@@akaouri "Picked"... with a *drill.* (EDIT: It's actually an electronic pick gun. Still not really LPL's style, though, and it tends to leave identifiable marks on the lock even though it remains usable.)
@@M90thYou To be fair, I'm not sure it's actually destructive, or if it's just being used to apply more torque than the hand could. Honestly, I'm not quite sure what that person is doing?
@@M90thYou Okay. I've looked some things up, and it wasn't exactly a drill, but an EPG, a tool that uses vibrations to accomplish something similar to a bump attack, but without being vulnerable to anti-bump pins. What he did was in principle non-destructive, although the key sticks slightly when he tries to demonstrate this, making me think he did minor damage, and in fact looking into it, EPGs do leave characteristic marks on locks. In essence, he made a paperclip into a skeleton key to get around the ward, and once it was in place he used the EPG to bump the pins open. Still, it would have been impossible to induce the proper vibrations by hand.
Combine that with jamb pins in the hinges, a hammerhead-style deadbolt (to prevent door spreader attacks) and a cowl around the thumb-turn to stymie under/over door wire/flipper attacks and security film on every window. The only way they're getting in then is with a shit-load of noise using a sledgehammer or powersaw.
Not strictly related, but that reminds me of a story. The front door lock at my grandmothers house was so busted that we joked a burglar couldn’t get through that door if they had the key in their hand. I’d spend a good 15 seconds opening that lock, and I’ve dealt with it twice a day for the past decade. I can only imagine that if a thief tried to open the door, they’d assume they had the wrong key and keep moving. Her house has been broken into, but even with a spare key “hidden” in the world most cliche place, never in the past 50 years has someone gotten though that front door
@@absurdengineering my pop's house was the exact same. Fucking old timey locks. I remember I couldn't get into a shed that had some tools because the lock was from like the 1920s.
@@akumasstorytime3910 With my grandma’s front door you had to get all the motions and pressures just right for it to turn. Otherwise it’d almost jam up and it took great care to get the key out without breaking the key. The key was stamped out of sheet steel and had the two “wings with teeth”. The keying on the wings was asymmetric. The only way a burglar would get in would be probably busting in without a key. With the key they would get stuck on the unlocking unless they had experience with a similarly opinionated lock.
When the lockpickinglawyer can't pick it under 4 minutes it's safe. When he takes hours and still cant this is Alien grade bulletproof spaceage security level 1 Billion
It's funny though because the design isn't even that high tech, just smart. You don't need high tech if you just put a piece of metal between the pins in the keyhole.
Exactly, most street criminals aren't going to be able to touch a lock like this. And even if you get an experienced lock picker, it would still take some time and effort. Unless they know you have $1 mil in cash locked up, most people wouldn't bother with it.
@@wileecoyote5749 only works if I have windows to start with ;) some of us buried our hobbit houses for insulation savings. lol Your point is still valid for the vast majority of folks though.
I have never once heard this guy ever say that he has not yet developed the skills necessary to nondestructively defeat the lock. Considering this dude's insanely highly developed abilities that is fucking crazy impressive.
@@xX_MC_OvU_PvP_YT_Xx You talk like I give a shit what you think. If you don't like the way I write, you're unfortunately just gonna have to deal with it.
The bowley lock is such a brilliant design. So simple, so effective, and yet so obvious it's surprising nobody had produced something like it until recently. A really good example of ingenuity over complexity.
It is an amazing lock, but the complexity of all the precisely assembled components makes it expensive to manufacture. So it is a risk balance playing there. Having this on your wooden door that can easily be breached by force may not be the best idea. The beefy padlock version makes more sense.
@@onradioactivewaves Bro, I am on my hands and knees here, please tell me where the chewing gum is a few cents. I've travelled throughout Europe, a small tour of japan, a dirt bike ride through the amazon, and lived primarily in America, visiting the different states over the many years. And I still can not find affordable chewing gum.
I can hear his voice in my head, "And as I twist my left hand, you can see how the flakes of dried snot crumble off below my little finger... (I'll put those over here in case I might need them later), but some of the liquid goo still managed to cling to my fingernail..."
Seeing this lock on a door would say two things to the initiated: 1. There's some very valuable stuff inside. 2. Gaining access to it via the lock is not the right plan.
Pretty sure thieves debunk that myth rather quickly in their professional experience. People watching these videos are not rich guys, they're just paranoid.
@@rokask Thieves debunk what? That's an expensive lock and the average thief isn't going to pick it. They may find another way in but it likely won't be quiet or quick. Why would anyone watching these videos be paranoid? Just a bunch of guys and gals who like to pick locks. I think you may be the paranoid one here.
@@666Tomato666 Compared to the $20 Kwiksets and Yales you normally find, a Bowley is a friggin expensive lock and not one the average, or even above average, thief is going to tackle with anything smaller than a sledge hammer..
Not uncommon in countries with good locks as standard. That ANSI grade 2 hardware looked tiny compared to the hardware we use on doors with no locks. Importing foreign door mechanisms could be a major upgrade for US doors even with their weak lock cylinders.
I hope you never lose your keys. I doubt very seriously any run-of-the-mill locksmith will be able to non-destructively defeat or re-key these. That is insane craftsmanship! BRAVO Bowley.
@@TrippOnPower Even owning one, no one literally will go through the trouble of trying to open the lock, probably cheaper and faster to just break the door itself at that point. And then it has fulfilled it's purpose, a lock is suppose to make someone resort to force, which is obviously a pretty loud method of "Opening" a door.
I bought one. It is extremely high-quality. I had to give a tutorial to my ex-wife and my girlfriend who are the only ones who have keys (don't ask) but it really does give some peace of mind. Plus it's cool AF. Hats off to both the #LockPickingLawyer and Bowley.
@John Hagemann < I don't know about that key, looks a bit flimsy to me as its long U shaped protruding part with no connection at the tip to the shaft could bend given enough force in a pocket or in the keyhole. It's not a very sturdy looking thingy but maybe it is.
@@Sip_Dhit what do you mean? There is this lock pick (that I still don't have) called the skeleton key which doesn't break so you can spam X to Autopick and the lock will eventually open.
My jaw actually just dropped, I've never seen a lock give you trouble before I am actually considering purchasing this as I've never heard you describe a lock in this manner before lol - great job to Bowley
@@Kawka1122 When it doubt: breacher choke on a pump shotgun and three hi-brass shells. Who cares about a lock when you can just blow the hinges off? >=) If the obvious method of entry is too difficult to overcome, then rest assured that there is an easier way somewhere else...just have to determine what that is.
Exactly. Unless your house is Fort Knox, most break ins are through unsecured windows. Or a rock through same. Even a drill to the lock core won’t arouse suspicions in a noisy or construction active neighborhood.
After watching LPL for a while I’ve been thinking on how would I engineer a more secure lock, often fancy, over complicated and intricate contraptions; however, after seeing this design being so simple inside made me remember why I’m not an engineer and appreciate simple “out of the box” solutions are always the better choice
@@jackmanning1117 Thanos would go to snap only to find that the gauntlet has been removed from his hand, it cuts to 4 months down the line where Thanos is just watching RU-vid in his cell and sees "Hey guys, it's the LockPickingLawyer and here's one I've been figuring out for a few months now. Here's how to pick the Infinity Gauntlet off of someones hand."
@@henmich not only that you could very easily go through wooden or vinyl siding, drywall and insulation with a friggin battery operated sawzall if it comes down to you wanting to get inside a house lol
@@captainfancypants4933 not in Europe though, we build houses solely from double walled stone: insulated reinforced concrete with a brick & morter outer wall. Happy sawing! Of course you could break into a window, but modern 3 layer thermopane would be very inconvenient to break and make loads of noise in doing it, let alone hurting the criminal. You only have to make your home less attractive then others around, not unbreakable, unless you've got millions of valuables inside.
Jokes on you, my walls are made of stone and all of my windows have steel bars in front of of them. Sure enough, you can cut through forged steel, but it's gonna take a while and make a lot of noise. Then you get in and the most valuable thing you find is a 400€ Laptop. Or a 280€ monitor.
So this is the day we discovered LPL is human. This lock deserves the highest respect; it kept him out. Brilliant video, you explained the mechanism perfectly
@@bradleywilliams1372 the video is also an old one. The bowley lock was unpickable when the video got out. Obviously not anymore if you have the right tools.
@@bradleywilliams1372 It cannot be picked under lab conditions without some specialized tools and a lot of time. Trying to pick this in broad daylight with neighbors next to you is a guaranteed arrest. That's the point
This is a good analogy for modern cryptography approaches in IT: security through obscurity is inferior to good design. The best encryption methods are completely open in source, just as you can take apart this lock and look into it. The strength of this lock does not derive from you not being able to look inside of it - the strength of the lock comes from being hard to open despite knowledge of its design.
Years ago - my dad worked in an office where they had a bank vault door they installed to a room made of standard 2x4 studs and drywall. Someone broke in one night and spent hours trying to cut through the door before abandoning the job. They had no idea that about 2 minutes with a sledgehammer and a hand saw would have got them through the wall next to the door and into the room.
To be fair security by obscurity is absolutely a legitimate tactic but you have to understand its uses and limitations. A lot of security is making yourself a less desirable target nowadays since there is almost always a zero day or other hole noone really knows about. But if you make yourself a pain in the ass youll get ignored most likely.
well........ the concrete that was made in ancient Greece is far superior to what we have today. all of those buildings are still standing, our concrete lasts MAYBE 50 years.
I appreciate the brilliance of this lock, from a firefighting/ forceable entry perspective, unless you put it in a steel door with a steel frame you are wasting your money. Residential doors take less than a minute to force, they are inherently weaker than just about any lock on the market
Even so people still find comfort in the only means of forced entry being either noisy or time consuming. The goal is less to guarantee keeping people out and more to give you better odds of noticing someone is breaking in so you can react.
I think it's more about stealth. After all padlocks can be as difficult to pick as you like. But I bet my angle grinder would beat em. If you live in a country where you need an unbeatable lock in a steel door. I would advise moving 😂
@@nickdimartino7796 Don't even need steel doors, aluminium doors would probably be fine, good luck bashing that open , only a grinder is really going to work, and that would take ages too. Although you also have to have a good door frame, a chain is as strong as it's weakest link as they say.
@@Theaikro The modern chimney is not a viable entry unless you are about the size of a racoon. In the US, a house without wood burning can have a 6 or 9 inch flue while a house that burns wood in a fireplace would likely have a 9x6 or 9x9 flue. Not really big enough for a human, and without that fireplace, you'd be hard pressed to find a way out of the chimney. - - I deleted about half of my original comment as I put WAY too much thought into this.
lol! With a blank key, and cutoff tool, and an oscillating tool, I can make it happen. Granted, everyone for quite some distance will need to be DEAF, and it'll shake the unholy hell out of the mechanism. Bring a vacuum to clean up the sawdust. ;) Also a key with an ultrasound driven keyway element, or MEMS actuator would work. Which is only practical if you have CIA level money. ;)
I think this is easily at the point where the bad guy shrugs, puts away his pick set and hauls put his sledge hammer. Great to see locks that are so different from the norm.
I think seeing a Bowley on a substantial door is when the bad guy does like one did to a friend of mine: Break into the garage, steal the chainsaw, and cut a door size hole through the back wall of the house...
I recently installed two of these on my front/back doors and I'd agree. You walk up to one of these and go "crap, where else can I break in"... ;). It's the point though, right?
I don't even think that the bad guy has lock picks to begin with. ive personally never seen it. around here they just use force. it works. Also gets them shot. thats a win in my book. I'd even go as far as to say the crooks in my city wouldn't even know what a freakin bowley lock is.
Watching your videos makes me think of the "paper room" at my grandparents house in Finland. It is basically a bank vault, an entire room with walls/floor/roof made out of a foot of steel, with a similarly heavy duty steel door, and the only way to get into the room is to open a padlock on the door that you could not brute force with slugs from a shotgun and uses a uniquely massive key. I guess the building used to be a bank 100 years ago, and that was the room they stored all the valuables in.
@@AlexQuill63 Basically nothing, just like towels and stuff like that lol. The house is just their summer cottage kind of thing, all their real stuff is at their primary residence in Helsinki.
I am kind of curious to see how you store all your locks and tools. I like to think you have display shelves for your favorite locks, and a room filled with your collection.
Love it. the lock has not been picked by anyone that I know of and the company adds a second row of pins. This is how it should be proactive not reactive.
Seems to me the second row makes it easier to pick, because it opens up the front of the ward more and adds a second slot in the core. Of course, I guess you could mitigate that by having the pins at an angle other than 12 or 6 'o clock.
Because people are fucking stupid and would rather leave their door unlocked permanently than experience the slightest inconvenience. Same reason people's passwords get cracked: cuz folks are lazy, stupid, or both.
Patents, most likely. Crime not being as frequent as paranoia could also play a role. Oh, here's another one, people living in high crime areas don't have shit worth risking prison over might also work. Don't get me wrong, I watched this whole video and now I know where I'm getting my next padlock and lock for my armored doors.
Also, for real this time, it's because you can have the most genius, secure lock design possible and it still won't hold up to an angle grinder. An angle grinder doesn't give a fuck about a bowley-abloy-steel-reinforced-security-pinned lock; unless you're gonna make it out of titanium, it just cuts right through.
I was a Marine Corps Armorer that did lock and key control for the weapon systems. I rebuilt ALL of the locks in the armory while I was there. I really appreciate your videos and learned a lot. Thank you
Stuff Made Here made a couple of great locks... but this is WAY beyond those. I'd even guess that that forthcoming Bowler was a response to his second lock.
@@DianaProudmoore My family house came with metal bars already installed ...and so do all the neighbors who live in this area. There used to be gang activity here, unfortunately. On a brighter note, because every house here has every window and door reinforced with bars break-ins stopped completely!
These videos need to be nationwide man! I've learned so much about the illusion of security with general lock mechanisms. Plus have used knowledge gained to totally drop my dads jaw simply bumping a door lock open on dads house after he was locked out. I'm not even a pro. He now watches your videos as well. Awesome lock, looks lilr
This is the type of lock that is perfect to secure remote buildings that have a steel door. Like transmitter sites, cellular sites, and so on. Putting this lock on a wooden door is a very silly thing to do.
Techwolf Lupindo you can reinforce door. Don’t forget that anything can be braked even full metal door especially when it locked on such small piece of regular metal
As someone in that industry... For real, locks don't matter, they just drill it out, angle grind it, and hammer fuck it open. Professional thieves will get into a site no matter what you do. Fastest I've seen is 1200lbs of batteries stolen by 3 guys in 30 minutes, by the time tech and cops rolled up they where gone. Another time they cut through the side of the shelter so we wouldn't get a door alarm.
Thats it! I have been racking my brain trying to figure out who he reminded me of. Of course I will now forever be picturing the LockPickingLawyer as a happy guy with an afro.
I truly wonder how many thieves have skills beyond cutting the lock (or chain) that would lead them to immediately seek other methods of destructive entry (eg breaching door jambs, hinge removal, etc.) An impenetrable lock - while important of course - would just mean efforts at entry become more simplistic and destructive. All of which points to the importance of hardening all areas of ingress plus monitoring. Fantastic content and perhaps the most educational channel on YT. As a lawyer I guess most of his cases are open and shut...😏
I don’t care if they break in and steal stuff, I’ve got good insurance. But insurance often won’t cover a picked lock break in since there’s no proof and they’ll assume insurance fraud. If there’s destructive entry you’re pretty much guaranteed to be covered by insurance, and that’s what matters to me.
@@MrAntice Well, I heard of _one_ burglary where the "entrepreneurs" climbed balconies. In all other cases, the point of entry is the front door. That's why over here in Europe "anti-burglary" doors with safe-like hinges and bolts all over are very popular, but I think that our favorite lockpick would make very short work of most of their locks. Of course, in single-family houses (or anything else on the ground floor or not much higher) windows are vulnerable.
Canadian here. LPL makes me proud. He essentially said what our Canadian company made is next to unpickable. No complement is greater than that from such an esteemed and respected locksmith as the LPL.
@@MrYeahyuhhh if you see the key its possible to just recreate it (assuming accuracy ofc). Same applies to disassembly, you can just check the positions of the pins and construct a key
@@matthewmcewen1 But if you have access to the key then you should just use it? A lock like this will be attached to a steel door, probably in the back of a business where money is counted.
@@hansolo631 obviously that would be a better idea if possible. By "seeing" the key, I mean getting photography of it, or somehow remembering the design or bidding but not being able to get full access to the key. For example, LPL has protected the key the key to his personal lock from the viewers to make sure we don't copy the bidding visually, doxx him and then steal his bike. All I mean is that seeing the key OR stealing it will be the best way to get in.
It's so cool that a manufacturer not only comes out with innovative designs, but listens to the views of the community and takes them on board. This shows a commercial maturity, is bound to grow their customers' confidence and I wish them well. Thank you for showcasing this product to your usual exceptional and honest standard.
Being in the arms industry we take a particular interest in locks as you can imagine. The design of this is marvellous and the proposed double bitted variant even more remarkable. I would imagine though that the keys would be vulnerable or inconvenient if kept in a trouser pocket. I'm surprised at the deadbolt though, here in the UK, even domestic door locks with deadbolts have hardened rollers within them to resist sawing and drilling.
Bro lock picking can be easy. I have picked all my friends house locks in under 10 seconds. The average lock is TRASH. When you can pick locks you realize just how insecure your house or other houses truly are. I thought I was safe until I learned and now I just assume anyone can get in so I have secondary devices for if they pick the lock.
Mr Master Lock lives in a big house and has a flashy car. And Walmart sells all kinds of shit - both could change tack, but why bother when cheap and nasty flies off the shelf?
Thank you again. I am no Locksmith, but strangely enough, we moved into a house that was owned by one and we still get Locksmith mail. My skills are in engineering and I love the videos (long or short) on all these wonderful mechanisms. So much of this knowledge carries over into all sorts of latches, fasteners, and other containment systems.
Holy shit I've been looking for a video where he can't pick a lock . Your videos are top notch Man and your a master and your skills are amazing. Never thought I'd watch so many lock picking videos
That cylinder is exactly 782% more secure than the doors I'd likely install it in... I can't wait for the padlocks though. I wonder what the street price will be? And how long before crappy reverse-engineered clones are being defeated by LPL?
Dunno about where you live, but ordinary burglars rarely bother with picking. They are too stupid to do that. This one will be opened with a sledgehammer or a prying tool or a drill (btw I didn't see ANY protection from drilling. Or just filled with epoxy and opened once the owners replace it with another temporary lock or stop locking it.
The closest robbers get to 'lock picking' is the 'credit card trick', where they use a piece of a credit card to wedge open the latch. (Doesn't work with deadbolts, obviously.) Failing that, they usually break a window to open the deadbolt. Very subtle, right?
People don't put locks like these as a sole security solution. A lock like this is a single piece among tens if not hundreds of other security components working together obviously. Which means, that this lock protects something that has windows that cannot be broken. Also, goodluck smashing this lock with a sledgehammer or tampering with it in any other way with all the cameras and sensors around. Not to mention the door that would house such a lock would be top tier as well. To assume that owners who went through all this would not replace the doors / lock when out of service is ridiculous as well.
My brother and I just recently got into lockpicking, him moreso than I. Point being is we've been watching your videos, and I've got to say this beast is intimidatingly impressive engineering! I think I'll stick with the old locks long lost in our parent's garage. lol
I sell these in my shop to anyone who even mentions wanting a high-security lock. That it's distinct looking with a really cool keyway may not be the most important aspect, but it certainly helps.
What locking door knob would you pair with this? There's a desire to have one key for the house if possible, but there are no alternatives produced by Bowley at this time.
I'm not really interested in lock picking but I really love two things about this video. I love the collaboration between lock pickers and the lock makers. Both parties are making the world safer for everyone. I also love the elegant simplicity of the mechanical design of the lock itself. Someone paid close attention in their mechanical engineering classes. :-) My only concern would be that I'd end up breaking the key in the lock with normal use but the gent in the video indicated that the key is made from some pretty durable material so perhaps that's not really a concern. Lastly, I checked online and was pleasantly surprised to see that the lock isn't very expensive.
I saved this, because of the countless vids I’ve seen here, THIS one’s the ONLY one I’d buy for my own home. Sounds like a superlative company. Hats off to em! 👏👏
I love how he’s like “oh you could potentially make a impression key out of brass with a mill to pick it” like my man who is trying to break into your house that also has access to a mill and the skill set to kill brass. 😂
I was impressed with this review - so I bought some for my house. Even the Grade 2 versions are not really expensive compared to 'high security' commercial pin tumbler locks. I do like them a lot. Installation with no binding does take some fine adjustment of all the parts... more so than expected - but doable with a few tries. I do find the keys annoyingly sharp - the edges are all crisp hard 90 degrees. This is hard on the hand and pocket, and there is no functional reason for this. I did some gentle fettling of the sharp edges with a file at 45 degrees just to knock off the sharpness. Some of the keys actually worked more smoothly after this (probably some of those crisp edges were damaged/folded). Be nice if they had been gently buffed to ease these edges already.
10:01 50 Thousandths of an inch threw me off there a bit, but it's actually just a twentieth (1/20) of an inch or about 1.25mm. It sounds a lot more impressive as a tolerance when you say thousandths though.
Very ingenious. As a non-lock-picker who is just fascinated by LPL's videos, I have to say that it looks like a recipe for a jamming lock to me. Now I have to say that it is more important to me that I can always open my front door or padlock than that some bad guy is unable to pick it - maybe my priorities are wrong. But tolerances that tight, mechanisms that intricate, metal that thin, I just think that within a couple of years I am bound to end up locked out. I mean, door jambs are never, ever, stable - wood moves, foundations move, you always end up having to use force with the key to move the hardware. One 6 thou piece of grit or corrosion will prevent it turning at all. Over the years I have been burgled, I have had valuable stuff taken from my cars, but never by picking - just by breaking and entering. And I can definitely say that I have had far more trouble from non-opening locks than insecure locks. Still, very clever.
A lock like this would be better used indoors for a server room where the climate is controlled, there are no windows and the door frame is made of metal. That should keep all the tolerances the same. And of course if something did go wrong, since you own the property you can always pay to have someone drill or grind through the lock in an emergency.
Yeah locks are just for the simple aversion. A defense against curiosity but not intent. But in theory I could design a lock in the same fashion and use some more corrosive resistant metals (Which I work with daily as I work on boat-riggings and others... The metal is extremely tough, extremely corrosive resistant and overall expensive). Heh, if I had any mind for security I might actually use that to start my own business xD
If you need such a lock, you presumably care enough about what it is protecting to invest a bit of time into maintaining the lock and its door. It's a mechanism, all mechanisms are prone to wear and jams unless you check, clean, lube and repair them at regular intervals.
@thisnicklldo. I agree - it's not practical for several reasons. It's gonna catch on clothes, and is more prone to breaking, but what a beautiful, elegant design.
Don't be misled by appearance. Right now, you are probably using a brass key when you force a sticky/jammed lock. This thing is high-tensile steel. The key is also much thicker than anything you are using now, really hard to bend, harder to break. The inside of the lock is stupidly robust and there is zero thin metal anywhere. (Also, in my experience, good machined tolerances are less likely to gum up with corrosion or grit than stuff with a loose fit.)
@@herrkulor3771 Fuck yeah boi, been saying we need that for years. Take the least convenient parts of Imperial and metric and smash them together. Deci-feet: like an inch, but shittier. Millimiles: that's like what, 5.28 feet? 5 feet, 2 deci-feet, and 8 centi-foots. Metre-pounds: like a foot-pound, except fuck you. Miles per gallon + litres per hundred kilometres = kilogallons per dozen litremetres.
@@gitghetto yeah, you know it was not all too serious. Just that LOGIC was the key word.. so I got a little provocative and triggered... Prefixes are everywhere, like Mega , kilo and practical since you only need one letter when writing so correctly I should have written 50m" which looks very crappy. The new 50 metre-inch
HI, and just want to say I really appreciate the series of videos you put out. Re this video, probably would have been much simpler to have a digital weigh scale. Then place the two grades of sliding bolts with attachments on them to show the increase in total weight difference of the upgraded two bolts and covers. Not easy to picture it using our imagination otherwise. Keep these videos coming, very impressive.
Try a stack of 2 flexible memory steel shims, cut very thin. One flat, with holes, and one set stamped to match the zero lift pin.. They should slide all the way down a hollow key frame, and wrap around a u shaped bend at the end of a hollow key. The first shim is to find the zero lift pin. Punch holes in the memory steel shims. 5 combinations of shim 1 which is flat, until you know which is the zero lift. It should feel more 'bindy when you turn the shim and hollow key together past the very rounded pins.' Now, using the stamped set of shims, use them to bump with a low spot in the right place.
Back in the days,if this guy was a professor at my university I would never miss any classes, and you wouldn’t catch me doing anything during the class, other than listening with my jaw dropped 😯 It’s just mesmerizing,and I’m not even interested in lock picking, just stumbled onto his videos by accident. 👍👍👍
Best infomercial for a lock... It's been picked very easily. The bowely is the most annoying frustrating lock ever... Imagine trying to get into your house in a hurry... (gotta poop, Bad weather, ex, vicious animal etc...) But you have to solve puzzle before entry lol