Thanks. Just starting. Looking for basically everything. I'm going to have to get a vise and a number of top tensioners and some good pics. I have some very cheap tools that I've made and acquired in the last 2 weeks. Looking forward to getting more involved with this Hobby. This looks like so much fun, thank you.😊
Normally a double-sided lock wil lhave a concave dimple in the centre of the keyway , single wafers will have a dimple at the flat edge of the lock face :]
Showing an Insurer you took reasonable care or not being the thief's first choice because the one next to it is a bit less effort are non-trivial benefits.
Finally. A GR8T example of the mechanics of Wafer Locks. THANK YOU
Agree , good vid. :}
Thanks. Just starting. Looking for basically everything. I'm going to have to get a vise and a number of top tensioners and some good pics. I have some very cheap tools that I've made and acquired in the last 2 weeks. Looking forward to getting more involved with this Hobby. This looks like so much fun, thank you.😊
My son's name is Samuel, and great job on the video.
Great video and explanation, easy to understand with the 3D animation
😃👍
thanks , trying to break in to my friends locker as i have some stuff in there
this is really cool, thank you!!
Thanks Kevin Malone
Really helpful video, does anyone know how to tell a single-sided from a double-sided wafer lock without having the key?
Normally a double-sided lock wil lhave a concave dimple in the centre of the keyway , single wafers will have a dimple at the flat edge of the lock face :]
alternating wafers inside the lock will indicate it's double-sided (e.g. one on the left, one right, one left, one right, etc).
What a great video and look at that, eleven year old video!
You can just bump a tryout key to pick it.
Did you make this video?
Nice video. Sir. !! Those vafer lock pick Keys. Are they really good. ??
No lock is impossible to crack you need to know how to break it and have the equipment to crack it
DasGamming the forever lock is impossible to pick
@@gabecross9440 Dynamite would like to have a say on that
Why is it worse than pin locks though
wafers are wider than pins and easier to access, and they're always looser
This looks much more difficult than pin and tumbler locks.
They're actually much easier to pick, all you need to do is usually use a thin tension wrench and a wave rake to just rake the lock open
1:45 Is he saying FAULT set? I thought it was false set? He definitely pronounces a T there.
no
So locks don't mean anything...
Modulo m they do not all locks are easy to pick some are pretty much impossible
Showing an Insurer you took reasonable care or not being the thief's first choice because the one next to it is a bit less effort are non-trivial benefits.
Not if they’re cheap
How do you master key this lad
Reverse pick it... look it up... ‘reverse picking wafer lock’
Is that a generic voice
hahas