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Chapter 6: Basic Scrubbing
At home you can take your time picking a lock, but in the field,
speed is always essential. This chapter presents a lock picking
technique called scrubbing that can quickly open most locks.
The slow step in basic picking (chapter
4) is locating the pin which is binding the most. The force
diagram (Figure 5.5) developed in chapter
5 suggests a fast way to select the correct pin to lift.
Assume that all the pins could be characterized by the same
force diagram. That is, assume that they all bind at once and
that they all encounter the same friction. Now consider the
effect of running the pick over all the pins with a pressure
that is great enough to overcome the spring and friction forces
but not great enough to overcome the collision force of the
key pin hitting the hull. Any pressure that is above the at
portion of the force graph and below the top of the peak will
work. As the pick passes over a pin, the pin will rise until
it hits the hull, but it will not enter the hull. See Figure
5.3. The collision force at the sheer line resists the pressure
of the pick, so the pick rides over the pin without pressing
it into the hull. If the proper torque is being applied, the
plug will rotate slightly. As the pick leaves the pin, the key
pin will fall back to its initial position, but the driver pin
will catch on the edge of the plug and stay above the sheer
line. See figure 6.1. In theory one stroke of the pick over
the pins will cause the lock to open.
In practice, at most one or two pins will set during a single
stroke of the pick, so several strokes are necessary. Basically,
you use the pick to scrub back and forth over the pins while
you adjust the amount of torque on the plug. The exercises in
chapter 8 will teach
you how to choose the correct torque and pressure.
You will nd that the pins of a lock tend to set in a particular
order. Many factors eect this order (see chapter
9), but the primary cause is a misalignment between the
center axis of the plug and the axis on which the holes were
drilled. See figure 6.2. If the axis of the pin holes is skewed
from the center line of the plug, then the pins will set from
back to front if the plug is turned one way, and from front
to back if the plug is turned the other way. Many locks have
this defect.
Scrubbing is fast because you don't need to pay attention to
individual pins. You only need to nd the correct torque and
pressure. Figure 6.1 summarizes the steps of picking a lock
by scrubbing. The exercises will teach you how to recognize
when a pin is set and how to apply the correct forces. If a
lock doesn't open quickly, then it probably has one of the characteristics
described in chapter 9
and you will have to concentrate on individual pins.
- Insert the pick and torque wrench. Without applying any
torque pull the pick out to get a feel for the stiness
of the lock's springs.
- Apply a light torque. Insert the pick without touching
the pins. As you pull the pick out, apply pressure to the
pins. The pressure should be slightly larger than the minimum
necessary to overcome the spring force.
- Gradually increase the torque with each stroke of the
pick until pins begin to set.
- Keeping the torque xed, scrub back and forth over the
pins that have not set. If additional pins do not set, release
the torque and start over with the torque found in the last
step.
- Once the majority of the pins have been set, increase
the torque and scrub the pins with a slightly larger pressure.
This will set any pins which have set low due to beveled
edges, etc.
To return to the table of contents, click
here.

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