Pippin89 wrote: ↑Wed Jul 20, 2022 9:04 am
There is a guy on Youtube called the lockpicking lawyer who tests all this kind of stuff. It's amazing how easily he opens some of the cheaper electronic safes. One of them he opened just by sticking a piece of tin foil in it and shorting out a couple of contacts. No idea if that Argos safe would be easily overcome like that but it does make to stop and think about how "safe" some safe's really are.
i've dabled in lockpicking, no means anywhere near him

, but i'd say the manual override key would not put up any fight for me. a nice tubular lock (like you used to get on bike d locks or arcade machines etc) would be far more secure than that. chubb type locks will hold off most lockpickers as it is a lot more of an artform then yale type key locks.
the main bit of security i discovered when i got into lock picking is your front door lock, no one will pick it to break in, same as padlocks. so pick resistance isn't improtant. what they will do is called snapping. you get the bit of lock barrel that sticks out your door, and wiggle it, it then breaks in 2, and they push it out and unlock your door by flicking the mech in the door. it is silent. so get anti snap locks. these are desinged to have a different part break off, and then it locks solid. far more secure.