Figure A.1: Selection of pick shapes
To make the 80 degree head bend, lift the bristle out of the vise
by about 1/4 inch (so 3/4 inch is still in the vise). Place the shank
of a screw driver against the bristle and bend the spring steel around
it about 90 degrees. This should set a permanent 80 degree bend in the
metal. Try to keep the axis of the bend perpendicular to the
handle. The screwdriver shank ensures that the radius of curvature
will not be too small. Any rounded object will work (e.g., drill bit,
needle nose pliers, or a pen cap). If you have trouble with this
method, try grasping the bristle with two pliers separated by about
1/2 inch and bend. This method produces a gentle curve that won't
break the bristle.
A grinding wheel will greatly speed the job of making a pick. It
takes a bit of practice to learn how make smooth cuts with a grinding
wheel, but it takes less time to practice and make two or three picks
than it does to hand file a single pick. The first step is to cut the
front angle of the pick. Use the front of the wheel to do this. Hold
the bristle at 45 degrees to the wheel and move the bristle side to
side as you grind away the metal. Grind slowly to avoid overheating
the metal, which makes it brittle. If the metal changes color (to dark
blue), you have overheated it, and you should grind away the colored
portion. Next, cut the back angle of the tip using the corner of the
wheel. Usually one corner is sharper than the other, and you should
use that one. Hold the pick at the desired angle and slowly push it
into the corner of the wheel. The side of the stone should cut the
back angle. Be sure that the tip of the pick is supported. If the
grinding wheel stage is not close enough to the wheel to support the
tip, use needle nose pliers to hold the tip. The cut should pass
though about 2/3 of the width of the bristle. If the tip came out
well, continue. Otherwise break it off and try again. You can break
the bristle by clamping it into a vise and bending it sharply.
The corner of the wheel is also used to grind the tang of the
pick. Put a scratch mark to indicate how far back the tang should
go. The tang should be long enough to allow the tip to pass over the
back pin of a seven pin lock. Cut the tang by making several smooth
passes over the corner. Each pass starts at the tip and moves to the
scratch mark. Try to remove less than a 1/16th of an inch of metal
with each pass. I use two fingers to hold the bristle on the stage at
the proper angle while my other hand pushes the handle of the pick to
move the tang along the corner. Use whatever technique works best for
you.
Use a hand file to finish the pick. It should feel smooth if you
run a finger nail over it. Any roughness will add noise to the
feedback you want to get from the lock.
The outer sheath of phone cable can be used as a handle for the
pick. Remove three or four of the wires from a length of cable and
push it over the pick. If the sheath won't stay in place, you can put
some epoxy on the handle before pushing the sheath over it.
A.3 Bicycle spokes
An alternative to making tools out of street cleaner bristles is to
make them out of nails and bicycle spokes. These materials are easily
accessible and when they are heat treated, they will be stronger than
tools made from bristles.
figure A.2
: Torque wrenches
A strong torque wrench can be constructed from an 8-penny nail
(about .1 inch diameter). First heat up the point with a propane torch
until it glows red, slowly remove it from the flame, and let it air
cool; this softens it. The burner of a gas stove can be used instead
of a torch. Grind it down into the shape of a skinny screwdriver blade
and bend it to about 80 degrees. The bend should be less than a right
angle because some lock faces are recessed behind a plate (called an
escutcheon) and you want the head of the wrench to be able to
reach about half an inch into the plug. Temper (harden) the torque
wrench by heating to bright orange and dunking it into ice water. You
will wind up with a virtually indestructible bent screwdriver that
will last for years under brutal use.
Bicycle spokes make excellent picks. Bend one to the shape you want
and file the sides of the business end flat such that it's strong in
the vertical and flexy in the horizontal direction. Try a righ t-angle
hunk about an inch long for a handle. For smaller picks, which you
need for those really tiny keyways, find any large-diameter spring and
unbend it. If you're careful you don't have to play any metallurgical
games.
A.4 Brick Strap
For perfectly serviceable key blanks that you can't otherwise find at
the store, use the metal strap they wrap around bricks for
shipping. It's wonderfully handy stuff for just about anything you
want to manufacture. To get around side wards in the keyway, you can
bend the strap lengthwise by clamping it in a vice and tapping on the
protruding part to bend the piece to the required angle.
Brick strap is very hard. It can ruin a grinding wheel or key
cutting machine. A hand file is the recommended tool for milling brick
strap.