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Loompanics Unlimited
Publishers & Sellers of Unusual Books
P.O. Box 1197
Port Townsend, WA 98368
800 380 2230 (for North America only)
(they ship internationally call  360 385 2230)
Fax  360 385 7785

        When they say unusual, they mean it!  Everything from igloo
construction to techniques of execution.  There is a $5 charge for their 
catalog.  ("no longer carried?" means I couldn't find it in their current
catalog)

# 52058 HOW TO CIRCUMVENT A SECURITY ALARM IN 10 SECONDS OR LESS
An Insider's Guide to How It's Done and How To Prevent It
by B. Andy 1994 88p. This revealing book explains in nontechnical detail how
anyone can bypass a security alarm system in seconds, leaving you and
your loved ones vulnerable to burglary or worse. Industry insider B.
Andy points out the glaring weaknesses of such popular devices as
contact switches, motion detectors, pressure pads and glass-break
sensors, as well as the "ultimate circumvention technique" that will
render even the most sophisticated systems useless. He also gives you a
shocking look inside the security business - how the alarms are
installed, how they're paid for, how they're monitored and how they're
responded to. You may not like what you read. $12.00

#52056 HOW TO OPEN HANDCUFFS WITHOUT KEYS by Desert Publications
(1979 48 pp) This book covers a selection of handcuffs in popular use
today and discusses some of the features with which you should become
familiar. Chapters include: Background on Handcuffs: Identification of
Handcuffs; Materials, Tools & Equipment; Construction of Handcuff
Picks & Shims; Lockpicking Techniques; Handcuff Keys; And more.
$9.95

#52019 COMBINATION LOCK PRINCIPLES (1974, 25 pp)
by Desert Publications These subjects are covered: The construction and
names of parts; How to determine the combination by using code books;
Reading an open lock; Drilling; Opening using a special fully explained
method of manipulation; and more. $8.95

#52046 PICK GUNS Lock Picking for Spies, Cops and Locksmiths
by John Minnery (1989, 128 pp.) This book gives an overview of the
mechanical principles of pick guns, how they work and how to use them,
and traces the development of the pick gun from its inception to today's
revolutionary devices. Included are the original patents by Epstein,
Segal, Moore, Cooke and others, as well as info on pick guns used by the
FBI and intelligence agencies. Photos depict improvised pick guns
designed by the author out of coat hangers and clothespins.  $14.00

#52020 KEYS TO UNDERSTANDING TUBULAR LOCKS by Desert Publications
(1974, 42pp) Subjects covered include: Internal construction; How to
disassemble and rekey; How to open by drilling; How to open by picking;
How to open by impressioning; How to make some of the necessary tools;
and more. $9.95

#52057 EXPEDIENT B & E Tactics and Techniques for Bypassing Alarms
and Defeating Locks by Carl Hammer (1992, 216 pp) An
examination of the various types of locks and alarms, instructions for
improvising lock picking tools, plus techniques for breaking into cars,
opening file cabinets and desk drawers, cracking safes and circumventing
various types of alarms and sensors. $20.00

#52055 SECURITY SYSTEMS SIMPLIFIED
Protecting Your Home, Business, and Car with State-of-the-Art Burglar
Alarms by Steve Hampton (1992, 128 pp) $14.00

#52042 B & E: A TO Z - HOW TO GET IN ANYWHERE, ANYTIME (VHS TAPE) by
Scott French, 1987.  Nearly two full hours of on-site techniques to
get in any building, beat any lock, open any safe, enter any car.
Price: $59.95 (may not be carried?)

#40031 INVOLUNTARY REPOSSESSION -OR- IN THE STEAL OF THE NIGHT by John
Russell III (64pp, 1979).  Written by a private detective for auto
repossessors.  All the standard methods of entering and starting
locked, keyless automobiles are given. Price: $10.95 (may not be carried?)

#52050 TECHNIQUES OF BURGLAR ALARM BYPASSING by Wayne B. Yeager
(110pp, 1990).  Alarms covered include: Magnetic Switches, Window
Foil, Sound and Heat Detectors, Photoelectric Devices, Guard Dogs,
Central Station Systems, Closed-Circuit Television, and more. Price: $14.95

#52047 THE B & E BOOK - BURGLARY TECHNIQUES AND INVESTIGATION by Burt
Rapp (149pp, 1989).  This is an investigatory guide and practical
manual designed for the police officer in charge of a burglary
investigation and its follow-up.  Price: $16.95

#52054 TECHNIQUES OF SAFECRACKING by Wayne B. Yeager (92pp, 1990).
Chapters include: Safe Mechanics and Operations, Guessing the
Combination, Manipulation Techniques, Safe Drilling Methods, Punching
and Peeling, Torches Etc., Explosives, Miscellaneous Methods of Safe
Entry, Safe Deposit Boxes, Deterrence and Prevention, and more. Price: $12.95

#52052 HIGH SPEED ENTRY - INSTANT OPENING TECHNIQUES (VHS TAPE - 1Hr)
1990.  Topics include: the Rabbit Tool and Hydra force door openers,
the Omni Force jam spreader, the best exothermic lance in the world,
two tools that open almost any auto in America, electronic locksmiths,
rippers and pullers, shove knives and re-lockers, and more "techie"
tools.  A complete source guide is included. Price: $39.95 (may not be carried?)

#52032 THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO LOCK PICKING by Eddie the Wire (80pp
1981).  The very best book ever written on how to pick locks (quite
the claim).  Topics covered include: Basic Principle and General
Rules, How To Mount Practice Locks, Warded Locks, Disc Tumbler Locks,
Lever Tumbler Locks, Pin Tumbler Locks, Wafer Tumbler Locks, Lock
Modifications To Thwart Tampering And How To Overcome Them, Various
Other Ways Of Bypassing Locks And Locking Mechanisms.  Price: $14.95

#52059 HOME WORKSHOP PROFESSIONAL LOCK TOOLS, by Eddie the Wire, $21.95
In step-by-step illustrated detail, eddie the wire tells you where
to get the best materials to use for making your own professional
lock picks - with no questions asked! Everything you need to know
to make lifter picks, diamond picks, snake picks, tension wrenches,
and more is revealed! How to make the best handles and carrying
cases for your picks. Mass production techniques. Impressioning
tools. Simulators. Using a computer to generate pick profiles.
How to "case" a subdivision. And much more!
1996, 8 1/2 x 11, 128pp, 80 illustrations, soft cover. Paperback
Published by Loompanics Unlimited January 1996 ISBN: 1559501367

#52044 PERSONAL PICKS (VHS TAPE - 72min) by Eddie the Wire, 1988.
Demonstrates the step-by-step process of making lock tools in the home
workshop.  Price: $29.95 (may not be carried?)

#52051 EXPERT LOCK PICKING (VHS TAPE - 60min) by Ron Reed, 1990.  The
author has won the California Locksmiths Association lock-picking
championship (I guess that's good).  Uses specially designed cutaway,
see-through locks, so you can view the inside mechanisms of working
locks as they respond to picking techniques.  Price: $59.95 (May not be
carried?)

#52048 ADVANCED LOCK PICKING by Steven M. Hampton (50pp, 1989).
Describes the inner workings of the new high-security locks and
includes templates for making custom tools.  Schematic diagrams for
portable electronic picks to open magnetic key and card locks.  Tips
on enhancing finger sensitivity, concentration power, constructing
practice lock boxes, and more.  Price: $10.00 (may not be carried?)

#52045 CIA FIELD-EXPEDIENT KEY CASTING MANUAL (48pp, 1988).  How to
make a duplicate key when you can keep the original only a short time.
Price: $10.00

#52043 HOW I STEAL CARS - A REPO MAN'S GUIDE TO CAR THIEVES' SECRETS
(VHS TAPE - 45min) by Pierre Smith, 1988.  How to open and enter
practically any modern automobile and how to start them without the
key.  Price: $49.95 (may not be carried?)

#52016 HOW TO FIT KEYS BY IMPRESSIONING by Desert Publications (26pp,
1975).  Subjects covered include: Fitting bit keys, Fitting flat steel
keys, Fitting lever tumbler keys, Fitting disc tumbler keys, Necessary
tools, Techniques of obtaining impressions, and more.  Price: $7.95
 (may not be carried?)

Paladin Press
P.O. Box 1307, Boulder, Colorado 80306
You might get the idea of what they sell (somewhat comparable to
Loompanics) by their own slogan "HOME OF THE ACTION LIBRARY"
800) 392-2400 Retail Credit Card Orders Only
(303) 443-7250 Wholesale Orders and Customer Service
(303) 442-8741 FAX
service@paladin-press.com -- Customer Service and Orders
sales@paladin-press.com -- Dealer Inquiries
editorial@paladin-press.com -- Editorial Queries

Here's a list of the locksmithing related books in their catalog:

COMPLETE GUIDE TO LOCK PICKING by Eddie the Wire
5 1/2 x 8 1/2, softcover, 60 illus., 80 pp.  $14.95

HOME WORKSHOP PROFESSIONAL LOCK TOOLS by Eddie the Wire
128 pp.  $21.95

HOW TO CIRCUMVENT A SECURITY ALARM IN 10 SECONDS OR LESS
An Insider's Guide to How It's Done and How to Prevent It by B. Andy
5 1/2 x 8 1/2, softcover, illus., 88 pp.
ISBN 0-87364-777-7....................$12.00

INVOLUNTARY REPOSSESSION or IN THE STEAL OF THE NIGHT by John Russell III
64 pp.  ISBN 0-87364-233-3....................$10.95

LOCK PICKING SIMPLIFIED
 5 1/2 x 8 1/2, softcover, illus., 20 pp.  $8.50

LOCKS, PICKS, AND CLICKS
70 pp. ISBN 0-87364-040-3....................$10.00

PICK GUNS
Lock Picking for Spies, Cops and Locksmiths by John Minnery
128 pp.  ISBN 0-87364-510-3....................$14.00

SECRETS OF LOCK PICKING by Steven Hampton
5 1/2 x 8 1/2, softcover, illus., 72 pp.
ISBN 0-87364-423-9....................$17.00

SECURITY SYSTEMS SIMPLIFIED
Protecting Your Home, Business, and Car with State-of-the-Art Burglar Alarms
by Steven Hampton
5 1/2 x 8 1/2, softcover, illus., 128 pp.  ISBN 0-87364-654-1   $14.00

EXPEDIENT B & E
Tactics and Techniques for Bypassing Alarms and Defeating Locks by Carl Hammer
5 1/2 x 8 1/2, softcover, illus., 216 pp.  ISBN 0-87364-688-6  $20.00

TECHNIQUES OF SAFECRACKING
by Wayne B. Yeager
5 1/2 x 8 1/2, softcover, illus., 96 pp.  $12.95

They also have half a dozen videos listed.

Wheeler-Tanner Escapes
3024 E. 35th
Spokane, WA 99223
509 448 8457.

Mainly Magic/Escape Artist supplies, but that includes lots of
locksmithing equipment and books.  If you need more info, jusk ask.
(Catalog is $2, refundable w/ 1st order).

There is a book [159]The Visual
Guide to Locksmithing has a heavily illustrated approach.

  Information for collectors.?

Lock Museum of America
130 Main St.
Terryville, CT
This museum also sponsors a lock collectors show.

The Padlock Collector  6th edition 1996
Franklin M. Arlall (isbn 0-914638-05-x)
The Collector
PO Box 253
Claremont, CA 91711
This book has descriptions of over 2800 locks.

[160]The First Internet Lock Museum
by Billy B. Edwards Jr., CML

                          Workshop Contents

In no particular order (the first person in some items is from the
original poster(s)):

WORKBENCH. must be solid enough to support a cheap key machine

HAMMERS. 1 claw, one 2 pounder, a couple of ball peens down to 6 ounces

SCREWDRIVERS  various sizes, slot and phillips. nothing fancy-a good
pocket screwdriver for ms lock set screws

DRILL  a cheap 3/8" is good for a beginner but should be reversible.
14.4V cordless w/extra battery.  Variable speed pays for itself.

SQUARE.  necessity when prepping doors

TAPE MEASURE

WRENCHES. decent small sized crescent, channel, needlenose, and a
couple of combo wrenches.  Also some specialty types from the MFG.  I keep
several different spanners like the one that comes with a SCH D80 Orbit, as
well as a Unican spanner.  Also, a castle nut wrench like those supplied
with SCH heavy duty levers

ALLEN WRENCHES. A good hex key set is invaluable in addition to some
longer ones supplied by the MFG.  Yale & Corbin use long ones for
convenience, but LORI deadbolts require them.  The lori wrenches also
work for some old MS locks and DormaGlass bottom rail locks.

BITS. ordinary high speed steel will do for anything the newbie would
encounter. Should also have augers or paddle bits up to 1-1/4"unibit"
and a good rasp

HOLE SAW. 2-1/8 for sure, other sizes optional 1" for metal frames, 1 1/4
for mortise cyl, and one approp for cheaper deadbolts such as SCH B-160

CHISELS. nothing fancy but if you can find a 1-1/8 for mortising face
plates, great. good 1" and good 1/2".  Keep an old one handy for beating.

 FILES. I find the Nicholson 1/8" round chainsaw file to be really
handy and cheap for impressioning. A cheap set of needle files from Radio shack
is good too. I grind down one edge of the triangle file to supplement the
round file. Also should have a large mill bastard. Pippins are expensive and
I don't find them any more useful than the above. I use a 6" #2 swiss
and a 6"/10" warding bastard.

HACKSAW. Go with quality here, especially with blades. Even the best
blades are a low ticket item so no sense buying off-brands

DREMEL or equivelant. Even a newbie... ESPECIALLY a newbie should have
one for fabricating hard to find or one-off items. Get lots of the thin
cutoff wheels and a mandrel to hold them

GOGGLES. protect those eyes. Not much work for a blind locksmith.

DIAL CALIPER. much handier than a micrometer.  I think the Pocket
Decoder by HPC is an excellent item to have on hand.  I havn't touched my
micrometer in years.

VISE GRIPS assorted

CYLINDER SHIMS  If he or she is new, better get a ton ;-)

FEELER GUAGE SET gives you lots of different thicknesses of shim stock
for padlock shimming, tool making, or spacing

PLUG FOLLOWERS can be home made. Nobody will notice  Don't let them see
you using your keedex pin dumping follower, you'll never teach them that
it's cheating.  Also, you'd need various types, unless you like driving
out roll pins.  Accompany these tools with a real set of pin tweezers.
Maybe some eyebrow tweezers for when you keep them in the shop for 2 months
cutting keys and get shavings in their socks ;-)

VISE

HEMOSTATS  lots of them. They can be modified into a number of useful
tools like snap ring pliers and pin tweezers. They can be bent, ground,
whatever, and economically discarded if you mess them up

MAGNIFYING GLASS

BASIC PICK SET  no need for the big Crayola 64 color set. A beginner
usually has time to make anything in this category anyway.  A couple of
extractors and a plug spinner.

VARIOUS TURNING TOOLS other than regular old tension wrenches. A
feather touch can be handy when raking or reverse picking spool equipped
locks, and I really like two-prong style tools for general picking.

CHEAP SET OF TUBULAR PICKS like the HPC "Peanut" or equivelant.  I
hate the peanut.  I use a good one with adjustable tension.

LUBRICANT

MAGIC MARKER

ELECTRICAL TAPE great aid in holding hinge shims, as well as more advanced
stuff not outfitted for here

STEP LADDER

TOOL BAG/POUCH the "Gator Mouth" tool bag is getting very popular now

VACUUM dirt devil or the like for cleaning up after drilling doors.
Also an old tarp for collecting the majority of shavings.

LUGGAGE CART great for hauling tools & supplies, and if you're in a lobby
in a commercial property--they're less likely to bitch at you than if you
had a cart or hand truck.  Also, luggage carts fold up and store neatly on
the truck.

SUBSCRIPTION to one of the trade rags.  Pref. TNL.  NPC has a horrible
reputation for customer service, plus they no longer publish most of
their most valuable books.  (the books are still advertised by ALOA though)
NPC is crap, again my personal opinion.

BOOKS. all you can afford, but starting with a couple of basic texts by
Roper or Phillips. Knowledge is more valuable than any physical tool.
A collection of back issues no longer needed by an established smith is
good, too. More specific books should reflect particular areas of interest
or specialization, like AUTO-SMART etc and should be bought fairly early
on.

BASIC SET OF CAR TOOLS  True, you can easily make most of the standard
wire tools, but good to have a "store-bought" set of the more popular ones
to copy.

COMPUTER AND INTERNET CONNECTION  This is becoming very nearly a necessity,
and once a beginner is "in the circle", he has the benefit of the sum total
experience and knowledge of a widely varied group of locksmiths as well as
access to reference works he can't afford yet, like up-to-date codes.

PIN TRAY can be made from a piece or corrugated rubber mat

PLUG HOLDER can be made from an old mortise cylinder

C-CLAMPS

ASSORTED BLANKS

FLASHLIGHT  I like a mini mag-light myself.  The mini-mini mag is -50
dia, and can be used as an emergency follower.  It's lighted too.

CAR OPENING LIGHT AND WEDGES

CODE BOOKS if a fairly up to date used set can be had cheaply. The expense
of code software is a good one to put off for a year or so if the newbie
has friends with books or software, unless he finds himself cutting by
code at least once a day.

KEY MACHINE  I am gonna go out on a limb here and get controversial. I
think a used FB machine is a decent first machine for a budget minded utter
beginner with a low work load. The stock machine has micrometer depth
adjustment, and they make an add-on micrometer spacing attachment.  Cutting
by the numbers therefore is do-able on the same machine the newbie
duplicates on. Yeah its a pretty cheesy little machine, but good training
for the beginner since it enforces the wise practice of checking adjustments
daily on the primary machine. These machines regularly go used for under a
hundred bucks, and a brand new spacing attachment is only $49.95 and
direct reading digital for a hundred bucks more. As for using the factory
supplied spacing keys, forget it. The hassle, versus the low cost of a spacing
attachment is just not worth it. I have done it both ways and the
micrometer add-on wins hands down.

Did I forget anything? Oh yeah a SERVICE VEHICLE. The family station wagon
or a pickup with a topper will do until a real van is financially do-able.

PISTOL. Only half joking, especially when doing night calls. I would rather
feel stupid for carrying it and never needing it, than to feel stupid for
ever needing it but not having it. ALTERNATIVELY, in more left-wing
liberal areas where only the bad guys are allowed to have guns, a can of
pepper spray.

ONE MORE THING... DIGITAL CAMERA. Great for archiving locks encountered on
jobs, especially safe locks and boltworks, and for reference pics when
asking old-timers for advice. Another possible use... taking pics of
customers without ID or taking pics of their drivers license. This is
kinda optional, but if you always wanted an excuse to get one anyway......

  Credit & Thanks

   The alt.locksmithing FAQ was put together from postings by 
[161]spike@indra.com spike@indra.com (Joe "Spike" Ilacqua), and hes@ncsu.edu 
(Henry Schaffer), with a major data collection effort by sanguish@digifix.com
(Scott Anguish).  Edited by hes.  Translated to English by
eliz@world.std.com (Elizabeth Lear).  Send comments, criticisms, and
compliments to "alt-locksmithing-faq@indra.com".

The following have contributed to this FAQ:
    Scott Anguish 
    J. James (Jim) Belonis II 
    Stephen J Berch 
    John F. Bousquet 
    Chris Boyd 
    Robert Bruce Findler 
    Hobbit (looking for current address);
    Marcus Jenkins 
    Larry Margolis 
    Andy McFadden 
    William A Moyes 
    Stan Schwarz 
    Thomas E Zerucha 
    Daniel Hagan 
    Joe Kesselman 
    Roger Weitzenkamp 
    Jay Hennigan 
    Billy B. Edwards Jr. 
    
    Robert Stahr 
    Marc Goldberg 
    Tom Pettigrew 
    Robinson 
    Andru Luvisi 

Thanks to:
          Indra's Net  --  Internet Access with an Attitude
             Email: info@indra.com  URL: http://www.indra.com
             Modem: (303) 786-7405  Voice: (303) 546-9151
for providing host facilities.

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 106. http://www.aufsperrtechnik.de/
 107. http://www.sperrwerkzeuge.de/
 108. http://www.ecircle.de/forum/aufsperrtechnik
 109. http://www.lockpicking.org/
 110. http://www.lockpicking.de/
 111. http://www.dtlgc.com/isrtst/
 112. http://www.locks.ru/
 113. http://www.johntann.com/
 114. http://www.gunnebo.se/eng/index.asp
 115. http://www.hawleylock.com/
 116. http://www.framon.com/
 117. http://www.leedobbs.com/
 118. http://www.flying-pig.co.uk/Pages/papl.htm
 119. http://a-1locksafes.com/
 120. http://www.iahssp.org/
 121. http://www.acculock.com/
 122. http://www.bestaccess.com/
 123. http://www.securitysolutions-usa.com/
 124. http://www.tolkey.com/
 125. http://www.evva.com/WelcomeE.htm
 126. http://www.sglocks.com/
 127. http://www.amsecusa.com/
 128. http://www.abloy.com/products.htm
 129. http://www.herculeezsafes.com/
 130. http://www.hightechtools.com/
 131. http://www.2-unlock.com/lock_picking.htm
 132. http://www.safes4less.com/Merchant/usedsafebbs.html
 133. http://www.lockcollectors.com/
 134. http://www.clev.frb.org/bicenten/
 135. http://www.lockcodes.com/
 136. http://www.blackhawk7.com/
 137. http://lock-picks.com/
 138. http://www.highpowersecurity.com/
 139. http://www.AltSecurityAlarms.com/
 140. http://www.lockshopsoftware.com/
 141. http://www.transponders.com/
 142. http://www.weblocksmith.com/"
 143. http://www.clearstar.com/
 144. http://www.thenationallocksmith.com/
 145. http://www.aloa.org/
 146. http://www.locksmith.com/
 147. http://www.simon-net.com/
 148. http://www.securitysafeusa.com/
 149. http://www.sievekingprodco.com/
 150. http://www.lockpicking.co.uk/
 151. http://www.rofu.com/
 152. http://www.jetkeys.com/
 153. http://www.marray.com/
 154. http://www.geocities.com/ghardigree/
 155. http://www.gpla.org/list.html
 156. http://www.locksoft.com/gloscopy.htm
 157. http://www.paolos.com/
 158. http://www.iahssp.org/
 159. http://www.standardpublications.com/
 160. http://www.thelockman.com/
 161. http://www.indra.com/homepages/spike

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