each others' keys, and wow it works! So they'd switch KEYS. (not LOCKS) *shrug* Harmless entertainment.
I found if you put tension on the many of the cheap combination locks you could easily feel the click when you found the right digit. I also did that around 40 years ago as I am 51 now.
This channel inspired me to take up lockpicking during the 2020 lockdowns. Which is a good thing because I was at a long distance range day a couple weekends back, and forgot my keys to my ammo box. Luckily I was able to get a paperclip off another shooter and turned that into a pick and tensioner and picked the lock open on my ammo. THANKS LPL!!
When I was at school in the 1970s a lot of bike locks were combination locks where the end of the wire was a "comb" that formed part of the lock mechanism. I discovered how to open them by gently pulling and turning the wheels - just like this really. My only foray into active lock picking (rather than just watching the channel).
@@willemsma well, if it's any consolation, I'm unaware of any burglary of a residence that was done by picking a lock. Usually, they kick in a back door or break a window.
@@spvillano I know people (wouldn't call them friends) who steal stuff by picking. Picking doesn't leave behind evidence (well, you can find evidence of picking as marks on pins, but no-one is checking that. People usually just don't know how they got robbed, think they left a door unlocked, etc.
@@sophiophile a quick Google search showed that around 2 - 4 % of burglaries involved lockpicking. Given the annualized loss expectancy and exposure factor, figuring out how much to spend to protect my property is trivial and I actually spend a bit more than necessary to protect my property by rekeying with security pins. Home invasions are fairly common for burglary, so protecting against that with a peephole helps, a camera or two might be worthwhile, as I own a few anyway and a few knives will do if the worst happens. Guns aren't as intimidating as a knife, as few have been shot, but everyone's been cut before. That's a lesson learned in crowd control in Somalia. Basically, if I replace my long ago stolen during a move firearms, it'll be for anything other than home protection, a quality lock and visibility plus camera are far more effective deterrents and a final, last ring defense being my fighting knifes, aka my Sicilian Express cards. But then, I already have those as well, an occupational risk of being a career soldier that exclusively served in combat units.
@@spvillano I wasn't arguing that it is common. You said you were unaware of any burglaries that involved lockpicking. So I was just sharing that I am aware of many. The reason I am aware of them is because I taught a bunch of people how to both make their own lockpicking tools, and how to pick- naively. I thought they would use it for dumpster diving and stuff, but at least 2 of them just became thieves. You are absolutely correct that most instances involve forced entry. I was just sharing that it still happens, and that it actually makes it really hard to get insurance money because of the lack of evidence left behind.
From what I can see, it looks like Abus actually made the spaces between the wheels and the lock body extremely tight. I'm guessing that the wheels are also of the "stepped" design where the part behind the case is a bit wider. Which means it's probably difficult if not impossible to get a tool in there to pull the bar against the wheels. So if Abus hadn't messed up by making the spring too strong, that lock probably would have been about as good as it gets for that style of combination mechanism. That's probably the most infuriating thing- they got SO close... then screwed up on one detail. This being Abus, a company known for making pretty good locks at most price points, I'll bet they correct that problem soon enough. I'm sure they watch these videos.
Would a weaker spring have disadvantages? For instance, is it possible to hit the lock hard enough for the bar to move exactly as you pull the shackle?
We have an enclosed trailer here that someone had the keys to but was out of town. Needing tools that were inside, I ground down a screw, found a small flat piece of metal to apply pressure and picked it in about 2mn thanks to you!!!
I remember I had a generic bicycle combination lock where you could do the same thing, this would have been in the mid to late 80's. For some reason I stopped using the bike chain, then had to start using it. And by then, I had forgotten the combination. But just like in this video, I learned the feel when each wheel was binding or feeling looser, and determined the code. I also remember telling a few mates what I did, and they didn't believe me, until one of them brought in a similar bike chain and I managed to unlock it without being told the combination. 😂
I recently did an escape room where we had a 4 digit combination lock and couldn't find the code... So I let everyone else keep looking and did this on the combo padlock. Saved us a bunch of time.
bought my first lockpick from you got it today. practice lock picked twice to get teh hand of it and took at 20 year old master lock i lost the key too and picked in in the time it took to watch this video. thank for all the tutorials
They also keep unknowing people , including otherwise dishonest people, from entering, which is the large majority of people. Most people don't carry a lockpick with them and watch LPL videos.
that takes me back to the early 80s at school, i was revered as a lock expert because i could open chain locks easily :) , swapping them across bikes was always a giggle.
This reminds me of a time I was able to pick a Swiss brand luggage lock. All I had to do was literally just listen for the pins to fall into place when operating the combination.
*Opens lock in under 20 seconds by just thumb scrolling* "Okay folks, it's not the fastest way in..." Righto. The only way it could be faster is if you watch the owner input the combination. LPL is the man of understatements when it comes to cracking codes. :D
Yes we used to do something similar with the combination locks when I was a kid, we just pulled the lock apart a little and felt the easy spot on each wheel.
In a perfect world lock manufacturers would have someone monitoring this channel in case one of their products comes up so they can improve them. The shame is we don't live in a perfect world and I firmly believe that lock manufacturers really couldn't care less about the vulnerabilities in their locks just as long as they keep selling.
amigo i like your voice and presentation very much it is always very relaxing to listen to you .. with your style i could even watch surgical things without getting sick
I have been watching his videos for almost 2 years now, and I still would not know what to get for any type of lock. I really wish he would showcase at least a few locks that are not terrible.
You bloody bastard! I have just opened my 1st padlock ever! It took me about 3 minutes to figure out how. GF is mad at me and she thinks that from now on I'll be able to open any lock without a key. GJ mate.
"It's not the fastest way", my man you literally popped it open while I was thinking that you were still looking for the *first* wheel that was binding the hardest.
It’s always interesting to see how he treats a respectable brand who had a small oopsie (Abus) compared the the big red crayon developers (master lock).
@frankbauerful yes. I want to see him actually make those changes is what I'm saying. Maybe he makes one in collaboration with one of the many very skilled machinists here on YT.
He often cites that security is not simply a linear scale of "already open" to "unbeatable security". Security usually comes at the cost of convenience (and vice-versa) and usually the most secure system is having no system at all to compromise in the first place. What does exist, however, is "secure enough", which is what LPL often talks about. "This lock is bad but also cheap, don't use it for anything that is worth more than the lock itself"
Uh I don’t think you listened to the video. He wasn’t using brute force. He said the spring was to stron which eliminated the need for the notch decoder tool. There is no need to pull up on the shackle either because he was able to decode using the tension the lock already has by default.
@Matt Weger - It's possible you're right. Bought a beginner kit from LPL and have an old weather beaten Masterlock. It's not as easy as he makes it look. I had to add a bit of lubrication but I've managed to rake it open several times now, just to demonstrate it's not a fluke. Haven't been able to pick it yet though.
Not a bad video idea… spray with vinegar, salt, & H2O2 mixture, then try picking it the next day. FWIW, if you spray the lock with a thin, wicking oil, my experience is that there’s very little difference (unless the lock is totally seized up).
@@wickedcabinboy I couldn't even rake a brand new masterlock #3, so it's having me wonder if I'm doing something wrong and there's some subtle technique to raking that I'm just not comprehending or something.
You are really a genius. I love it everytime you prove the manufacturer otherwise😂. Consumer just paid for exorbitant price thinking they got the best lock.☹️
Don't worry. His retirement video will go like this: LPL: This is the Lock Picking Lawyer-- LOCK: [Opens up] LPL: --and just like that, we go this open.
I noticed one thing from this lock: You can change the number combination while this lock is attached onto something. Basically a troll can go to this lock and change the number combination into something that he also doesn't know. And then the owner has a new combination and wonders why he can't open that lock. Or do I miss something and this doesn't work?
I have opend lockes like this by pulling on the shackle and turning the each weel untiil it binds then turning it one more untill it feels loose this works on almost every code weel padlock i have ever come across
Did I just see you change the combination without having the lock open?! If so, wouldn’t it be even easier to just change the combination to anything you want?
Taking advantage of the Fourth of July sale and pick me up the genesis set and a set of rakes. Super excited to get started in my lock picking journey.
I used a similar method to pick locks where I grew up (AFB) and then change the combination. You didn't need a tool to put it in change combination mode. I just know that the maintenance guys were pissed every time they came upon my mischievousness. Unless they knew the same trick, of course.
I remember back when I was about 8 years old, in the sixties, I did something similar with a combination bike lock at school. I didn't steal the bike but I did take the lock. Hopefully they got a better one to replace it.
For some reason this reminds me of an old combo bike lock bypass. It was the kind where the wheels were all next to each other. You could decode it as there was a gap between the wheels that would move to the next wheel every time you got a number correct. Wish I could remember the brand.
I live in the Netherlands, and Arbus is the most widely used brand here on bikes. Indeed, if you get bike insurance here, oftentimes the policy will only cover you if you have an Arbus lock - as most are considered to be a "standard" best level of security. I hope Arbus see this video and immediately recall and remove it from their line. That was absolutely shocking how easy it was to crack.
*ABUS. August Bremicker und Söhne KG. And do the NL insurance companies really recommend/require ANY lock as long as it's made by ABUS? Many of the bike locks recommended by our Swedish insurance co:s are from ABUS, but not all, and all locks by ABUS aren't among the recommended ones.
"It's not the fastest…" I can't even find my keys in 3 minutes and a half and still he managed to do an intro, explain all the process before doing it, and even have a conclusion for the video… 🤯
1:29 slight correction there. The biggest benefit is, that the entry method doesn't leave any forensic marks, since you aren't really operating with the lock outside it's intended operating parameters.
The most insecure thing about this lock is that it can be decoded in full view of witnesses without arousing suspicion. It just looks like you are entering the combination legitimately.
All you have to do is say your eyesight is not the greatest, so it takes a few tries get it right. On these type locks, the 8-9-0 all together can be easily confused, as can the 5-6.
@@wictimovgovonca320 That would be suspicious if you feel you have to excuse yourself for not getting in.
Nobody will pay attention to you as you decode it.
Yes, if someone asks then you can explain your poor eye sight or you could just tell them to not look at your code.
Yes...all to easy to set your own combination right on the spot...what a ridiculous design
@@tenguken847 One assumes you cannot set your own combination unless the correct combination has been entered...
It's a feature. This is a combination lock that can be used by people who are partially sighted.
He did it!
He finally opened up a lock without ANY tools at all!
But it took him more than a few seconds, so it's already a better-than-average lock. And certainly better than any Masterlock.
I bet this is not his first time doing that
This is not his first time opening a lock with no tools, lol
Look ma no hands is next.
He decoded some master combo lock without tools in an earlier video.
How long before LPL just looks at a lock and it opens? This guy is the epitome of competency. He just flat out knows his stuff.
This guy should be in jail making locks for his ass belt cover not to be raped.
These videos should be considered illegal. But u stupid look at him like a God.
"I smelled the combination to this lock immediately because of the poor choice in lubricant used in the design"
Is there any video of a lock he couldn't open?
@@justindececco5836They don't exist
@@67goodoleboy67Fort Knox. Not because he couldn't open it, probably, but because nobody in charge is likely to let him try.
At a school where I worked they had this thing called BreakoutEdu which is an educational "escape room box" puzzle thing that uses multiple locks that you're supposed to solve using clues to figure out the combination. When the company came in to demonstrate the device, our box was locked with 3 different wheel locks with numbers/symbols/etc that we were supposed to solve using clues hidden in the room.
We were paired up with another individual and then set to race to see who could solve their lock box first. I asked my partner if they wanted to do it the hard way of finding clues and solving it or if they wanted me to just open the locks. We agreed that I'd just open the locks and it went pretty much like this video. We were done in under 2 minutes and the demo team were a bit annoyed at us.
Edit: To clarify, we went back and did it the right way later on. I ended up using BreakoutEdu in my classroom later on and just added a rule that no picking or brute force solving was allowed. It was all good in the end.
That sounds like a them problem, not a you problem lol
I don’t know. Solving the puzzles and working out the clues sounds like a fun game. It’s not like they planned to test pick proof locks, they planned to design a game and what you did sounds like a bit of a jerk move.
The challenge of the game is thinking and problem solving. You thought outside their box and solved. Well done!
@@glockenrein Yes, but looking out for exploits (and patching them as deemed necessary) is also a part of game design. Though, personally, I would go back and solve legitimately later because that sort of puzzle is my kind of thing.
@@floopyboo No. The problem was either:
- you for being there, when you had no intention of doing it properly
- your teachers or parents forcing you to be there, when you had no intention of doing it properly
Not the demo team, that likely lacked the legal justification to _prevent_ you from being there.
LPL is as skilled at his commentary as he is at picking locks, love it!
The safest lock is the one LPL hasn't gotten around to making a video on yet.
Watch his April Fools videos, they do not disappoint
I'm still looking for the finger tool in the covert companion tool kit 🧐
If you look at it angry enough eventually it opens out of shame!
I read the comments and its obvious that a lot of people do not understand what just happened. LPL changed the combination while the lock was in the default combination of 0-0-0-0 by turning the reset on the bottom of the lock. You can only turn the reset if you have the right combination which was 0-0-0-0 before he changed the numbers.
Thank you. I was wondering how that had occurred with the lock in the closed position.
Something perhaps less obvious, is that eyes aren't even needed for this decode. He could have reopened the lock after setting the new combo without ever turning it back over.
@@VoltisArthow's that not obvious?
He opened the shackle before he changed the combo. That is super obvious and the entire reason he scrambled the lock. Of course he's going to change it from the default combo. Otherwise, what good is the video?
I'd wondered about that.
You know, it'll be really funny when one day, after re-scrambling and testing the lock, he manages to scramble it to the right code
1 out of 10k with four wheels. Totally can happen if you do that enough :)
It may have happened already, but do you think that's the video he'd post?@@tseikkisnelkytkaks9013
@@bobvogel9916 he probably would, give a chuckle, then redo it.
It's amazing how often when I scramble my gym locker, I reach every time close enough to the right combination (like -1, 0, -1 or +8, +8, +8 for example)! Apparently I move each wheel the same amount of time!
I feel like there is one video that he re-scrambled a lot because the second scramble was too close. With 1500 videos, its hard to remember which one.
I've sometimes had trouble explaining how a *tiny* change in a piece of software can have a *disastrous* and large security implication. I think this is the first lock that provides a direct mechanical demonstration of the same principle...
You might try pointing people at the Debian OpenSSL fiasco, if they still don't believe you. "Hey, I fixed this compiler warning in OpenSSL and upstream rejected the patch. Let's see if anyone notices."
It’s kind of like the TF2 coconut conundrum. Code can really be a finicky bitch sometimes.
“I now have a lock to which I do not know the combination.“ I‘ve no doubt that other phrases have been spoken more often, however, I doubt that any have been spoken with more irony or less meaning than this. The skill that LPL shows almost daily amazes me, even after years of watching his videos.
As an amateur picker and building maintenance supervisor, I have put your videos to use on several occasions. Thanks for all the useful information
It’s incredible. I have used his information to point out security flaws that needed correction at my job.
I'm always amazed by how easy some locks are to open. Thank you for keeping my eyes and mind wide open.
all locks a relatively easy to open if you know what you are doing.
@@LarkspeedNL I've had a few locks defeat me. Not many, but a few.
Of course, practice makes perver - erm, perfect. ;)
When the decoding is shorter than the reset and scrambling, it really shows the LPL’s point clearly. Enjoy your presentation and information.
Butts
Hahahahahaha!!! LOL!!!
Its safe to assume this was indeed a fluke
Fluke, for sure
😂😅😂
He just repeated the video 10000 times.
This just jarred a memory for me. As a young kid, I had a cheap inline bike lock with a similar wheel-combo setup. I distinctly remember fidgeting with it often and being able to feel the difference in play in the wheels, and soon discovered that if I did it enough it would accidentally open. I know realize I was inadvertently using this technique 40 years ago! :)
I had one of those super cheap bike locks they sold like crazy back in the 70s-80s, with the cheap chain inside the semiclear color plastic "anti scratch" tube, with the four big wheels on the outside middle of the lock. You could tension those by simply pulling on the chain, and spin the wheels till you felt them "fall into place". So easy to decode!
I remember being an asshole 5th grader who figured out how to decode those cheap 4 number inline bike locks on my own (around 1994).... everybody had them so I would find two people who had the same color lock, decode both, swap them and relock the bikes....
@@wrlprchnx I was slightly more advanced, I had modified a masterlock key by filing the wards and sanding it flat, and so it basically opened any masterlock it would fit into. And I did the same thing, switching kids' padlocks. Stand back and watch as all the kids got on their bikes and left, eventually leaving just those two. They'd get to talking, and try each others' keys, and wow it works! So they'd switch KEYS. (not LOCKS) *shrug* Harmless entertainment.
I found if you put tension on the many of the cheap combination locks you could easily feel the click when you found the right digit. I also did that around 40 years ago as I am 51 now.
I remember opening those locks and swapping them from front to back, from one part of the frame to another, ...
This channel inspired me to take up lockpicking during the 2020 lockdowns. Which is a good thing because I was at a long distance range day a couple weekends back, and forgot my keys to my ammo box.
Luckily I was able to get a paperclip off another shooter and turned that into a pick and tensioner and picked the lock open on my ammo.
THANKS LPL!!
Real "Fallout" franchise vibes from this comment. Well done with the paperclip!
Was the paperclip made by Microsoft?
@@faemike55 "Hi, it looks like you forgot your keys to your ammo box. Can I help?"
@@faemike55 wrong,clippy is useless
Poor Clippy. I bet they're lonely these days.
I'm nearly 70 and remember opening locks with this method when I was a child.. 👍😎✊
When I was at school in the 1970s a lot of bike locks were combination locks where the end of the wire was a "comb" that formed part of the lock mechanism. I discovered how to open them by gently pulling and turning the wheels - just like this really. My only foray into active lock picking (rather than just watching the channel).
Watching LPL at work while practicing lock picking is a good day.
@@willemsma did you at least remember your clothes this time? 🤣
@@willemsma well, if it's any consolation, I'm unaware of any burglary of a residence that was done by picking a lock.
Usually, they kick in a back door or break a window.
@@spvillano I know people (wouldn't call them friends) who steal stuff by picking. Picking doesn't leave behind evidence (well, you can find evidence of picking as marks on pins, but no-one is checking that. People usually just don't know how they got robbed, think they left a door unlocked, etc.
@@sophiophile a quick Google search showed that around 2 - 4 % of burglaries involved lockpicking. Given the annualized loss expectancy and exposure factor, figuring out how much to spend to protect my property is trivial and I actually spend a bit more than necessary to protect my property by rekeying with security pins.
Home invasions are fairly common for burglary, so protecting against that with a peephole helps, a camera or two might be worthwhile, as I own a few anyway and a few knives will do if the worst happens. Guns aren't as intimidating as a knife, as few have been shot, but everyone's been cut before. That's a lesson learned in crowd control in Somalia. Basically, if I replace my long ago stolen during a move firearms, it'll be for anything other than home protection, a quality lock and visibility plus camera are far more effective deterrents and a final, last ring defense being my fighting knifes, aka my Sicilian Express cards. But then, I already have those as well, an occupational risk of being a career soldier that exclusively served in combat units.
@@spvillano I wasn't arguing that it is common. You said you were unaware of any burglaries that involved lockpicking. So I was just sharing that I am aware of many.
The reason I am aware of them is because I taught a bunch of people how to both make their own lockpicking tools, and how to pick- naively. I thought they would use it for dumpster diving and stuff, but at least 2 of them just became thieves.
You are absolutely correct that most instances involve forced entry. I was just sharing that it still happens, and that it actually makes it really hard to get insurance money because of the lack of evidence left behind.
From what I can see, it looks like Abus actually made the spaces between the wheels and the lock body extremely tight. I'm guessing that the wheels are also of the "stepped" design where the part behind the case is a bit wider. Which means it's probably difficult if not impossible to get a tool in there to pull the bar against the wheels. So if Abus hadn't messed up by making the spring too strong, that lock probably would have been about as good as it gets for that style of combination mechanism. That's probably the most infuriating thing- they got SO close... then screwed up on one detail.
This being Abus, a company known for making pretty good locks at most price points, I'll bet they correct that problem soon enough. I'm sure they watch these videos.
They tripped at the finish line.
Not even close, there is still the trick of sliding a thin metal strip at the top to unlock the shackle directly.... it's Abus, remember 😆
I'd watch them. It's a free test and a free advice on what is wrong. The best test rig if you ask me.
@@Sodabowski the extended body will make that really hard, especially with the lock in use.
Would a weaker spring have disadvantages? For instance, is it possible to hit the lock hard enough for the bar to move exactly as you pull the shackle?
What we already have: A compilation of Bob Ross washing his brushes.
What we still need: A compilation of LPL scrambling his wheels.
that brings a whole 'nother meaning to "happy little accidents"
LPL is the Mr. Rogers of Lock Sport.
@@AflacMan13 it’s a beautiful day in the lockpicking neighborhood!
We have an enclosed trailer here that someone had the keys to but was out of town. Needing tools that were inside, I ground down a screw, found a small flat piece of metal to apply pressure and picked it in about 2mn thanks to you!!!
It brings me memories to the cheap tsa combination carry case padlock. You just pull by shackle and turn those wheels until it get loose...
I remember I had a generic bicycle combination lock where you could do the same thing, this would have been in the mid to late 80's. For some reason I stopped using the bike chain, then had to start using it. And by then, I had forgotten the combination.
But just like in this video, I learned the feel when each wheel was binding or feeling looser, and determined the code.
I also remember telling a few mates what I did, and they didn't believe me, until one of them brought in a similar bike chain and I managed to unlock it without being told the combination. 😂
That's the kind of trick you really put into perspective by giving them a dead stare while doing the thing.
Twice.
Bet the lock makers love this channel
I recently did an escape room where we had a 4 digit combination lock and couldn't find the code... So I let everyone else keep looking and did this on the combo padlock. Saved us a bunch of time.
bought my first lockpick from you got it today. practice lock picked twice to get teh hand of it and took at 20 year old master lock i lost the key too and picked in in the time it took to watch this video. thank for all the tutorials
For as many years as I have watched LPL I can say with confidence that locks only keep honest people honest 😂
They also keep unknowing people , including otherwise dishonest people, from entering, which is the large majority of people. Most people don't carry a lockpick with them and watch LPL videos.
that is exactly what my father told me. LPL rules!!!
I've picked code locks like this myself, but this is the first one I've seen that doesn't even require any tension to be placed on the shackle.
yeah i picked bicycle code locks as a kid by pulling on chain and turning each wheel till i felt a slip.
Love a good LPL video in the morning
9 pm here :P
3:30 pm here :D
LPL after decoding the lock in 30 secs....... "Ok folks, like I said, it's not the fastest way in."
Love it. Best vids on the net!!!
This technique also sometimes works when pulling on the shackle. Found this out on my bike's chain lock.
that takes me back to the early 80s at school, i was revered as a lock expert because i could open chain locks easily :) , swapping them across bikes was always a giggle.
@@amojak extra points for the swap. That's sadistic. Love it.
This reminds me of a time I was able to pick a Swiss brand luggage lock. All I had to do was literally just listen for the pins to fall into place when operating the combination.
I knew it! ... The day was going to come when he picked a lock open with no tools at all! 😂
*Opens lock in under 20 seconds by just thumb scrolling*
"Okay folks, it's not the fastest way in..." Righto. The only way it could be faster is if you watch the owner input the combination. LPL is the man of understatements when it comes to cracking codes. :D
When I was young back in the 80s I used to open bicycle locks with this type of mechanism
The cylindrical ones with chain attached at each end? Me too 😊
@@Oligodendrocyte139 exactly
Yes we used to do something similar with the combination locks when I was a kid, we just pulled the lock apart a little and felt the easy spot on each wheel.
1:46 God his wife must love him
Chill
In a perfect world lock manufacturers would have someone monitoring this channel in case one of their products comes up so they can improve them. The shame is we don't live in a perfect world and I firmly believe that lock manufacturers really couldn't care less about the vulnerabilities in their locks just as long as they keep selling.
Wild to imagine that "in a perfect" world UA-cam would exist, much less padlocks.
Many make money by quantity rather than quality.
The length of these videos just shows how skilled LPL is, there was 30 seconds of scrambling the lock in this 3 minute video
And more than a minute of preamble…
Under thirty seconds of “finding the combination”
Picking time was only 30 seconds after the scramble .
amigo i like your voice and presentation very much it is always very relaxing to listen to you .. with your style i could even watch surgical things without getting sick
I'd love to see a list of pad locks LPL actually recommends
Invest in those lock companies
I have been watching his videos for almost 2 years now, and I still would not know what to get for any type of lock. I really wish he would showcase at least a few locks that are not terrible.
He loves the Squire SS100 padlock.
@pax368 he literally released a video called "a padlock I'd use" 1 year ago. Video 1398
@@ChristopherHallett what a cheap lock
You bloody bastard!
I have just opened my 1st padlock ever! It took me about 3 minutes to figure out how.
GF is mad at me and she thinks that from now on I'll be able to open any lock without a key.
GJ mate.
Sometimes I wonder if LPL will ever run out of content. But then I remember people still keep making new locks.
Yeah it's a pretty solid business model
Simply fascinating, as always - it really is a pleasure to watch someone who really knows their craft
He didn’t even put tension on the shackle. Wow!
"It's not the fastest way", my man you literally popped it open while I was thinking that you were still looking for the *first* wheel that was binding the hardest.
It’s always interesting to see how he treats a respectable brand who had a small oopsie (Abus) compared the the big red crayon developers (master lock).
This is the first time I have the same skill as LPL ! I have used this on cheap crap bike locks I've bought in the past !....cheers.
I’d love to see LPL in an escape room. Please indulge us!
Face reveal would need to come first.
@@bluephreakr he controls the camera and he’s been pretty good at it so far.
That would be a fun video. Not as fun as when he defeats Mrs. LPL’s locks each year….
I'm impressed with LPL discovering multiple different methods for picking open multiple different lock mechanisms.
I want to see LPL design a lock that's actually secure. His knowledge of security vulnerabilities would be useful in designing said lock I think.
In basically every video he mentions trivial changes that would boost security. But the lock producers don't listen.
@frankbauerful yes. I want to see him actually make those changes is what I'm saying. Maybe he makes one in collaboration with one of the many very skilled machinists here on YT.
If he designed a lock that was unpickable, he would put his UA-cam channel out of business.
He often cites that security is not simply a linear scale of "already open" to "unbeatable security". Security usually comes at the cost of convenience (and vice-versa) and usually the most secure system is having no system at all to compromise in the first place.
What does exist, however, is "secure enough", which is what LPL often talks about. "This lock is bad but also cheap, don't use it for anything that is worth more than the lock itself"
@@feger481 Or, y'know, he could just become the LockSellingLawyer
Using the tools God gave me, I'm going to open this lock.
I still think its hilarious that the masterlocks can be decoded just by pulling up on the shackle a bit 😅
Locks tremble at the thought that MR LPL will bring out the digits in no time ! Jamie from AUSTRALIA !!!keep up the good work 😊
You can knock down time by pulling on the shackle while "brute forcing" the last wheel.
Uh I don’t think you listened to the video. He wasn’t using brute force. He said the spring was to stron which eliminated the need for the notch decoder tool. There is no need to pull up on the shackle either because he was able to decode using the tension the lock already has by default.
@@JasonB808 Read my comment again.
There's no need to scramble the numbers for so long, a quick scramble is fine. We trust you well enough by now, 😊
I would like to see a lot of these locks after they're left in an accelerated aging chamber for a year bet it's harder to do
@Matt Weger - It's possible you're right. Bought a beginner kit from LPL and have an old weather beaten Masterlock. It's not as easy as he makes it look. I had to add a bit of lubrication but I've managed to rake it open several times now, just to demonstrate it's not a fluke. Haven't been able to pick it yet though.
Not a bad video idea… spray with vinegar, salt, & H2O2 mixture, then try picking it the next day.
FWIW, if you spray the lock with a thin, wicking oil, my experience is that there’s very little difference (unless the lock is totally seized up).
@@lockpickinglawyer - Couldn't even rake it until I sprayed just a touch of WD40. So now I can successfully rake it about every 5 or 6 attempts.
@@wickedcabinboy I couldn't even rake a brand new masterlock #3, so it's having me wonder if I'm doing something wrong and there's some subtle technique to raking that I'm just not comprehending or something.
@@Tahngarthor - turns out I was pushing too hard on the wrench and locking up the pins. I had to ease up on the pressure and just keep trying.
this technique also worked on my high school’s lockers :D
👌🏽
The super code is having a sense of touch. Amazing!
Yo let’s go new lpl vid
@Don't Read My Profile Picture ok I won’t
I love the sound of good scramble in the morning.
I'm beginning to wonder whether or not it would be more secure to just use mousetraps.
You are really a genius. I love it everytime you prove the manufacturer otherwise😂. Consumer just paid for exorbitant price thinking they got the best lock.☹️
The setting of the new code takes longer than the subsequent opening of the new lock. It’s a well known trick of LPL to extend his video’s.😂
lpl you’re the smartest person in whatever room you’re in.
so, does it mean the lock gets more and more pick-resistant with time as the spring gets looser?
Good point!😁
LPL always amazes me .
Welcome to Murder Mystery episode 1541, where today's victim is Abus and their 'touch me the right way and I open' lock
This is the day we've all been waiting for... a no tool open. Hopefully he doesn't retire.
Don't worry. His retirement video will go like this:
LPL: This is the Lock Picking Lawyer--
LOCK: [Opens up]
LPL: --and just like that, we go this open.
Whoa that might have been a fluke
This attack works on a surprising number of combination locks. Used this myself a lot.
I noticed one thing from this lock:
You can change the number combination while this lock is attached onto something.
Basically a troll can go to this lock and change the number combination into something that he also doesn't know.
And then the owner has a new combination and wonders why he can't open that lock.
Or do I miss something and this doesn't work?
I had the exact same thought. I also thought, couldn't a thief just change the code and then open it up?
The lock was in the UNLOCKED state, just closed up so it looked as if it was Locked.
You have to enter the correct code and unlock it before you change the code (combination).
This man is brutal in his reviews... Just pure demonstration of what crap lock it is. Facts don't lie. 👍
Was that a Fluke?
A relevant question, actually. Does that spring have the same (too strong) tension in all locks of the same model?
I have opend lockes like this by pulling on the shackle and turning the each weel untiil it binds then turning it one more untill it feels loose this works on almost every code weel padlock i have ever come across
Did I just see you change the combination without having the lock open?! If so, wouldn’t it be even easier to just change the combination to anything you want?
I was thinking the same, but it should probably need to be on the actual combination to change to a new one.
Taking advantage of the Fourth of July sale and pick me up the genesis set and a set of rakes. Super excited to get started in my lock picking journey.
What kind of combo lock allows you to change the combination in a locked state?
You need to have the correct combination set on the dials before you can turn the reset
@@LeonardRoberts Ahh. I see.
That's mind blowing! Thank you again for a great video! 😆
I used a similar method to pick locks where I grew up (AFB) and then change the combination. You didn't need a tool to put it in change combination mode.
I just know that the maintenance guys were pissed every time they came upon my mischievousness.
Unless they knew the same trick, of course.
Nice demonstration.
LPL is the Mr. Rogers of Lock Sport. 😊
I have two of those locks that im planning to lock my bike with in the future did not expect to see such a result
I remember back when I was about 8 years old, in the sixties, I did something similar with a combination bike lock at school. I didn't steal the bike but I did take the lock. Hopefully they got a better one to replace it.
If you pull the shackle out and keep that pressure on, it binds the wheels and you can hear the click when each wheel hits the open position.
LPL literally gave the lock a 30-second massage and it opened 😂
Nobody would have a second thought about seeing someone take that long to open a combination lock.
If there's one thing he's taught me over the years, it's that locks are IRRELEVANT 😂😂😂😂😂
For some reason this reminds me of an old combo bike lock bypass. It was the kind where the wheels were all next to each other. You could decode it as there was a gap between the wheels that would move to the next wheel every time you got a number correct. Wish I could remember the brand.
I live in the Netherlands, and Arbus is the most widely used brand here on bikes. Indeed, if you get bike insurance here, oftentimes the policy will only cover you if you have an Arbus lock - as most are considered to be a "standard" best level of security. I hope Arbus see this video and immediately recall and remove it from their line. That was absolutely shocking how easy it was to crack.
*ABUS.
August Bremicker und Söhne KG.
And do the NL insurance companies really recommend/require ANY lock as long as it's made by ABUS? Many of the bike locks recommended by our Swedish insurance co:s are from ABUS, but not all, and all locks by ABUS aren't among the recommended ones.
I see that day coming in fast when he can talk the locks to open.
LPL: Hand model extraordinaire
"It's not the fastest…" I can't even find my keys in 3 minutes and a half and still he managed to do an intro, explain all the process before doing it, and even have a conclusion for the video… 🤯
This is the Lockpicking Lawyer, and today I'm going to stare this locking mechanism into submission... blindfolded.
I look at this, it looks so easy and I know I would never be able to open the lock again without going through all the combinations 😅
Abus enthusiasm, Masterlock wisdom.
1:29 slight correction there. The biggest benefit is, that the entry method doesn't leave any forensic marks, since you aren't really operating with the lock outside it's intended operating parameters.
Wow what a stunning achievement in counter-security!
I've been doing this to shoddy decoder locks for ages. It works well on suitcases and crappy TSA locks.