Teardown of a 2 lever lock very easy to pick mortise external mounted lock











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My new favourite tool to grow a YouTube channel... • https://www.Tubebuddy.com/pricing?a=t... Hi everyone. Please click the like, subscribe, thumbs up or down and leave a comment. It takes a second to click and is very much appreciated. Click like on every video for much love x x • A mortise lock (mortice lock in British English) is a lock that requires a pocket—the mortise—to be cut into the door or piece of furniture into which the lock is to be fitted. In most parts of the world, mortise locks are found on older buildings constructed before the advent of bored cylindrical locks, but they have recently become more common in commercial and upmarket residential construction in the United States. They are widely used in domestic properties of all ages in Europe. • Mortice locks may include a non-locking sprung latch operated by a door handle. Such a lock is termed a sash lock. A simpler form without a handle or latch is termed a 'dead lock'. Dead locks are commonly used as a secure backup to a sprung non-deadlocking latch, usually a pin tumbler rim lock.[note 1] • Mortice locks have historically, and still commonly do, use lever locks as a mechanism. Older locks may have used warded locks. This has led to a popular confusion between the two; the term 'mortice lock' is widely known and used, but usually in reference to lever keys. In recent years the Euro cylinder lock has become common, using a pin tumbler lock in a mortice housing. • The purpose of a mortise lock is to act as a combination of locks. It is dual-action, meaning that it acts as a door knob and a deadbolt.

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