One thing a working Locksmith can count on is finding himself on occasion scratching his head at a job that was supposed to be stupidly simple and ecstatically easy but is anything but. Such an occasion reared its ugly head for me last week when I responded to a lockout call out in the middle of nowhere — which doesn’t have to be very far from my business location since it, itself, is pretty much in the middle of nowhere.
This was a call from a man who had recently installed a new piece of hardware on his barn and had managed to lock the keys inside with no spare key to fall back on. How many times have I heard that story in my 28 years of professional service? Too many to count. No matter that it was an incredibly hot day (keep in mind I live in arid Arizona where it can get hot as all get out even in October), or that I wasn’t feeling particularly well . . . I figured this would be routine enough and wasn’t the slightest worried as I made the 1 hour trip over dusty, bumpy dirt roads.
When I drove up and was directed to the barn, I still didn’t think much of the situation until I walked up to the door for a closer look. It was an industrial steel man door in a small barn, and it had a commercial duty Schlage leverset on it. These are never fun, as the keyway is orientated sideways and the Schlage keyway can be a bear to pick, with its six-pin configuration and constrictive keyway.
The sun was beating on the white steel door, further amplified by the fact that the barn itself was covered with white siding (what ever happened to red barns?) and it was out in the middle of a field of barren dirt. I felt like a fly under a seven-year-old’s magnifying glass. I pulled out my trusty pick set and got to work, after flooding the keyway with lubricant and saying my standard pre-picking chant, keeping it under my breath so as not to create undue suspicion on the part of my customer. I could tell after three minutes that this wasn’t going to be much fun.
At this point I pulled out my Lockaid Pick Gun but instantly realized it was going to be of no use whatsoever. Pick guns are incredibly unwieldly when you try to use them on keyways that are not nice and vertical, but in this case I couldn’t even get a straight shot into the keyway because this door was in a very deep frame and the lever hardware was too close to the door frame to give the pick gun adequate clearance.
It was at that moment that I remembered I had a month earlier slipped a new Brockhage BPG-15 pick gun into my service van’s tool box, just in case I ran into one of those upside-down Euro locks that are showing up in so many decorative security doors now days. It occurred to me that maybe it would allow me to pick a sideways keyway. At least I knew I’d be able to line it up straight with the lever. I fished it out of the box, put it together (I hadn’t even used it yet), and approached the burning hot hardware with a new sense of purpose.
It took me less than ten clicks of the gun to pick the stubborn thing! I was, quite frankly, shocked.
So chalk up another seriously serious advantage to taking along the BPG-15 . . . which, if you don’t already know . . . is the DOWNWARD STRIKING pick gun that Brockhage introduced to the market not so long ago. I can honestly say I will never go out on another lockout call without it.
You can find this wonderful tool, by the way and not surprisingly, at our web site, www.LockPickersMall.com. If you are a working Locksmith, you have no business being without one of these pick guns.
Oct. 13, 2008 – by George Robertson, Lock Picker’s Mall
