This Peterson pick is made from 0.018″ thick Government Steel and then pressed into a purple-tinted plastic handle. This is the second thinnest series of picks from Peterson. Although they are slightly thicker than the 0.015 picks, they are designed with the “Euro” neck reduction to improve access in cramped keyholes. They are designed to be useful for locks with narrow keyholes and to provide a little more strength than the 0.015 picks.
They are incredibly useful for locks with narrow keyholes.
Keep in mind that these picks are specifically designed to provide access in narrow keyholes where standard picks will not fit. This narrowing of the width naturally makes the picks slightly less sturdy.
If you want to use these thin picks in wider keyholes, it means you no longer have the lateral support of the two walls in the keyhole. For narrow keyholes, this lockpick could still get support from this though. If you are heavy handed, these picks may bend sideways or even break under high pressure in locks with wide keyholes.
Peterson manufactured its picks using the acid machining method for many years before starting to use laser cutting/marking to produce its picks in late 2019. The picks they had the least of were, of course, cut first. Laser cutting took several months. After their simultaneous tumbling and polishing work was completed, the lead time for the casting process and production was still several months, so they did not start the completed picks until March 2020. When the completed laser picks were received from the mold, Peterson’s existing CLASSIC pick inventories were replaced with the newer laser picks.
The result was a step-by-step addition of activity: individual picks were replaced immediately as they came in, and reluctantly, starting in March 2020, picksets were built (to keep products available on the shelf to meet demand) with an ever-increasing percentage of the newer laser picks. By the end of August 2020, Peterson had received all of their laser steel picks, so the entire stock of the picksets at that time was gone through and rebuilt with only laser picks.
While Peterson believes that their laser picks are better than their CLASSIC picks, they also note that CLASSIC picks are fully capable of picking. The only problem with CLASSIC picks can be observed if you bend the picks sideways at the handle. For example, the Peterson Reach is marked PR. The top and middle of the characters form 2 dashes (like the perforations at the top of a check in your checkbook). Normal lockpicking will not break these picks – but bending them sideways with the picks can cause them to break. But why would you do that?
In order to offer you a great bargain on Peterson picks that (based on the information above), you may have actually bought and enjoyed in the past, we have ordered an assortment of the Peterson CLASSIC Picks that they have removed from their stock and no longer offer for sale in stores.
Anonym –
Excellent
Anonym –
very good pick, using it effort less, pleasant to use.
Diederik B. –
#ERROR!