@@4EyedAnimation She would, if it's one of those with molded plastic hair. Her curly mane is pointy enough at one end to work just as well as the astronaut :P
I have terror every time i see this, once saw a post on fb of a pigeon wearing a strap on dildo and it said that the chances of a pigeon raping you are slim...but never zero...
From LPL roasting a gun lock with a Lego man to McNally picking a door lock with a milk jug, it’s always hilarious seeing the lock’s disappointment in full display
Look at him like the consumer reports for locks. You don't come here to see him sell a sponsored lock. You come to see how good a particular lock is in the grand scheme of things. This particular lock will get someone killed one day because someone out there will buy it and think it does the job it claims and they will find out it tragically it doesn't. Meanwhile hopefully several thousand other people who might have bought this lock will see this video and decide on something else.
@@goodbodha I think it's more likely that this lock is not intended to be secure. It's just there to satisfy gun safety laws without the restrictions of an actual lock. Bc lets be honest, a gun lock is only going to slow you down when you need it most.
@@crimpers5543 I seriously doubt this will pass muster for any of the gun safety laws. The wording on those usual is clear enough that a shoddy device like this simply won't cut it. What this looks like to me is a poorly designed product done as cheaply as possible to scam customers. I won't be surprised if the manufacturer is essentially unreachable for lawsuits or legal servicing. The plastic part looks like a cheap injection molding and the locking cable is super short and thin. I would guess there is about a dollar worth of material there. Maybe another dollar for packing and manual. They probably have a massive markup and are making a killing off of anyone dumb enough to buy it.
I first fired a gun at the age of about 9 or 10 years old. Unsupervised. Because I discovered my grandmother kept a lockbox under her bed, which I figured out how to pick the lock and discovered it was where she kept her Charter Arms .38 Special, among other things.And, being the mischievous little kid I was, living in a rural area with just my mother and grandmother, I was able to get away with a lot. So I would frequently take my grandmother's .38 and a pocket full of extra bullets deep into the woods behind our home and shoot at trees, squirrels, the river, whatever. Then reload and replace the gun exactly like I found it when I was done.
@arzog6446 He always reminds me of that one meme with the intercontinental ballistic missile gambit 😂 taking it very seriously and literally while somehow meming through the whole thing
A child can easily take apart and put back together a nerf gun. The bottom of the trigger on that gun very clearly wiggles a bit and looks like it has a button on it. Even a child could put two and two together and remove that from that gun.
Pretty much what I posted above. I'm sure they provided this cheeseball lock to check a box on the legal paperwork to "be in compliance" and they wanted to increase the price to the consumer as little as possible. I know I don't want a gun-lock that's gone through development engineering and adds $100 cost to the gun, it's going straight into my trashcan. A lock that adds $1.79 to the cost of my gun? Great, beautiful, works for me!
@@Skank_and_GutterboyCouldn't they just make the loop a bit longer and make it $1.81 to fix the design? Trying to save a penny or two by shortening the loop until it's too short renders the design useless.
I never ever had any interest in locks but this channel ranks as one of the very best on RU-vid, it's astonishingly funny and at the same time informative !
And even if the thief / curious teen / whoever did not have the strength, a screwdriver would undo the screws holding the whole thing to the wall rather easily
To be fair though, did you ever use this exact weapon? From what I hear about the military in my own country, they are not afraid to cut corners to save costs, so maybe the weapons you used didn't have that feature?
@@steves1015 Looking at photos of the standard M16 and M4A1 online and they both appear to have pins holding the trigger guard in place. It would probably be more expensive to design it differently because you'd need a whole different mold, or whatever it is they use to manufacture gun parts.
@@Ninvus2 Yep, I bet you're right. They probably provided this cheeseball lock to check a box on the legal paperwork and pass as little cost to the consumer as possible.
@@steves1015ever M16/AR15 rifle has it. The only ones that do not are speciality lowers with an enlarged trigger guard built into it, where it was polymer or machined to not have it. But every standard military issue rifle has had them for decades for cold weather operations. It’s just not used as much because gloves have gotten better and smaller. Think of the huge thick extreme cold weather military gloves of the 60s and you get what I am saying. Now you can be warmer with less. You can buy just the trigger guard that is bowed down to allow it to fit gloves without needing to flip it.
Mrs LockPickingLawyer gets pregnant. Nine months later: "This is LockPickingLawyer Junior and today I'm going to show you how insecure this womb is..."
Deploy the better gun lock! **pans over** "HEY!" Build the Gun Lock, Deploy the Gun Lock, and Off to safety! The new, gun lock collection from LEGO Gunsmiths.
It's the same with software. The brightest people aren't the ones creating the software or defense mechanisms. It's the lazy intelligent people who find an easy workaround. Some companies even post bounties for malicious (or just skilled white hat) programmers to find exploits in their systems for considerable sums of money. Physical security companies should probably do the same with touch ID, locks etc.
@@righteousone1 Views on gun ownership doesn't change the need for better storage. A ban on these guns wouldn't be a magical magnet that gets them off the streets.
@@righteousone1 That's not how society works. When you make something illegal or put a ban on it (weed, drugs, alcohol, prostitution, books, religious beliefs, etc...) all you do is create a vacuum that will be filled with either a black market, or imitations that are more dangerous than the original. Proper regulations, or comprises would go farther than creating a rift between people with opposite stances.
Perhaps a more effective way of securing this weapon would be 3 chewed pieces of bubblicious bubblegum. Two stuck to the wall to hold the gun, and the third placed on the trigger, because no one wants to get gum on themselves.
@@leeroymlg4692 That's an AR... Just because it doesn't have a free floating rail doesn't mean it's not an AR lol... Let me guess, you think that it's an M16 or an M4 lol...
The cap of a pen should be the only thing I need to bypass this vault, a click out of one. Twos binding, a click out of three, and there we go. Opened under 12 seconds
from a nation with double lock on gun and its firing mechanism removed from storaged gun, and separation of the ammunition to said gun. this just looks like something you only could use on a show stand.... convention or shop but always have a gun safe for storage when it is not time for it to lay around for admiration
@@revmpandora it may have been changed but i where told by a hunter that had his own rifles at home that it was the current law in Denmark when i was tennager
Indeed, to protect against the amount of face palm destruction after that ridiculously simple hack. I wonder has anyone actually sued that gun safety lock company for the most moronic, complacent and wilful stupidity? I wouldn't be surprised if they also make napalm fire extinguishers.
Imagine being with the president in his nuclear bunker and hearing “This is the LockPickingLawyer, and today we are going to review a lock highly requested by a viewer from North Korea...”
"one click outta two, three is binding, aaand it's open, I'm gonna go ahead and let my soldiers do the rest, that'll be all for this episode make sure to like adn sub(PEWPEWPEWPEW)scribe if you wanna see more video- "AAAUUUUGGHHHHHH MY LEGG"
"Water is Wet" DJT 2017 "Puerto Rico is an Island, surrounded by water, lots of water, big water, ocean water" DJT "My Nuclear Button is Bigger than his" DJT Having back packed warzones I am here to say this last four years and three weeks to go have been the most terrifying of my life.
@@SlayerofFiction As someone whose deployed to actual war zones, you do not know what you are talking about at all. Go find something else to lie about to strangers online.
Even lethal! Hopping on one foot holding the other in pain and lose balance over a banister, down the stairs, head first onto the corner of a table, or counter, or brick fireplace, etc.
@@RekzysTheTitan all seriousness, did you see the massive monster of a human that was his 1st cell mate? X cop, in for quadruple murder & drug running. Dude looked like an enforcer + hitman BEFORE he went to jail... I could only imagine what he'd do to a pedo if he actually wanted to, but I doubt he ever touched the perv bc he'd snap the fuck like a toothpick.
I have a feeling that they failed long before that. Even if they'd never understood the trigger guard, the fact remains that the lock system would likely still be defeated trivially. The potential weaknesses I see: 1: the thin cable could easily be cut with any side cutters or linemans pliers 2: the combination lock is almost certainly decodable or bypassable, if not easily broken with a good tug 3: the screws are accessible, allowing the mount to be removed from the wall with a screwdriver 4: the rifle can be removed from the mount, allowing the attacker to give it momentum in a brute force attack (i.e. you can just jerk against the cable until something breaks) 5: the fact that this comes with expansion anchors like any shitty coat hook almost promotes users attaching it to hollow or insufficient walls (e.g. drywall) One might look at that last point and say that's the fault of the user being dumb or at least inattentive. I'm going to posit that a person shouldn't be able to purchase this product, install it on _any_ wall, and rest feeling contented and secure without being faulted similarly.
Vanargand considering the number is shootings taking place, gun stores don’t care about keeping people safe. Actually mass shootings help their business, so they do this all the time
@@heynowureallstar so it's just a coincidence that a top comment from a Reddit thread about LockPickingLawyer just a few days ago is exactly same as yours. Great minds think alike, I guess. /s
@@mysuperkillersjdejdhs4314 I hate mirror force, in every yugioh video game it is played right as you are going to finish the AI and they wipe all the monsters you had on the field. They always have three of them in their deck.
This is a channel that each and every lock manufacturer should subscribe, no matter what kind of lock you produce or where your product would be fitted.
Eventually, he's gonna run outta random stuff to pick a lock with, and I have no doubt that after that point, he's just gonna find a way to breathe on a lock and open it
I just looked this up on Amazon and the day after the release of this video the manufacturer decided to change the description of it to a gun mount instead of a gun lock. Great job LPL!!!
You forgot to mention that the screws holding the entire thing to the wall seem to be unprotected. So even someone who doesn't know about the trigger guard could still just unscrew the mount.
Not even that, but with how things are usually screwed into walls I think in most case it would be pretty easy to just rip it off the wall with a good yank on the rifle.
Oh God you're right! Step 1: lift rifle off bracket Step 2: unscrew bracket from wall You know have a fully functional rifle with a lock dangling off of it. (Some AR-15 rifles don't have the swing down trigger guard.)
He is being crazy generous with the manufacturer of that "lock". He didn't even point out how a plastic piece screwed to the wall by only 2 screws only requires you to to swiftly yank on the rifle to easily shear off the plastic from the wall. Hell you could just unscrew the thing if you don't know the trigger guard can be opened.
@@HSishi It's standard on all copies of the Colt AR. There are some manufactures that have solid trigger guards for cosmetic reasons though. Still, I wouldn't trust this lock, it looks incredibly easy to defeat in a lot of other ways.
@@cojones8518 Right. The wall mount likes like plastic easily defeated with a hammer and the cable could probably be cut with a good pair of wire cutters.
I think he worded it best; "Those who don't understand guns should not design gun locks." To that I respond; "Those who don't understand guns should not design gun laws."
After watching this video I got recommended another of his AR-15 lock videos and I noticed that the rifle looked different, then I searched his channel for other AR-15 videos and 433, 436, 568, and 1024 each have differences in the rifles, I don't think he's used the same one twice for a video so either he just borrows them from friends or...
Even better... LPLs son, whispering to self as he gently rubs gf's back: _"Click on one, binding on two, three is set..."_ GF says somewhat dreamily: "What's that, honey? I didn't hear you." *_CLICK_*
Seriously though have you ever actually had trouble with bra clasps?. There's like 2 types and with 5 minutes of practice you should be able to undo either type with 2 fingers and a thumb. Edit no shit ask a woman with the most difficult combination bra clasp in front of you. Please figure it out we're here for you.
Not only that, but you can also just remove the upper receiver to steal, which is enough to own half a gun (or sell for a good payday). Proper gun safes are a must for storage.
George Lewis Conservative: that ding dang ol Chiner germ jus a way der dem libels to impreach Trump Durka dur See I made a statement an attributed it to an entire group pretty easy
@@mail-qh2qc You could not be more wrong with that statement, the dude who made that and advertises it as "gun safety product" is most definitely an asshole. However being careless and uneducated does not make a person into an asshole, that simply makes them careless and uneducated and prone to very silly mistakes. To be an asshole by using this product would require you to know that it's trash but use it anyway and pretend that your guns are well protected. Aand in all likelihood yell at anyone who tries to tell you otherwise now that would be the pinnacle of being an asshole, right after the guy who is selling this shit ofcourse.
@@mail-qh2qc Yes I do agree and you do have a very good point there. I wouldn't feel excatly safe either with a person like that around me. This is somewhat funny topic as I cannot comprehend how anyone could be that stupid/ignorant but I also know that people like that does exist.
Or vice-versa... Amazon customers who purchased "LEGO City Space Lunar Space Station Building Set with Toy Shuttle, Detachable Satellite and Astronaught" also bought "Del-Ton Sport Mod2 .556 Semi-Auto $477.00" & a "random really crappie lock $too-much"
Now you're just showing off... (and I love these videos) Imagining the company seeing these videos and being embarassed enough to actually make better locks.
I use an incredible lock called a “gun safe” it’s bolted to the ground and so nobody can steal my guns and unlock them on their own time, i also store them close to by separate from ammo so that even if someone got one or the other it’s almost impossible to do both unless you have both combinations and both keys, it takes me 30 seconds to get in and load a gun but i have lots if practice doing home invasion drills for if someone breaks in Its 30 seconds late but it’s much better than haveing someone get into my guns and potentially hurting others with my property. What im trying to say is A SINGLE LOCK ON A GUN LEFT IN THE OPEN IS NOT A SAFE STORAGE!
why i do agree with your point, i think it's ridiculous you think your home is going to be burglarized; enough to warrant "drills" ... I assume you fear a stranger breaking into your home, which unless you are in some dangerous/illegal line of work they chances of this happening are very, very, slim. In most cases home burglaries or violence is going to be by someone you know. I don't have anything against owning guns, and respect those who keep gun safety a top priority but this "self defense" and fear of "home invasion" crap is beyond dumb, it's paranoid delusion. You honestly live in some fantasy land, and the fear of loss of control is life consuming.
The only thing worse than not securing your gun is having the illusion of security. If you had no lock for the gun, you would at least go through the trouble of hiding it somewhere a kid won't find it. On the other hand, if you use this lock and trust it to do it's job, you may very well place it on a wall without concealing it, making it all the more dangerous.
@phillip miller okay, but not everyone wants to train their children in paranoia. i can shoot a firearm because my dad taught me, but i'd never wish that on anyone else. i love him but he has too many screws loose.
@phillip miller by "people you don't trust with a gun" I think it means someone you know is a mess when dealing with them, either being too bad of a shooter or doesn't know how to move them with caution or just panics very easily, not necessarily that you don't trust the person
It's like selling a refrigerator lock that threads through the fridge door handle and connects it to the freezer door handle. Now your food is completely secure.
to be fair, i'm sure the guy that designed it knew exactly about this problem. he was counting on there being enough stupid people shopping on amazon that it didn't matter. this is, arguably, much worse.
@@Wizzm957 The upper may be more expensive but the lower is legally considered the gun- If you're a felon you cant buy one, and stealing one is cheaper than buying it on the black market
I saw the problem as soon as you noted the short cable on the lock. A prime example of why people who do not understand how firearms work should neither make locks for said firearms nor write laws related to firearms.
that's why you get a collaboration between a gun and a lock guy. Because most locks aren't designed by one person. Or get someone that knows about guns AND locks, which is literally their job. YOU HAD ONE JOB. MAKE A LOCK THAT YOU CAN'T JUST TAKE OFF.