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Vonrat1 (January 1, 1970 at 7:29 am)
Well played, good sir
G1aD0S (January 1, 1970 at 7:29 am)
3:30 thats what she said
sr20DETdrift (January 1, 1970 at 7:29 am)
85 percent of locks today arent high quality. most people go for cheaper stuff.
butters913 (January 1, 1970 at 7:29 am)
it might work with the bump key but it wears down the tumblers and springs which when you go to use your key it will not work right. Also it might jam the pins(chipping them or cracking) them so it wont work. I have had to replace and fix many locks for people that do this.
rmessenger (January 1, 1970 at 7:29 am)
Your right, I didn't mean high security locks. I meant, ordinary pin tumblers made of better materials and higher quality tend to respond much better to bumping (less likely to break or jam) and leave less evidence of it. Also, if it's done properly, it wont ruin even a cheap lock. I have a $20 lock that I've bumped hundreds of times, and it opens as smoothly as ever.
butters913 (January 1, 1970 at 7:29 am)
not true. new higher quality locks have pins on the side of the key which you can not duplicate. which they also have patented keys which you will only be able to get from one locksmith- each locksmith has a different one. he is showing this on a junk lock with $20 nothing good. this also can ruin your lock.
3ass3 (January 1, 1970 at 7:29 am)
Depends on how hard you hit it.
MacDreezy650 (January 1, 1970 at 7:29 am)
i'm hungry for a fucking burrito. (see what i did there?) :P
renasc (January 1, 1970 at 7:29 am)
That's cool, doesn't need much of a bump does it.
LieutenantProduction (January 1, 1970 at 7:29 am)
its easyer to by a set of 10 for $10. lol even a bunch of auto bump keys |