If you like this video, I have made a far, far better series on lever locks since this was published, enjoy! ua-cam.com/play/PLXm18pW-yyX7qhybbWL85Y80JeN2K9vhY.html
Nice video, very nicely detailed, but there is 1 doubt, how do you find the talon of the bolt of a curtain lever padlock with a tensioner ? I mean the mortise lock you've used has a prominent curtain that pretty much acts as a support to the bolt when the tensioner tool is turned, but in a normal curtain lever padlock, the curtain & bolt are separate, so how to recognize with the tensioner which is the bolt shoulder where the pressure needs to be applied ?
Awesome vid!! I’ve got a simple question Noob. I saw that your tension tool to turn the cam was quite a bit shorter than what the original key provided. I see many tensioner made with them full length like the original key. Is it usually unnecessary to make them full length like the original key?
I’m retired at 75 now, but, as a lad of 15, I worked at an ironmongery where we were encouraged to open up locks so as to see how they work. I was also taught how to cut keys. As such, I desired a vocation as a lock smith. Training an individual for ironmongery was an expensive outlay for the company, it was a night school thing at the time, so the management dissuaded me from following that course. As a result, I went into electronics. Never actually loosing that desire to pick locks purely to assist the unfortunate situations we all might find ourselves in. Now, I have the time to tinker around with locks noticing that cheap lock picking kits are now available. Assuming of course that they work. So having spent a considerable amount of time studying 3,5 lever’s mortise locks, the older type cylinder (Yale) type. Never loosing the interest over the years, so UA-cam is a great source of information and inspiration to further that interest. Thank you for the reminders, as well as some interesting issues that being a locksmith can bring. Great video
finally a Video that clearly explains Each of Industry Terms or names given to each part of the lock such as Gate or why it's called Curtain, which other videos usually omit or assumed we knew. But most of all, the video is filmed with the OPTIMAL lighting, and angle WITHOUT distracting movement or unnecessary time consuming demonstrations that to see the exact inner workings as it unlocks and locks. Thank you.
Cool video. As a locksmith in Boston, I don't run into lever locks too often, especially ones that are still in use. Great explanation of how they work and picking methods involved!
Excellent description of how these locks work,I come across these fairly regularly and generally drill them to access the gate area but I have made a key similar to yours however I cut the key down less so it automatically sets the lowest cut lever ,sometimes there is non in but sometimes two so you then have to only pick the three remaining levers,loving your video’s keep em coming 👍
My word, I JUST picked up locksport, and am only now waiting for my top of the keyway tensioners in the mail now. Yesterday I saw a scrap piece of wire clothes hanger and thought about hammering the end down, as Im an amateur blacksmith. This video has given me a sign that I'm to blend my two skills. The KiloWhiskyForge now has a direction, and a goal.
Being new to lock picking (as a hobby that is!!) This video is fantastic. Thank you so much for posting. You have explained and demonstrated in a perfect and easy way for me to understand. A very well done.
I'm still fairly new to Locksport, and have never tried to pick a lever lock. Truthfully, I wasn't even exactly sure how they worked. This excellent video explained it perfectly! Thanks @Lock Noob! You da man!
Excellent and well explained detail of the Curtain principle and demonstrated admirably. Even more so having constructing your own tools. Well done and many thanks.
Thanks for the teaching. I am reasonably good on pin tumblers and this is just what I need to learn how to pick mortice locks. I really appreciate the full explanations you give. Thank you again, best wishes.
Nice tutorial! It's worth mentioning that due the shape of the levers, you can relock the lock by basically just trying to overlift all levers so you really don't need to really pick it to re-lock it without a key. Some other lever lock designs may have false gates for the other direction, too.
Thank you for such a clear and simple explanation of how lever locks work. Much appreciated. 👍 Looks like 144 lock manufacturers didn't like this video.
That’s fascinating, and a really good visual example of how lever locks work, as well as their anti picking features. What really blows my mind after seeing this, is how long lever locks have actually existed for, the parts are nowhere near as small as those in pin locks, but it’s still a clever design, that needs relatively accurately made parts to work.
I love the old CHUBB Battleship range, one of my first ever levered picking challenges! I didn't know what to expect inside, so I had a hard time navigating the false gates. As an inexperienced lock manipulator, I didn't have a good working knowledge of the internal structure prior to picking. Thanks for sharing. 👍
Thanks for the video! That was my first look at lever lock and it was very interesting! I am a lock noob like yourself and really like anything new. Unfortunately I watched.the Chubb vid first. This cleared it up nicely thank you again. I will look forward to more.
Excactly my thinking. I was thinking those 'old fashioned big key locks' provided little security. But seems, when done well, takes some serious tooling. After all, his were custom made.
Great job. Being an American I encountered these in Italy. They really threw me because the door had 3-4 locks and getting them all to the open position was no fun at all. That combined with a 3 inch thick steel door with 1 inch thick bolts made me feel like the apartment was a vault.
These locks are on lots of doors, especially "storm" doors in the UK as I'm sure you're are aware of. Good to see someone actually showing how they work and how to pick the curtain ones. Most don't have that feature so I'm guessing that just a skeleton key would open most? Cheers mate, really enjoyed that 🙂👍
Maybe it's simply a matter of familiarity and exposure level, but I find curtained lever much more challenging than pin tumblers. The ones with only single gates are easy enough, but the ones with many levers, complete with serrated notches and false gates can be a nightmare. Being in the states, these are sadly an extraordinarily rare find. I'd love to hear from someone (if such a soul exists) who works almost exclusively with these, and rarely pin stacks, if they find good lever locks more or less challenging than a decent pin tumbler lock, say a Schlage with uncooperative pinning. Great video, love these style locks.
Now that was a great video mate and will help lots of newbies out regarding mortice locks. Really enjoyed watching it. I have not had my mortice picks out for some time.
Great video. I have been planning to try to make some lever picks so that can try to pick a couple lever locks that I recently acquired. This video really improved my understanding of what the tools need to do - which will help me to make them and hopefully have a chance of picking the locks open.
Had a chubb 6 lever lock off an old black A & B public telephone, very nicely machined with tight tolerance fences & gate and false notches. Even with the lock case open in front of me, was impossible to pick. This was a safe lock used on the money compartment. would like to see how u pick a chubb safe lock. Awesome video:-)
Wow, friend, how come it took me 2 years to find this? Must be goin' blind! Just top quality work, chap. I've been around a few locks and spent a few hours mooching around youtube locksport antics. I'm pure amateur, very occasional tourist to the sport but find it fascinating. However, mortice/curtain locks have always been a dark art.......'till now! That has taught me more in 10 mins than all the tube stuff in years. Thank you kindly, friend, sub'd in an instant and looking forward to playing catchup with some bimge locknoob watching. Take care, bloke.....
Awesome video - very interesting stuff perfectly explained and demonstrated. I was fascinated throughout the whole video. Great job in presenting this - thank you. Looking forward for more lever-videos like this :-)
Thank Potti314 :-) I enjoyed making this video. As an when I have the money, I'll buy myself some more lever lock picking equipment as it's really good fun
Hi Lock Noob, great intro to Lever lock picking. I am fascinated to how lever locks can be picked, as in the UK as I am sure you know, most doors seem to contain a lever lock as well as a pin tumbler. I really would like to see much more content on this subject. How about a DIY curtain pick making tutorial? Those things are so damn expensive!! I asked BosnianBill about these locks, explaining how common they are over in the UK, but he claimed to have never picked one! Keep up the great work! All ready in love with this channel!
Mr Cessna thanks for watching :-) I'm still really new to lever locks, but I'm learning what I can with what I have. I might do something on lever wires, but only when I get more confident with the subject matter.
Very interesting ... my search was to understand the workings of a mortice lock as I have a problem with one, the locking bolt doesn't quite retract far enough causing a bind of 0.5 mm or so. I'll try the "lawnmower fix" technique of pulling it apart, cleaning it, and putting it back together! The springs worry me a little, as in: will they fly away? Many thanks for this informative exploded view of how it works!
Lock Noob it worked ... pulled it down, took all the lock levers out in order, cleaned it up including filing the bolt a wee bit. Back together and it’s sweet!
After spending 1-hour trying to free a jammed lever lock on my front door I finally got it open. This video gave me the confidence to remove it, in the hopes that it would be in need of cleaning and I would be able to get it more reliable. I did get a shock when I opened my lock and found it had 7 Levers! I was able to dismantle it, carefully numbering the parts, clean it and reassemble it. My one concern is that with the door open if I close the lock I can push the bolt back into the lock. Obviously this isn't possible if the door is in the closed position and I lock the door but I wonder if this is a feature or if there is still something wrong. If I turn the key slightly more than 360° and then back a little bit and remove the key it is then not possible to push the boat back into place and I welcome any comments on this.
How do you get hold of the cut down keys? I've looked on a quick google search, and couldn't find any. There's only try out keys, which don't seem useful to me.
It’s actually easier than the name might suggest. You literally take a key for the lock or a blank for the lock and grind it down to make a tensioner :-)
Question: if you are tensioning the bolt from the rear, what would you do if picking from the other side? You'd have to tension from the front and there'd be no room to slip the pick wire, no?
It's called mortise lock because it mimics a mortise and tenon join. The door with the bolt projecting becomes the tenon, locking into the recess of the mortise in the frame
Do you have any info on how to make a training mortice lock?I can see plastic fronts.to buy but dont know how to take the lock apart without everything coming apart
If you take care any lie the lock flat, the insides should stay where they are. We all sometimes make mistakes, but you also learn a lot about a lock if you have to re assemble it, so don’t be put off :-)
It's the only way my pin-picking head could explain it as. I think it acts in the same way as a zero lift as they would normally be put in to 'protect' shorter pins behind it. This 'zero lift' lever does a similar job here and really does make it much harder (but not impossible) to slip by. I'm certainly a very long way from being an expert on lever locks though :-)
Make the pick wire thinner, and practice getting under and around lever 4 to get to 5. instead of starting at 5, and working forward. The binding order seldom works in your favour, as it did in the video.
Looking at the video again. One thing I find too when using the perspex cover, it sometimes compresses the levers making them act differently then when the normal steel cover is in.(making them bind differently). Keep up the good work.
I have the wires and tensioners from uklp, but my pick wire keeps getting stuck under/against the levers and I can't pick some of them without giving up too much tension to move on to the next one. One of my wires is ground away at the bend from grinding against one lever to get to the next. Any advice?
The only tip is to learn to make your own lever wires. Very easy to do and you can file and sandpaper them to your liking. You can experiment with 1.4 to 1.6 mm music wire to see what you prefer :-)
Just wondering how you would apply the tension when the lock is fitted on the right hand side instead of the left. The deadbolt cam is obviously in front & not at the back which means you need to get through the tensioner to get to the levers
I think I heard you say you can buy a tension tool that fits in multiple locks..any pointers for one available to the U.S. please? Excellent vid BTW! True has more room than a false. Good pointer.
Andy mac lock lab I buy all my lever stuff from him beautiful wires and 5 and 7 gauge tensioners and his padlock pick set is just awesome beautifully hand made
Nice vid dude, don't see enough vids about lever locks . Shame the Chris belcher tool is so bloody expensive - otherwise I'd already own one! The uncurtained picks are about 20-40 on UK bumpkeys but the curtained version is 200!
I’m trying to cut a key for a Yale 2 lever sashlock but can’t get it right. I can successfully cut the bit to length and width but can’t get the next stage correct. Is there a specific sequence to cutting the key to fit the levers?
Well quite, and there is the experience. Usually it's a little guess work and feeling how much play there is in the gate, with true gates often feeling wider. It's really an art
If you like this video, I have made a far, far better series on lever locks since this was published, enjoy! ua-cam.com/play/PLXm18pW-yyX7qhybbWL85Y80JeN2K9vhY.html
Lock Noob where can i buu these tools and what are their names
Nice video, very nicely detailed, but there is 1 doubt, how do you find the talon of the bolt of a curtain lever padlock with a tensioner ? I mean the mortise lock you've used has a prominent curtain that pretty much acts as a support to the bolt when the tensioner tool is turned, but in a normal curtain lever padlock, the curtain & bolt are separate, so how to recognize with the tensioner which is the bolt shoulder where the pressure needs to be applied ?
have sent u email. check yr spam. strayboat
@@resoluteaddy1649 Lb mhh
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Awesome vid!! I’ve got a simple question Noob. I saw that your tension tool to turn the cam was quite a bit shorter than what the original key provided. I see many tensioner made with them full length like the original key. Is it usually unnecessary to make them full length like the original key?
Nice tutorial.
LockPickingLawyer thank you :-) now I just need the skill to be able to pick it blind, lol
LockPickingLawyer Jio
The emperor have spoken!
OG
Correct…
I’m retired at 75 now, but, as a lad of 15, I worked at an ironmongery where we were encouraged to open up locks so as to see how they work. I was also taught how to cut keys.
As such, I desired a vocation as a lock smith.
Training an individual for ironmongery was an expensive outlay for the company, it was a night school thing at the time, so the management dissuaded me from following that course. As a result, I went into electronics.
Never actually loosing that desire to pick locks purely to assist the unfortunate situations we all might find ourselves in. Now, I have the time to tinker around with locks noticing that cheap lock picking kits are now available. Assuming of course that they work.
So having spent a considerable amount of time studying 3,5 lever’s mortise locks, the older type cylinder (Yale) type. Never loosing the interest over the years, so UA-cam is a great source of information and inspiration to further that interest.
Thank you for the reminders, as well as some interesting issues that being a locksmith can bring. Great video
Thank you for watching!
This has got to be the single best lever lock picking explanation out there. Great job, learnt a lot in 13 mins! :)
Thanks dude, that's nice if you to say :-) thanks for watching :-)
Well done, Lock Noob. That's the first time I've watched a lever lock picking video and thought 'got it!'.
That's very kind of you: I'm glad you got something from it :-) If I had more time, money and space, lever picking would be nice to branch off into
finally a Video that clearly explains Each of Industry Terms or names given to each part of the lock such as Gate or why it's called Curtain, which other videos usually omit or assumed we knew.
But most of all, the video is filmed with the OPTIMAL lighting, and angle WITHOUT distracting movement or unnecessary time consuming demonstrations that to see the exact inner workings as it unlocks and locks.
Thank you.
Cool video. As a locksmith in Boston, I don't run into lever locks too often, especially ones that are still in use. Great explanation of how they work and picking methods involved!
Thank you :-)
Excellent description of how these locks work,I come across these fairly regularly and generally drill them to access the gate area but I have made a key similar to yours however I cut the key down less so it automatically sets the lowest cut lever ,sometimes there is non in but sometimes two so you then have to only pick the three remaining levers,loving your video’s keep em coming 👍
Great, perfectly clear demonstration. Excellent clear English and brilliant lighting and camera position etc.
Thank you 👍🏻
My word, I JUST picked up locksport, and am only now waiting for my top of the keyway tensioners in the mail now. Yesterday I saw a scrap piece of wire clothes hanger and thought about hammering the end down, as Im an amateur blacksmith.
This video has given me a sign that I'm to blend my two skills.
The KiloWhiskyForge now has a direction, and a goal.
More detailed than others ive seen, Thanks for the inside advice on how the mechanism of the lock works, brilliant.
Thanks 🙏
You seriously need more subscribers this is the best I've found so far that actually made sense.
Being new to lock picking (as a hobby that is!!) This video is fantastic. Thank you so much for posting. You have explained and demonstrated in a perfect and easy way for me to understand. A very well done.
Thank you, I appreciate that :-)
I'm still fairly new to Locksport, and have never tried to pick a lever lock. Truthfully, I wasn't even exactly sure how they worked. This excellent video explained it perfectly! Thanks @Lock Noob! You da man!
Try these too! ua-cam.com/play/PLXm18pW-yyX7qhybbWL85Y80JeN2K9vhY.html
Excellent and well explained detail of the Curtain principle and demonstrated admirably. Even more so having constructing your own tools. Well done and many thanks.
Thank you for the nice comment :-)
Thanks for the teaching. I am reasonably good on pin tumblers and this is just what I need to learn how to pick mortice locks. I really appreciate the full explanations you give. Thank you again, best wishes.
Thank you :-)
Nice tutorial! It's worth mentioning that due the shape of the levers, you can relock the lock by basically just trying to overlift all levers so you really don't need to really pick it to re-lock it without a key. Some other lever lock designs may have false gates for the other direction, too.
Ft 5
It just dawned on me that I had absolutely zero knowledge on how a mortise lock worked or how to pick one. Thanks for the very informative video.
Thanks 🙏
Thank you for such a clear and simple explanation of how lever locks work. Much appreciated. 👍 Looks like 144 lock manufacturers didn't like this video.
Glad to help
Very useful, thanks. I have often wondered how those types of lock work compared to pin and tumbler locks, now i know!
Thank you :-)
Thank you for this. I was studying lever locks in my locksmith studies and needed to see what everything was about.
Please watch this instead! These are FAR better ua-cam.com/play/PLXm18pW-yyX7qhybbWL85Y80JeN2K9vhY.html
I've never seen or thought about how the lever locks work, very interesting and as always well presented. thanks heaps !
Thank you :-)
That’s fascinating, and a really good visual example of how lever locks work, as well as their anti picking features.
What really blows my mind after seeing this, is how long lever locks have actually existed for, the parts are nowhere near as small as those in pin locks, but it’s still a clever design, that needs relatively accurately made parts to work.
Thanks for watching :-)
Thank you so much with your tutorial it helped a lot 10 minutes ago…I almost slept out
I'm a carpenter and can do the yale locks , but looking to learn how to pick a mortice just in case i need it, this opened my eyes very good guide
Richard Hunt thanks :-)
the best video on picking in UA-cam
I love the old CHUBB Battleship range, one of my first ever levered picking challenges! I didn't know what to expect inside, so I had a hard time navigating the false gates. As an inexperienced lock manipulator, I didn't have a good working knowledge of the internal structure prior to picking. Thanks for sharing. 👍
They can be tough locks!
Thanks for the video! That was my first look at lever lock and it was very interesting! I am a lock noob like yourself and really like anything new. Unfortunately I watched.the Chubb vid first. This cleared it up nicely thank you again. I will look forward to more.
James Murphy thanks for watching :-)
Damn, never thought this kind of lock is so difficult to open!
rubbers3, well, the 2 lever non-Curtained ones are a lot more simple, but this is a relatively high security version of a Curtained Lever Lock :-)
Lock Noob I think he's being sarcy?
@@feetthong624 I think rubbers3 is confusing a warded lock which looks similar from the outside but is in fact much simper to open.
Excactly my thinking. I was thinking those 'old fashioned big key locks' provided little security. But seems, when done well, takes some serious tooling. After all, his were custom made.
Great job. Being an American I encountered these in Italy. They really threw me because the door had 3-4 locks and getting them all to the open position was no fun at all. That combined with a 3 inch thick steel door with 1 inch thick bolts made me feel like the apartment was a vault.
Sounds secure!
Super cool way of illustrating how these locks work. Thanks so much!
Thanks :-)
best explanation .found everything needed for a fresher
Thanks :-)
I found it really interesting. Thanks for almost reverse picking the lock too
Thanks 🙏
Brilliant tutorial. It's really cool to see you progress with lockpicking. Always spurs me on to get back into picking.
Happy picking :-)
When he said 'introduce you to the key' did anyone else go "HELLO KEY!" ?
These locks are on lots of doors, especially "storm" doors in the UK as I'm sure you're are aware of. Good to see someone actually showing how they work and how to pick the curtain ones. Most don't have that feature so I'm guessing that just a skeleton key would open most?
Cheers mate, really enjoyed that 🙂👍
Maybe it's simply a matter of familiarity and exposure level, but I find curtained lever much more challenging than pin tumblers. The ones with only single gates are easy enough, but the ones with many levers, complete with serrated notches and false gates can be a nightmare. Being in the states, these are sadly an extraordinarily rare find.
I'd love to hear from someone (if such a soul exists) who works almost exclusively with these, and rarely pin stacks, if they find good lever locks more or less challenging than a decent pin tumbler lock, say a Schlage with uncooperative pinning.
Great video, love these style locks.
Go check out Andy Mac’s channel, he picks lever locks almost exclusively :-)
Now that was a great video mate and will help lots of newbies out regarding mortice locks. Really enjoyed watching it. I have not had my mortice picks out for some time.
Thank you waddac2, means a lot :-)
You are more than welcome. Keep them coming ;o))))
Very interesting,
I like these types of locks as they are much harder than they look.
lol
Cheers & Happy pickin!
One day I'll try it covered. One day. Maybe
Great video. I have been planning to try to make some lever picks so that can try to pick a couple lever locks that I recently acquired. This video really improved my understanding of what the tools need to do - which will help me to make them and hopefully have a chance of picking the locks open.
Thanks :-)
Had a chubb 6 lever lock off an old black A & B public telephone, very nicely machined with tight tolerance fences & gate and false notches. Even with the lock case open in front of me, was impossible to pick. This was a safe lock used on the money compartment. would like to see how u pick a chubb safe lock. Awesome video:-)
Those locks can be tough!
Wow, friend, how come it took me 2 years to find this? Must be goin' blind! Just top quality work, chap. I've been around a few locks and spent a few hours mooching around youtube locksport antics. I'm pure amateur, very occasional tourist to the sport but find it fascinating. However, mortice/curtain locks have always been a dark art.......'till now! That has taught me more in 10 mins than all the tube stuff in years. Thank you kindly, friend, sub'd in an instant and looking forward to playing catchup with some bimge locknoob watching. Take care, bloke.....
Thanks friend :-)
Good introductory video for us beginners. Thank you.
You are welcome!
Awesome video - very interesting stuff perfectly explained and demonstrated. I was fascinated throughout the whole video. Great job in presenting this - thank you. Looking forward for more lever-videos like this :-)
Thank Potti314 :-) I enjoyed making this video. As an when I have the money, I'll buy myself some more lever lock picking equipment as it's really good fun
Hi Lock Noob, great intro to Lever lock picking. I am fascinated to how lever locks can be picked, as in the UK as I am sure you know, most doors seem to contain a lever lock as well as a pin tumbler. I really would like to see much more content on this subject.
How about a DIY curtain pick making tutorial? Those things are so damn expensive!!
I asked BosnianBill about these locks, explaining how common they are over in the UK, but he claimed to have never picked one!
Keep up the great work! All ready in love with this channel!
Mr Cessna thanks for watching :-) I'm still really new to lever locks, but I'm learning what I can with what I have. I might do something on lever wires, but only when I get more confident with the subject matter.
Great stuff, no rush, looking forward to any new lever lock content! Thank you😊
Pick a skeleton lock
Great explanation of lever locks and picking. Thanks!
Thank you :-)
Very interesting ... my search was to understand the workings of a mortice lock as I have a problem with one, the locking bolt doesn't quite retract far enough causing a bind of 0.5 mm or so. I'll try the "lawnmower fix" technique of pulling it apart, cleaning it, and putting it back together! The springs worry me a little, as in: will they fly away? Many thanks for this informative exploded view of how it works!
Just take care, but you can learn a lot that way!
Lock Noob it worked ... pulled it down, took all the lock levers out in order, cleaned it up including filing the bolt a wee bit. Back together and it’s sweet!
I remember those big ol chubb padlocks from when I was a kid, the council used to use them on park gates....big heavy duty boat anchors😂
Great video, very concise and well explained
Than you :-)
Brilliant video, it is explained very well
Thanks 🙏
After spending 1-hour trying to free a jammed lever lock on my front door I finally got it open. This video gave me the confidence to remove it, in the hopes that it would be in need of cleaning and I would be able to get it more reliable. I did get a shock when I opened my lock and found it had 7 Levers! I was able to dismantle it, carefully numbering the parts, clean it and reassemble it. My one concern is that with the door open if I close the lock I can push the bolt back into the lock. Obviously this isn't possible if the door is in the closed position and I lock the door but I wonder if this is a feature or if there is still something wrong. If I turn the key slightly more than 360° and then back a little bit and remove the key it is then not possible to push the boat back into place and I welcome any comments on this.
Is it one of those locks where you have to rotate the key twice to get it to fully lock?
Cool video. Nice to see this type of thing covered. Good job.
Thank you :-)
Enjoyed this a lot and will now check the new ones you suggest. Thanks
That was really interesting and very well explained, thanks
Thank you :-)
How do you get hold of the cut down keys? I've looked on a quick google search, and couldn't find any. There's only try out keys, which don't seem useful to me.
It’s actually easier than the name might suggest. You literally take a key for the lock or a blank for the lock and grind it down to make a tensioner :-)
3:41 you actually told me where the key goes 😂😂😂
Thanks. Very well demonstrated
Thank you! 😀
Great video, fantastic explanation! Thanks for sharing. 👍👍
Thank you :-)
Very nice video 👍 to learn how it works 👍🔓👏💯✅
Thx to you Master!!!
Question: if you are tensioning the bolt from the rear, what would you do if picking from the other side? You'd have to tension from the front and there'd be no room to slip the pick wire, no?
You are tensioning on the curtain, so it works fine :-)
It's called mortise lock because it mimics a mortise and tenon join. The door with the bolt projecting becomes the tenon, locking into the recess of the mortise in the frame
Indeed :-)
Do you have any info on how to make a training mortice lock?I can see plastic fronts.to buy but dont know how to take the lock apart without everything coming apart
If you take care any lie the lock flat, the insides should stay where they are. We all sometimes make mistakes, but you also learn a lot about a lock if you have to re assemble it, so don’t be put off :-)
you done really well mate I've never done that before
Jackcc5, thanks for watching :-)
my Cannon safe is locked out with all my guns in it, the keypad is broken, looks like i will be trying your guide! thanks for posting it.
I love lever locks. And picked a few. But great video For beginners. Thanks
Thanks dude!
Bravo,bravo 👏👍👍
Wounderful video,thanks for taking the time to make it😘😘🍻😎😎😎
Thank you Pick Beard :-)
Lock Noob no Thank You sir 👍👍😘😎😎😎
Great explanation on how these work.
Thanks :-) try this too :-)ua-cam.com/play/PLXm18pW-yyX7qhybbWL85Y80JeN2K9vhY.html
The low belley on number 4, stops you from getting to number 5 with the pick, as it rests on the curtain. It isnt a zero lift like a pin tumbler.
It's the only way my pin-picking head could explain it as. I think it acts in the same way as a zero lift as they would normally be put in to 'protect' shorter pins behind it. This 'zero lift' lever does a similar job here and really does make it much harder (but not impossible) to slip by. I'm certainly a very long way from being an expert on lever locks though :-)
Make the pick wire thinner, and practice getting under and around lever 4 to get to 5. instead of starting at 5, and working forward. The binding order seldom works in your favour, as it did in the video.
Good advice :-) and yes, I was mega lucky with the binding order. At some point I'll practice it blind
Looking at the video again. One thing I find too when using the perspex cover, it sometimes compresses the levers making them act differently then when the normal steel cover is in.(making them bind differently). Keep up the good work.
Yes, I had to squirt in a bit of 3 in 1 and loosen the screws to stop them being so sticky. They were still not quite moving independently as you saw
Really excellent video and explanation.
trying to learn to pick the lock for the door leading to my building's terrace! need that fresh air during quarantine :)
Be careful not to damage a lock in use. I never pick locks I rely on
No need for this knowledge but it is really cool knowledge. Thanks.
Thanks :-)
I have the wires and tensioners from uklp, but my pick wire keeps getting stuck under/against the levers and I can't pick some of them without giving up too much tension to move on to the next one. One of my wires is ground away at the bend from grinding against one lever to get to the next. Any advice?
The only tip is to learn to make your own lever wires. Very easy to do and you can file and sandpaper them to your liking. You can experiment with 1.4 to 1.6 mm music wire to see what you prefer :-)
At least i know what you call it. Thanks
Now to learn the picking business end
thank you. Id always wondered about these types of locks. :) fantastic
Useful video, my lock is currently refusing to let me in using the key and trying to figure out how to make it turn before I escalate to destruction.
very interesting thank very much, where did you get the practice lock from,nice videos
Thanks :-) the lock came from Walkers Locksmiths in the uk :-)
What do you call the ones with a side ways key hole ==O like this.
I have an old storage cupboard, I can't figure out how to open it?
very cool! not something we see too often.
Thank you :-)
I am going to attempt to make a cut down key like yours myself can yoi advise how i might do so? Beautiful work also.
Nice the only thing you didn't mention is mirror image key because it works from both sides of the lock.
This is a lock of a safe.
@@LucidPreditor no just a normal house door lock here in the uk
Excellent and informative video.
Subscribed.
Thanks 😊
Great work, 👍👍👍👍👌👌👌👌😊
Thanks 🙏
Always been curious how lever locks work, since there are not a lot of "gutting a lever lock" videos around.
Please watch my playlist on Lever Locks - you won't regret it!
Thanks, super helpful, I was able to open a cedar chest that we had lost the key for ( only one lever thankfully but still😉)
Hi There,
I was wondering if you sale these coat hanger picks that you made? Thanks
No, I don’t sell tools, but you should have a go yourself; it’s quite easy :-)
Hi, when I put a tension tool and pick the curtain, it only turns a 3rd. It doesn't turn any further. Any ideas?
Nicely done mate
Thanks 👍
What would you say the best universal lever / curtain lever lock pick out there is ?
Another excellent video.
Lock Noob, would you by any chance have a video on picking the western electric payphone lock?
Sadly, no I don’t
D'oh! It's all good. Great videos there by the way.
Just wondering how you would apply the tension when the lock is fitted on the right hand side instead of the left. The deadbolt cam is obviously in front & not at the back which means you need to get through the tensioner to get to the levers
I think I heard you say you can buy a tension tool that fits in multiple locks..any pointers for one available to the U.S. please? Excellent vid BTW! True has more room than a false. Good pointer.
No idea for the US, sorry. The U.K. sell most of the curtain picks I think :-)
You’ve explained that really well, if only they all had clear fronts
With only a little work and some Perspex, you can do this yourself. Vid coming soon :-)
Lock Noob I remember a post on UKLS on someone (you?) cutting the front recently. It cracked at the last touch🥴
Susan Cox that’s certainly happened to me. Just did it again :-)
Was this a Era vicount?? have you picked it blind yet? i may need to make tensioner out of keys and get more of these open.
I think it might be:-) and no, I've not tried picking it blind yet... I'm just not that good with levers
Andy mac lock lab I buy all my lever stuff from him beautiful wires and 5 and 7 gauge tensioners and his padlock pick set is just awesome beautifully hand made
They really are!
Nice vid dude, don't see enough vids about lever locks . Shame the Chris belcher tool is so bloody expensive - otherwise I'd already own one! The uncurtained picks are about 20-40 on UK bumpkeys but the curtained version is 200!
I know. The price of entry is stopping me from taking up lever lock picking more. One day maybe :-)
great video , well explained,
Quote of the day, "Locks are for Honest Men". (And your Insurance installments).
Lol
I’m trying to cut a key for a Yale 2 lever sashlock but can’t get it right. I can successfully cut the bit to length and width but can’t get the next stage correct. Is there a specific sequence to cutting the key to fit the levers?
Great video but how do you know when you are in a false gate or a true gate ?
Well quite, and there is the experience. Usually it's a little guess work and feeling how much play there is in the gate, with true gates often feeling wider. It's really an art