Great video, thanks for making and sharing this. While 95% of the time it will be four digits, it could also be three or five, or even more if the person setting it didn’t understand that the digits can be in any order and can’t repeat
Like how the screwdriver acts as a bit of a cover, when stupid people walk away from an open box, because there is no key in it, so no need to close it back up. It is almost daily I walk by open boxes, with the right code dialed in on the wheels, or like this with the code showing by looking at the arrows inside
Great stuff. That was really surprising to hear the 4 digit code can be entered in any order. Thanks for sharing this👍
Happy to have you back. These things are far too common
🤜🤛
Thank you, someone at my company decided to put a lock on a shared break room with no explanation. found out the key is in one of these
Great video, thanks for making and sharing this. While 95% of the time it will be four digits, it could also be three or five, or even more if the person setting it didn’t understand that the digits can be in any order and can’t repeat
wonderful video! do you know of any sort of bypasses for these kinds of key boxes?
Unfortunately, no, I'm unaware of any direct bypasses. Manipulating them seems to be the way to go!
Really cool demonstration, cheers
How much pressure are you putting on the unlock button?
Like how the screwdriver acts as a bit of a cover, when stupid people walk away from an open box, because there is no key in it, so no need to close it back up. It is almost daily I walk by open boxes, with the right code dialed in on the wheels, or like this with the code showing by looking at the arrows inside
Tried it on a older model didn't seem to work for me, but I'll keep trying.
Make sure to press down really hard on the buttons!
@@LockPickNic ok I will retry today, I'm pretty sure I'm pressing hard using a sharpie pen to do it. Thanks!!
Very cool.