Jesus just imagine being held at gun point in your yard while another person is just dumping clips into a lock trying get it to break. By the time their done the bike/whatever you had this laying against is going to be completely beat up and possibly broken. I think it would be easier for them to sit down and change a bike tire in the time it would take to dump mag after mag into it and probably more cost effective.
"Now that I've shown how many .50 cal bullets it takes to destroy this thing, I have another one I'm going to open by exploiting a flaw in it's mechanism using nothing but a paper towel and a rubber ducky."
This is the LockPickingLawyer and we're out here at the range, where we're going to see how many rounds of this Nerf gun it takes for this Masterlock to open. I've attached the lock to the frame and I see that it has already opened itself up, as if in surrender.
Just imagine someone looking at that lock and saying: get the c4 we're going in for the wall. But sir it's just a lock. The wall is weaker than the lock.
The LPL: "I don't think the 556 or the armour piercing 308's gonna do the trick." Bill: "Well, we carried it all out her though..." The LPL: "I didn't say we weren't gonna shoot it." Bill: "Oh, ok." Best exchange of the whole video (honorable mention to all the times they tried to hold the shot lock).
@@petlahk4119 Interestingly, there was actually test of a tactical nuke where they sat a tank about 300 meters away from the blast ("Operation Totem" I think). Not only did it survive but it also kept being used, though I think I read something about issues with some residual radioactivity. So while I seriously doubt this lock could survive the very core of the blast, I'm sure it could tank a near hit. Hell, if it was a little ways away I would not be too surprised if you could still open it with the keys.
@@breezy5673 So? Maybe it will look quite stupid and you can't stand upright or walk but you will be protected for from the unlikely event of being shot at with a .50cal
I know the others mentioned the weight but I'm just imagining the soft tissue damage from all the energy being directed into your body even though there's no penetration.
@@postindustrial76 these locks are for specialized security, I'd imagine they would sell specialized security doors at a premium instead of fancy bedroom doors
.308 AP is no joke, and the squire tanked it no sweat. .50 BMG is downright monstrous and it still took 20 after the 100 previous rounds. Demolition ranch did a video testing the lethality of the barret m82 and even a glancing hit on the ear of their ballistic dummy destroyed the head. It literally tanked 20 shots of a round originally meant to repel *tanks*
Yeah...if i needed to get by that thing I would definitely just cut around it. A set of bolt cutters and any chain is toast, better put that padlock on a giant mythril door....
the only place I can think can be strong enough to be as reasonable hard to break open as this monster is like the presidential car, a russian bunker next to a nuclear plant or something
This feels like a Wile E. Coyote cartoon, where he tries to blow up a padlock to get into a building, but after destroying the building the padlock is still perfectly intact
@@NightmareBlade10 itwouldnt hang this loosely and the back is likely to be up against something so no swinging back honestly i wouldnt be surprised if you could get through this lock in half the shots
"I don't think the 5.56 or armor-piercing .308 is gonna do it." "Well, we carried it all out he-" "I didn't say we weren't going to shoot it." *AMERICA 100*
@@kahnu893 I think he was i either thinking wooh I still get to shoot it or. What a waste its not gonna open to those we should head straight for the big guns.
i own a 308, and let me just say, ive made some homeloads and, being a jackass, decided to make a cast iron slug. Never again. just...never again. first, and last, time i will make something able to go through the 4x4 pine post holding the target AND the triple layer of plywood that is backed by a sand berm. We found the slug 2 feet into the sand berm...
"This is the LockpickingLawyer and what we have here today is a hardened steel, covered in titanium and kevlar padlock, meant to hold fire from anti-tank sniper rifles. And I will show you how it can be opened in less than a half second. To do that, we just need this GAU-12 25mm Rotary Cannon that BosnianBill and I made, load it with a belt of 250 rounds with depleted uranium, let the AI controller lock onto the target, and give slight touch on the trigger. *BRRRT*. As we can see folks, it doesn't matter how strong your lock is, there will always be a destructive method that can break it and everything around it. In any case, that's all I have for you today"
I know it was a joke and all, and it's not really relevant for that purpose, but .50 BMG rifles are neither anti-tank (unless you're back in World War 1) nor sniper, they don't have the power for the earlier, nor the precision for the latter. They're what's known as anti-materiel rifles, meant to defeat light armored vehicles and equipment, to destroy things suspected to contain explosives from a safe distance, and other such tasks.
@@CaptainPriceONDATRAINFR100 a healthy human mind doesn't wake up thinking about making an award for someone who made a "first" reply, but i think that's a luxury, not a curse
@@randomstuffbychris can confirm, shot a rifle for the first time ever with a red dot with 100% accuracy across 9 shots from the prone position, range being no more than 50 yards and scope being a zeroed in red dot
"In the end, the Squire SS100CS can be easily defeated with a relatively low-skilled attack using just a piece of a Red Bull can, 30 feet of det cord and a brick of C4."
I think that had the lock been affixed to something solid behind it rather than free-swinging on a chain it probably wouldn't have lasted nearly as long as it did, the lock being able to move backwards and swing around means that it can dissipate energy that would otherwise be directed straight through it. I know it's a bit of a silly point to make this long after the video is made but I'd be curious to see how it would do attached to something like a heavy metal door. love the channel btw!
"This is a 5000 joule airgun with steel-tipped bolt that Joerg and I made few days ago, and we're going to test it on this lock. Let me show you its feature."
the 7.62x51 ap rounds dont carry enough energy to do it and they only fired fmj 50.s at it thats like tryin to push a marshmallow through a phonebook. that bein said it was still kinda impressive how well it held up
The main reason is the fact it was swinging, so a good deal of the energy was lost simply pushing the lock backwards. If you want an analogy, try stabbing a piece of paper with a pencil while it's hanging by pegs from a clothes dryer. Now put it over a baking dish and tape all four sides down so it is tight and try again. That's the difference.
@@chrisburn7178 A Channel by the name of Going Ballistic actually tested the same lock against some ap 50 cals with a big wooden log as backsupport and somehow it still took a bunch of shots till it finally broke (the APs didnt even make it all the way through) A SLAP would probably breeze right through and if you went for the steel rods connecting it you would also crack it open in no time but the body of this target has some serious meat to it
@@chrisburn7178 Well anytime a tough product or a product that claims to be top notch hits the market its only a question of time till people start firing supersonic lead at it. Im just happy when people with the proper knowledge and equipment test it (LPL with his knowledge on how the lock operates and Going Ballistic with their arsenal of exotic/expensive and hard to come by ammunition are 2 channels that i would class as experts in the field) Still waitin for that SLAP round tho that should blow that lock a new one
I started following you channel because it’s pretty cool even though I had no interested in bypassing locks. I’ve been seeing some nice guns on your channel and seeing these firearms today made me absolutely love this channel.
@@waltermh111 what value do guns have? From what I understand they don't have many positive effects on society- all I can really think of is that they're fun to use. On the other hand however they are responsible for many deaths. It seems to me like guns are overall negative.
@@user-zl7sv6go3p Except data shows far more lives are saved in US by the defensive use of guns than non-suicide deaths are caused. Guns are a great equalizer. They are the only reason a pregnant lady could have any personal defense against a large male aggressor. They have a very positive impact.
@@slyking214 can’t have a shitty core in an absolute beast of a lock like that otherwise there would literally be no point Imagine if it was a wafer lock lmao
They probably would. Hang that thing in the front lobby of their headquarters with pictures at every desk in their QC department. "You have to literally use an anti-material rifle to break our lock."
@@Nater2204 Halo sniper fires 14.5mmx114mm rounds. .50 cal comes out to 12.7mm. 20mm is what you would find in use for canons and mounted guns on aircraft.
This is the highest praise I have ever heard him give a lock and I have been watching for a few years now, I've seen most of his videos and never once have I heard him say he was speechless in a good way, I might be wrong and just didn't hear it but damn that is some good praise
not really, having it hanging looses a lot of energy on impact. the energy is not only absorbed but also given to the lock in a longer timeframe. i dont thin kthe back survives if the lock would be mounted hard. but ofc the riccochet risk then is probably too high. and shooting sucha tiny lock at 100 yards isnt much fun either
"Oh why what a nice netflix series i finally fucking found it would be such a shame if someone assblasted my INDESTRUCTIBLE SUPER TURBO LOCK(trademark) with the sheer ungodly force of a anti material round while i am ever so vulnerable from this newfound satisfaction of-" *huge crack of a 50 cal*
This is literally the most intimidating intro he had ever done. "This is lock Picking Lawyer *with a soft voice*" while showing 3 heavy firearms + 2 full magazines + approximately 12 extra 50 BMG bullets.
@@canter1ter “The average person may not realize this but every dislike comes from a person with a name and an address, and today we will be testing all the locks on their homes”
"this is the lockpicking lawyer and soon i will be conducting a raid on your house, keep me out for 4 hours and ill give you a free Covert Companion. you have only 2 weeks to prepare. godspeed"
@@analcough5321 (explosion sound resounds as you panick, LPL with a loaded gun infront of you) "Ok to prove this wasn't a fluke, I will try this again" (leaves and gives you another week)
@The champs of Gaming .50 bmg WAS designed as an anti-tank round... just from WW1... It was a bit too small by the time WW2 came around, but there were still a few Italian and IJA light tanks which it could penetrate.
@Hakageryuu We are now in the year 3046. The earth has been abandoned. A weapon finally bested the latest squire padlock however, doing so, it pierced a hole straight through the earth. The squire padlock, cut in half, flew right out of the atmosphere and both chunks impacted faraway planets inhabited by some higher life forms, completely obliterating them. Squire is therefore on trial for having caused the first galactic war; Humanity is on the brink of destruction. Squire engineers now ask themselves: Have we gone too far?
OMG that's incredible!!!!!! Squire should use this footage or even just a picture of what you've done in their advertising that lock is literally built like a tank
"You find the door is heavily warded with a mechanism of both extreme complexity and durability" Lockpick - 50 : Despell the Ward Small Arms - 100 / Big Guns - 75 : Shatter the Mechanism
That's impressive. Theres some armored vehicles in the US military that I'm sure couldnt take that much abuse in the same small area and not have substantial damage of not penetration of the haul. I'm talking about IFVs, Strykers, M113/577, and things like that. Obviously many wheeled vehicles would never stand up to that sort of fire. But I know protection level's and this lock is absolutely thicker than many armor plates on military vehicles. I'm impressed this lock survived as long as it did. What's more impressive is that it did so with an induced weakness by that .308 shot on the shackle. If it weren't for that they might have ran out of ammo trying to defeat this thing and if you are going to shoot a lock you'll be a lot closer than they were, you'll also attract a lot of attention, and looking at the wood and the fact that camera too shrapnel, you would also be riddled with it before you even got close to breaking this thing open. Such a shame the picking didnt take him an unreasonable amount of time. But it also makes sense that it can be picked by a very experienced person because you definitely dont want to have to try to bust this thing open if the keys are lost.
The Stryker is rated against 14.5 mm I believe. Apparently even the LAV-25, which I thought had pretty light armor, is being or has been upgraded to the A2 model featuring protection against 14.5 mm
Scene from an action movie: Hero infiltrates the bad guys base, and find the girl locked in a cell. He takes aim at the lock with his pistol. Hero: Wait, is that a Squire? Girl: What? Hero: That lock, it's a Squire, I ain't got no chance! Girl: What does that mean? Hero: It means i'm out, see ya.
4 года назад
He just needs to shoot at the bars of the cell, as they are probably weaker than the lock.
This is the lock picking lawyer and today Bosnian Bill & I came up with the coolest "business" reason to get away from our wives for the day. We're making an educational video today swiss cheesing a boat anchor Squire calls a padlock.