View allAll Photos Tagged masterlock
Open, but way harder than a Masterlock! Sesamee four digit combination lock successfully bypassed. Then successfully decoded, a key/pin made, and new combination set. Love those clever little EZDecoders from @SerePick | #lockpicking #locksport bit.ly/2PX7Ihb
I was hoping that this company is American and their locks were being made in America. According to what I read they are a part of Masterlock which is the biggest lock producer in America. They just had their 100th year anniversary last year. 1912 to 2012 !
Photo taken for Macro Monday where each week we post up to five images that follow a theme. This week's theme is "Restrictions"
My 13-year-old daughter took this one the other night.
Darn it, she's been doing this for a month and I think many of the best photos in my photo stream are ones she took.
Follow her flickr account at Old Crow's Daughter
Pentax K-30, Accura Diamatic 135/2.8, extension tube(s)
For the Pentax Forums Single in March Challenge
I've been feeling a bit uninspired lately, but I do have a few more prints coming on Monday or Tuesday.
Model: Katia, MM#189635
Photographer: Sean, MM#684173
Strobist: One Vivitar 285HV thru white umbrella camera right @ 1/4 (1/2?), one Vivitar 283 bare @ 1/32 far camera left. Trigged by eBay triggers.
Mad props to Sarah and Drew for their work as light stands, and of course to Katia for showing her colors.
For 365 &&& February's Alphabet Fun 2011
M is for Master lock
Also for 111 Pictures in 2011: #49: lock/key(s)
Dr. S. Harry Robertson, Aviation Safety innovator and engineer works the lock on a gate at his ranch in Williams, Arizona. Dr. Robertson is one of four pending enshrinees of the National Aviation Hall of Fame scheduled to be enshrined in July 2011.
(8/23/2010, Photo by Robert Cunningham, PSR News, Int.)
The balcony wraps around three sides of the seemingly ancient auditorium. Lockers, at least two hundred of them, rest against the railings with their backs facing the now vacant temporary classrooms. Their fate appears inevitable as they have since been replaced. For the time being, about half the school tosses their belongs in these, rarely visiting them anymore except for a quick change of books.
- - - - -
The first and second floors of the main building at my school were being redone. These old lockers were hauled out and onto the balcony of a different building (this one being around a hundred-years-old), which housed most of our classes until the remodeling finished in the beginning of April.
This was another I've had in mind for some time, and I was afraid that - with us finally moved into the main building - the administration would have everyone drag their belongings with them and I'd miss this chance. So I skipped lunch one morning and spent the entire thirty(-five) minutes snapping pictures.
**Constructive criticism greatly appreciated!**
Nockamixon State Park, Bedminster & Haycock, Pennsylvania.
Not sure when or why this started, but several people have professed love on locks they attached to the security fencing used for shielding people from the long drop near the observation area high above & away from the Nockamixon Dam, to the waters below.
A locked door covered with yellow insulation foam at the Cape Ann Tool Company in Rockport, Massachusetts.
Image © Susan Candelario / SDC Photography, All Rights Reserved. The image is protected by U.S. and International copyright laws, and is not to be downloaded or reproduced in any way without written permission.
If you would like to license this image for any purpose, please visit my site and contact me with any questions you may have. Please visit Susan Candelario artists website to purchase Prints Thank You.
Once lock opened by trial and error it was cleaned free of all the pieces of aluminum shim trapped in the body. Then the disks were observed while manipulating the dial finding the three disk notches aligned at 24-5.5-0. Subtracting 10 yielded the correct combination 14-35-30. Further trial of how far off the numbers could be set resulted in a final combination of 14-36-30. With my camera in macro mode the flash is inoperative and it is inpossible to correctly light the internals as the camera is in the way, but you can see the tips of the disk notches partialy lined up.
It surprises me that none of the websites I saw mention cleaning and lubricating a lock before trying to pick it. Seems obvious to me and I see lots of complaints about dirtiy locks breaking picks. The only real picking observation I made was that the last number was obvious. When the shackle was pulled and the dial rotated it caught at about 12 places only one of which (30) was 3 digets wide, centered on 30, and released the dial face to move freely off center. All the rest of the first and second number finding hints from the web were useless. The most helpful recommendation was to use all senses and try to visualize what was going on inside the lock.