I lost my closet key, how to open it?











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18
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I lost the key to a closet and I need to open it. I don't need for the lock to remain opperative after the opperation, so I accept "radical" solutions.



The key is of this type:



keys



I have no experience or tools for lockpicking.
Any ideas?



Edit:
I was not able to open it yet. I am adding pictures of the actual door and lock



keyholedoor with hinges, keyhole, and doorknob










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  • 4




    You might want to firm up your question. I don't think "sawzall" is the answer you want but the question just about screams "sawzall" to me.
    – Joshua
    Nov 29 at 22:21










  • @Joshua I do not own a sawzall and do not plan to buy one, so it is not an option. Thanks for the suggestion
    – Guillermo Vasconcelos
    Nov 29 at 23:15










  • We really need a picture of the lock and the door. Not just the key. Not being familiar with US English, I'm not sure what you mean by 'closet'. Is it built into the wall or is it free-standing?
    – chasly from UK
    2 days ago










  • The door hinges are designed so that the door would be removed by opening it and then lifting it off the hinges, rather than by removing the hinge pin. The lighting of the picture is not very good, but the appearance is consistent with either a crude warded lock or a crude lever lock. Does the keyhole extend all the way through the door? If so, and you can get a dowel the right diameter to serve as the shaft of the key, you might try putting a small finishing nail in the side of it (maybe an inch from the end), extending out about as far as a key would go, and then...
    – supercat
    2 days ago










  • ...inserting it to different depths and turning it to see whether you feel spring-loaded levers or rigid warding.
    – supercat
    2 days ago















up vote
18
down vote

favorite












I lost the key to a closet and I need to open it. I don't need for the lock to remain opperative after the opperation, so I accept "radical" solutions.



The key is of this type:



keys



I have no experience or tools for lockpicking.
Any ideas?



Edit:
I was not able to open it yet. I am adding pictures of the actual door and lock



keyholedoor with hinges, keyhole, and doorknob










share|improve this question









New contributor




Guillermo Vasconcelos is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 4




    You might want to firm up your question. I don't think "sawzall" is the answer you want but the question just about screams "sawzall" to me.
    – Joshua
    Nov 29 at 22:21










  • @Joshua I do not own a sawzall and do not plan to buy one, so it is not an option. Thanks for the suggestion
    – Guillermo Vasconcelos
    Nov 29 at 23:15










  • We really need a picture of the lock and the door. Not just the key. Not being familiar with US English, I'm not sure what you mean by 'closet'. Is it built into the wall or is it free-standing?
    – chasly from UK
    2 days ago










  • The door hinges are designed so that the door would be removed by opening it and then lifting it off the hinges, rather than by removing the hinge pin. The lighting of the picture is not very good, but the appearance is consistent with either a crude warded lock or a crude lever lock. Does the keyhole extend all the way through the door? If so, and you can get a dowel the right diameter to serve as the shaft of the key, you might try putting a small finishing nail in the side of it (maybe an inch from the end), extending out about as far as a key would go, and then...
    – supercat
    2 days ago










  • ...inserting it to different depths and turning it to see whether you feel spring-loaded levers or rigid warding.
    – supercat
    2 days ago













up vote
18
down vote

favorite









up vote
18
down vote

favorite











I lost the key to a closet and I need to open it. I don't need for the lock to remain opperative after the opperation, so I accept "radical" solutions.



The key is of this type:



keys



I have no experience or tools for lockpicking.
Any ideas?



Edit:
I was not able to open it yet. I am adding pictures of the actual door and lock



keyholedoor with hinges, keyhole, and doorknob










share|improve this question









New contributor




Guillermo Vasconcelos is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I lost the key to a closet and I need to open it. I don't need for the lock to remain opperative after the opperation, so I accept "radical" solutions.



The key is of this type:



keys



I have no experience or tools for lockpicking.
Any ideas?



Edit:
I was not able to open it yet. I am adding pictures of the actual door and lock



keyholedoor with hinges, keyhole, and doorknob







locks






share|improve this question









New contributor




Guillermo Vasconcelos is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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share|improve this question




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edited 2 days ago









sondra.kinsey

1032




1032






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asked Nov 29 at 16:05









Guillermo Vasconcelos

19117




19117




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  • 4




    You might want to firm up your question. I don't think "sawzall" is the answer you want but the question just about screams "sawzall" to me.
    – Joshua
    Nov 29 at 22:21










  • @Joshua I do not own a sawzall and do not plan to buy one, so it is not an option. Thanks for the suggestion
    – Guillermo Vasconcelos
    Nov 29 at 23:15










  • We really need a picture of the lock and the door. Not just the key. Not being familiar with US English, I'm not sure what you mean by 'closet'. Is it built into the wall or is it free-standing?
    – chasly from UK
    2 days ago










  • The door hinges are designed so that the door would be removed by opening it and then lifting it off the hinges, rather than by removing the hinge pin. The lighting of the picture is not very good, but the appearance is consistent with either a crude warded lock or a crude lever lock. Does the keyhole extend all the way through the door? If so, and you can get a dowel the right diameter to serve as the shaft of the key, you might try putting a small finishing nail in the side of it (maybe an inch from the end), extending out about as far as a key would go, and then...
    – supercat
    2 days ago










  • ...inserting it to different depths and turning it to see whether you feel spring-loaded levers or rigid warding.
    – supercat
    2 days ago














  • 4




    You might want to firm up your question. I don't think "sawzall" is the answer you want but the question just about screams "sawzall" to me.
    – Joshua
    Nov 29 at 22:21










  • @Joshua I do not own a sawzall and do not plan to buy one, so it is not an option. Thanks for the suggestion
    – Guillermo Vasconcelos
    Nov 29 at 23:15










  • We really need a picture of the lock and the door. Not just the key. Not being familiar with US English, I'm not sure what you mean by 'closet'. Is it built into the wall or is it free-standing?
    – chasly from UK
    2 days ago










  • The door hinges are designed so that the door would be removed by opening it and then lifting it off the hinges, rather than by removing the hinge pin. The lighting of the picture is not very good, but the appearance is consistent with either a crude warded lock or a crude lever lock. Does the keyhole extend all the way through the door? If so, and you can get a dowel the right diameter to serve as the shaft of the key, you might try putting a small finishing nail in the side of it (maybe an inch from the end), extending out about as far as a key would go, and then...
    – supercat
    2 days ago










  • ...inserting it to different depths and turning it to see whether you feel spring-loaded levers or rigid warding.
    – supercat
    2 days ago








4




4




You might want to firm up your question. I don't think "sawzall" is the answer you want but the question just about screams "sawzall" to me.
– Joshua
Nov 29 at 22:21




You might want to firm up your question. I don't think "sawzall" is the answer you want but the question just about screams "sawzall" to me.
– Joshua
Nov 29 at 22:21












@Joshua I do not own a sawzall and do not plan to buy one, so it is not an option. Thanks for the suggestion
– Guillermo Vasconcelos
Nov 29 at 23:15




@Joshua I do not own a sawzall and do not plan to buy one, so it is not an option. Thanks for the suggestion
– Guillermo Vasconcelos
Nov 29 at 23:15












We really need a picture of the lock and the door. Not just the key. Not being familiar with US English, I'm not sure what you mean by 'closet'. Is it built into the wall or is it free-standing?
– chasly from UK
2 days ago




We really need a picture of the lock and the door. Not just the key. Not being familiar with US English, I'm not sure what you mean by 'closet'. Is it built into the wall or is it free-standing?
– chasly from UK
2 days ago












The door hinges are designed so that the door would be removed by opening it and then lifting it off the hinges, rather than by removing the hinge pin. The lighting of the picture is not very good, but the appearance is consistent with either a crude warded lock or a crude lever lock. Does the keyhole extend all the way through the door? If so, and you can get a dowel the right diameter to serve as the shaft of the key, you might try putting a small finishing nail in the side of it (maybe an inch from the end), extending out about as far as a key would go, and then...
– supercat
2 days ago




The door hinges are designed so that the door would be removed by opening it and then lifting it off the hinges, rather than by removing the hinge pin. The lighting of the picture is not very good, but the appearance is consistent with either a crude warded lock or a crude lever lock. Does the keyhole extend all the way through the door? If so, and you can get a dowel the right diameter to serve as the shaft of the key, you might try putting a small finishing nail in the side of it (maybe an inch from the end), extending out about as far as a key would go, and then...
– supercat
2 days ago












...inserting it to different depths and turning it to see whether you feel spring-loaded levers or rigid warding.
– supercat
2 days ago




...inserting it to different depths and turning it to see whether you feel spring-loaded levers or rigid warding.
– supercat
2 days ago










10 Answers
10






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up vote
32
down vote













Very few if any closets open inward -- which means the hinges will have their pins on the accessible side. Just drive the pins out of the hinges, and the entire door can be pulled out of the frame (and easily put back once the lock is either opened, replaced, or the key found and duplicated).



If the pins are peened in place, a tool like a Dremel could be used to cut one head off so the pin can be removed.






share|improve this answer

















  • 6




    Thinking outside the "closet"... just remove the door +1
    – Nelson
    Nov 30 at 0:20






  • 3




    Why do you think the hinges would be outside when it opens to the outside? My closet has the hinge systems on the inside, but the doors open to the outside
    – Ferrybig
    2 days ago






  • 1




    @Ferrybig a picture of the closet in the question would help. If it uses standard hinges, then they will be on the outside. (Butt, butterfly, etc) A barrel or concealed hinge will of course not have an outside hinge. Given the key, it's an older cabinet (so not a concealed hinge) which leaves the very common butt hinge, or comparatively rare barrel hinge, so it's a good bet that the hinge in this case is external.
    – Baldrickk
    2 days ago








  • 1




    @Ferrybig Zeiss is probably assuming that because that's how the vast majority of doors work. It would take a non-standard hinge for doors to open on the opposite side. Something like that would not normally be done for something like an closet.
    – Kevin
    2 days ago






  • 8




    Now that a picture has been added, it's clear that the type of hinges used do not have pins that can be removed, but this is still and answer that could help someone else.
    – JPhi1618
    2 days ago


















up vote
14
down vote













Vintage locks employed two concepts, sometimes individually and sometimes together.



A warded lock has structures within the lock, called warding, which are designed to fit in notches carved into the key. A quality warded lock will be constructed so that the only way for a key to reach the mechanism is for it to snake around some complicated warding, but many cheaper warded locks can be opened with a skeleton key, which is a key blank that is filed down to remove everything except one or two simple projections or pairs of projections that will operate the mechanism. The way to defeat a quality warded lock is to construct a key by starting with a suitable key blank, covering it with soot or similar material, attempting to open the lock, moving the key back and forth a little at the place it is blocked, carefully removing it, and looking for markings in the soot. Cut, file, or otherwise remove the parts of the key where the soot was marked by the warding and try again. Either the lock will open, or new markings will appear, which again need to be removed. This process can sometimes be slow and tedious, but one will end up with a usable key, greatly increasing the value of the lock to a collector.



Lever locks have one or more levers that must be lifted to the correct height to allow the bolt to move. Lever locks will often have a different feel from warded locks, since warded locks will usually block the key before it has a chance to engage the mechanism, while lever locks will allow the key to engage the mechanism but will block the mechanism from moving fully unless the levers are lifted to the correct height. Many lever locks can be picked relatively easily with the proper tools, but picking would require using a pair of tools, with one being used to try to operate the mechanism which is blocked by the levers, while the other tool is used to try lifting the levers. Often, there will initially be one lever blocking the bolt; once that lever is moved to the right position (i.e. "set"), the bolt will be able to move a little bit before being blocked by another lever. If the bolt is kept under tension, this will rather conveniently hold the first lever in place while the picker focuses attention on the next lever that needs to be set.



The best locks combine these two approaches, requiring intricately-cut keys which need to move several different levers simultaneously by relatively precise amounts. Such locks are much more expensive to manufacture than current designs. Although they may be as secure or even more so than most recent locks, the additional security they offer is not sufficient to justify their cost.



I would not expect a closet door to have a particularly high-quality lock. If the lock uses warding to distinguish correct and incorrect keys, picking with crude tools may be easy. If it uses levers for that purpose, picking will require the simultaneous use of two tools that are designed to work together. There are many youtube videos and web tutorials that would explain how to make the required tools. If you can find some old keys that look like they would fit, I would suggest trying them and seeing what happens. If the key is blocked by something in the lock without engaging a mechanism, you probably have a warded lock. If the key engages the mechanism but the mechanism itself feels blocked, it's probably a lever lock.






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    up vote
    13
    down vote













    I should suggest trying a bobbypin or a smaller flathead screwdriver if you'd like to save it. From my experience, these types of locks are very easily opened, even with almost no skill in lockpicking. After all, you might find the key again.



    Another option could be to drill out the center of the lock, therein making it very easy to open the door. This would, of course, entirely destroy the lock, but you have already said this is not an issue.






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    • 1




      I was maybe 10 years old and grandma used to store chocolates and condensed milk on a closet with a similar key/lock. It was easy to open and close it with a strong paper clip :)
      – brasofilo
      2 days ago








    • 2




      I'm not sure drilling the centre is going to help. You'll just destroy the mechanism but the bolt will still be in place.
      – chasly from UK
      yesterday










    • @chaslyfromUK Then you can turn it sideways and shake and the bolt will slide out.
      – wizzwizz4
      yesterday


















    up vote
    8
    down vote













    The original image of the key is interesting to me. You could just wander into the local locksmith and ask if they have a set of keys that might fit. There's a limited number of variants on these keys and you may just be able to buy one off the shelf as the lock is only a token gesture towards security.



    If you're not overly attached to the lock, there's the question of how firmly it's attached. many cabinet locks are lightly attached to the inside of the door and if you attach a decent handle to the outside you could possibly just force it open. Though the hinges are quite heavy duty which implies a more solid door and lock mechanism.






    share|improve this answer




























      up vote
      7
      down vote













      Other suggested methods of removing the hinge pins or picking the locks are good.



      You can also try to depress the latch via a thin wire if the door opens out or a thin plastic card if the door opens inward. What you goal would be is to depress the latch as if the door were closing on its own.






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      • 2




        This is what used to be call "jimmying" the door, then later came be "carding" the lock. Works well for simple locksets intended for interior doors.
        – Zeiss Ikon
        Nov 29 at 20:17






      • 3




        That won't work because it is a deadbolt, not the ones with a spring
        – Guillermo Vasconcelos
        Nov 29 at 20:28










      • @GuillermoVasconcelos - yes my suggestion would not work then, picking seems like the best bet.
        – Gary Bak
        2 days ago










      • In BrE, a "jimmy" (or "jemmy") is usually a crowbar; it's not even vaguely the same as using a wire or card on the latch.
        – Roger Lipscombe
        2 days ago










      • @RogerLipscombe Can't talk to older history, but when I was a kid, a jimmy was what later became a "slim jim" -- mainly for opening car doors when the key was locked inside. Thin and flexible. Still won't work on a deadbolt, though.
        – Zeiss Ikon
        2 days ago


















      up vote
      2
      down vote













      Well, if you don't care about locking it again, I'd find my trusty old Fein multimaster cutter and just cut the lock open. Or if you want the gentle solution use a small hacksaw blade.






      share|improve this answer





















      • +1 to hacksaw. They cost pennies and you can easily fit the blade into that big gap
        – Valorum
        yesterday


















      up vote
      1
      down vote













      Use a punch and hammer. Insert the punch where the key would go...use the hammer to drive the lock mechanism off the back of the door. A couple of good whacks and you should be wide open. Shame to bust it though..I would try the bobby pin method first.






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        up vote
        1
        down vote













        Is that a skylight window above the door? Perhaps you can gain access through it.



        I am not suggesting climbing in through the window -- that's probably not practical. But perhaps you can open it, and then with possibly reach through it with a stick or belt, open the lock from the inside.



        I am assuming the door has an inside lock latch (for safety) which you might be able to toggle with a broomstick.



        If such a latch is 'down' and you need to pull it 'up', a 1" eye-hook screwed into end of stick might give you the purchase you need to pull up on the latch. (You might need to screw the eye-hook in at 45degree angle on stick.)



        A knob would be much harder to turn, but perhaps you could buckle a couple of belts together into a 3-4' diameter loop which you dangle down from the skylight, perhaps with some resin on one of them to make it 'sticky', loop one end around the knob as if it was a pulley, then attempt to turn it.






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          up vote
          0
          down vote














          1. One way is to cut horizontally through each hinge where the join is. Then the door will open outwards on the hinge side (provided it's not very stiff which is a problem anyway).


          2. Look on YouTube and you will find many videos showing you how to pick or bypass different kinds of lock.



          Example



          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiFj3_4ZJcA




          1. Get a quote from a qualified locksmith. They will do it in seconds without damaging anything. It might be worth the money. Otherwise you could be spending it on repairing the closet.






          share|improve this answer




























            up vote
            -1
            down vote













            If you were inside the cupboard with a table, what I would do is Bang your head against the wall until its sore, saw the table in half.
            Two halves make a whole. Climb through the hole and your in !
            (I still don't understand why my computer can't calculate I=V/R where R=0. but -0 is ok (ie OK like -0 even exists ? ... urgggh! )






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            • Yeah, very funny. Not exactly a new joke. And certainly not an answer.
              – Stephie
              18 hours ago













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            10 Answers
            10






            active

            oldest

            votes








            10 Answers
            10






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

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            up vote
            32
            down vote













            Very few if any closets open inward -- which means the hinges will have their pins on the accessible side. Just drive the pins out of the hinges, and the entire door can be pulled out of the frame (and easily put back once the lock is either opened, replaced, or the key found and duplicated).



            If the pins are peened in place, a tool like a Dremel could be used to cut one head off so the pin can be removed.






            share|improve this answer

















            • 6




              Thinking outside the "closet"... just remove the door +1
              – Nelson
              Nov 30 at 0:20






            • 3




              Why do you think the hinges would be outside when it opens to the outside? My closet has the hinge systems on the inside, but the doors open to the outside
              – Ferrybig
              2 days ago






            • 1




              @Ferrybig a picture of the closet in the question would help. If it uses standard hinges, then they will be on the outside. (Butt, butterfly, etc) A barrel or concealed hinge will of course not have an outside hinge. Given the key, it's an older cabinet (so not a concealed hinge) which leaves the very common butt hinge, or comparatively rare barrel hinge, so it's a good bet that the hinge in this case is external.
              – Baldrickk
              2 days ago








            • 1




              @Ferrybig Zeiss is probably assuming that because that's how the vast majority of doors work. It would take a non-standard hinge for doors to open on the opposite side. Something like that would not normally be done for something like an closet.
              – Kevin
              2 days ago






            • 8




              Now that a picture has been added, it's clear that the type of hinges used do not have pins that can be removed, but this is still and answer that could help someone else.
              – JPhi1618
              2 days ago















            up vote
            32
            down vote













            Very few if any closets open inward -- which means the hinges will have their pins on the accessible side. Just drive the pins out of the hinges, and the entire door can be pulled out of the frame (and easily put back once the lock is either opened, replaced, or the key found and duplicated).



            If the pins are peened in place, a tool like a Dremel could be used to cut one head off so the pin can be removed.






            share|improve this answer

















            • 6




              Thinking outside the "closet"... just remove the door +1
              – Nelson
              Nov 30 at 0:20






            • 3




              Why do you think the hinges would be outside when it opens to the outside? My closet has the hinge systems on the inside, but the doors open to the outside
              – Ferrybig
              2 days ago






            • 1




              @Ferrybig a picture of the closet in the question would help. If it uses standard hinges, then they will be on the outside. (Butt, butterfly, etc) A barrel or concealed hinge will of course not have an outside hinge. Given the key, it's an older cabinet (so not a concealed hinge) which leaves the very common butt hinge, or comparatively rare barrel hinge, so it's a good bet that the hinge in this case is external.
              – Baldrickk
              2 days ago








            • 1




              @Ferrybig Zeiss is probably assuming that because that's how the vast majority of doors work. It would take a non-standard hinge for doors to open on the opposite side. Something like that would not normally be done for something like an closet.
              – Kevin
              2 days ago






            • 8




              Now that a picture has been added, it's clear that the type of hinges used do not have pins that can be removed, but this is still and answer that could help someone else.
              – JPhi1618
              2 days ago













            up vote
            32
            down vote










            up vote
            32
            down vote









            Very few if any closets open inward -- which means the hinges will have their pins on the accessible side. Just drive the pins out of the hinges, and the entire door can be pulled out of the frame (and easily put back once the lock is either opened, replaced, or the key found and duplicated).



            If the pins are peened in place, a tool like a Dremel could be used to cut one head off so the pin can be removed.






            share|improve this answer












            Very few if any closets open inward -- which means the hinges will have their pins on the accessible side. Just drive the pins out of the hinges, and the entire door can be pulled out of the frame (and easily put back once the lock is either opened, replaced, or the key found and duplicated).



            If the pins are peened in place, a tool like a Dremel could be used to cut one head off so the pin can be removed.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Nov 29 at 16:56









            Zeiss Ikon

            7,102728




            7,102728








            • 6




              Thinking outside the "closet"... just remove the door +1
              – Nelson
              Nov 30 at 0:20






            • 3




              Why do you think the hinges would be outside when it opens to the outside? My closet has the hinge systems on the inside, but the doors open to the outside
              – Ferrybig
              2 days ago






            • 1




              @Ferrybig a picture of the closet in the question would help. If it uses standard hinges, then they will be on the outside. (Butt, butterfly, etc) A barrel or concealed hinge will of course not have an outside hinge. Given the key, it's an older cabinet (so not a concealed hinge) which leaves the very common butt hinge, or comparatively rare barrel hinge, so it's a good bet that the hinge in this case is external.
              – Baldrickk
              2 days ago








            • 1




              @Ferrybig Zeiss is probably assuming that because that's how the vast majority of doors work. It would take a non-standard hinge for doors to open on the opposite side. Something like that would not normally be done for something like an closet.
              – Kevin
              2 days ago






            • 8




              Now that a picture has been added, it's clear that the type of hinges used do not have pins that can be removed, but this is still and answer that could help someone else.
              – JPhi1618
              2 days ago














            • 6




              Thinking outside the "closet"... just remove the door +1
              – Nelson
              Nov 30 at 0:20






            • 3




              Why do you think the hinges would be outside when it opens to the outside? My closet has the hinge systems on the inside, but the doors open to the outside
              – Ferrybig
              2 days ago






            • 1




              @Ferrybig a picture of the closet in the question would help. If it uses standard hinges, then they will be on the outside. (Butt, butterfly, etc) A barrel or concealed hinge will of course not have an outside hinge. Given the key, it's an older cabinet (so not a concealed hinge) which leaves the very common butt hinge, or comparatively rare barrel hinge, so it's a good bet that the hinge in this case is external.
              – Baldrickk
              2 days ago








            • 1




              @Ferrybig Zeiss is probably assuming that because that's how the vast majority of doors work. It would take a non-standard hinge for doors to open on the opposite side. Something like that would not normally be done for something like an closet.
              – Kevin
              2 days ago






            • 8




              Now that a picture has been added, it's clear that the type of hinges used do not have pins that can be removed, but this is still and answer that could help someone else.
              – JPhi1618
              2 days ago








            6




            6




            Thinking outside the "closet"... just remove the door +1
            – Nelson
            Nov 30 at 0:20




            Thinking outside the "closet"... just remove the door +1
            – Nelson
            Nov 30 at 0:20




            3




            3




            Why do you think the hinges would be outside when it opens to the outside? My closet has the hinge systems on the inside, but the doors open to the outside
            – Ferrybig
            2 days ago




            Why do you think the hinges would be outside when it opens to the outside? My closet has the hinge systems on the inside, but the doors open to the outside
            – Ferrybig
            2 days ago




            1




            1




            @Ferrybig a picture of the closet in the question would help. If it uses standard hinges, then they will be on the outside. (Butt, butterfly, etc) A barrel or concealed hinge will of course not have an outside hinge. Given the key, it's an older cabinet (so not a concealed hinge) which leaves the very common butt hinge, or comparatively rare barrel hinge, so it's a good bet that the hinge in this case is external.
            – Baldrickk
            2 days ago






            @Ferrybig a picture of the closet in the question would help. If it uses standard hinges, then they will be on the outside. (Butt, butterfly, etc) A barrel or concealed hinge will of course not have an outside hinge. Given the key, it's an older cabinet (so not a concealed hinge) which leaves the very common butt hinge, or comparatively rare barrel hinge, so it's a good bet that the hinge in this case is external.
            – Baldrickk
            2 days ago






            1




            1




            @Ferrybig Zeiss is probably assuming that because that's how the vast majority of doors work. It would take a non-standard hinge for doors to open on the opposite side. Something like that would not normally be done for something like an closet.
            – Kevin
            2 days ago




            @Ferrybig Zeiss is probably assuming that because that's how the vast majority of doors work. It would take a non-standard hinge for doors to open on the opposite side. Something like that would not normally be done for something like an closet.
            – Kevin
            2 days ago




            8




            8




            Now that a picture has been added, it's clear that the type of hinges used do not have pins that can be removed, but this is still and answer that could help someone else.
            – JPhi1618
            2 days ago




            Now that a picture has been added, it's clear that the type of hinges used do not have pins that can be removed, but this is still and answer that could help someone else.
            – JPhi1618
            2 days ago










            up vote
            14
            down vote













            Vintage locks employed two concepts, sometimes individually and sometimes together.



            A warded lock has structures within the lock, called warding, which are designed to fit in notches carved into the key. A quality warded lock will be constructed so that the only way for a key to reach the mechanism is for it to snake around some complicated warding, but many cheaper warded locks can be opened with a skeleton key, which is a key blank that is filed down to remove everything except one or two simple projections or pairs of projections that will operate the mechanism. The way to defeat a quality warded lock is to construct a key by starting with a suitable key blank, covering it with soot or similar material, attempting to open the lock, moving the key back and forth a little at the place it is blocked, carefully removing it, and looking for markings in the soot. Cut, file, or otherwise remove the parts of the key where the soot was marked by the warding and try again. Either the lock will open, or new markings will appear, which again need to be removed. This process can sometimes be slow and tedious, but one will end up with a usable key, greatly increasing the value of the lock to a collector.



            Lever locks have one or more levers that must be lifted to the correct height to allow the bolt to move. Lever locks will often have a different feel from warded locks, since warded locks will usually block the key before it has a chance to engage the mechanism, while lever locks will allow the key to engage the mechanism but will block the mechanism from moving fully unless the levers are lifted to the correct height. Many lever locks can be picked relatively easily with the proper tools, but picking would require using a pair of tools, with one being used to try to operate the mechanism which is blocked by the levers, while the other tool is used to try lifting the levers. Often, there will initially be one lever blocking the bolt; once that lever is moved to the right position (i.e. "set"), the bolt will be able to move a little bit before being blocked by another lever. If the bolt is kept under tension, this will rather conveniently hold the first lever in place while the picker focuses attention on the next lever that needs to be set.



            The best locks combine these two approaches, requiring intricately-cut keys which need to move several different levers simultaneously by relatively precise amounts. Such locks are much more expensive to manufacture than current designs. Although they may be as secure or even more so than most recent locks, the additional security they offer is not sufficient to justify their cost.



            I would not expect a closet door to have a particularly high-quality lock. If the lock uses warding to distinguish correct and incorrect keys, picking with crude tools may be easy. If it uses levers for that purpose, picking will require the simultaneous use of two tools that are designed to work together. There are many youtube videos and web tutorials that would explain how to make the required tools. If you can find some old keys that look like they would fit, I would suggest trying them and seeing what happens. If the key is blocked by something in the lock without engaging a mechanism, you probably have a warded lock. If the key engages the mechanism but the mechanism itself feels blocked, it's probably a lever lock.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            supercat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.






















              up vote
              14
              down vote













              Vintage locks employed two concepts, sometimes individually and sometimes together.



              A warded lock has structures within the lock, called warding, which are designed to fit in notches carved into the key. A quality warded lock will be constructed so that the only way for a key to reach the mechanism is for it to snake around some complicated warding, but many cheaper warded locks can be opened with a skeleton key, which is a key blank that is filed down to remove everything except one or two simple projections or pairs of projections that will operate the mechanism. The way to defeat a quality warded lock is to construct a key by starting with a suitable key blank, covering it with soot or similar material, attempting to open the lock, moving the key back and forth a little at the place it is blocked, carefully removing it, and looking for markings in the soot. Cut, file, or otherwise remove the parts of the key where the soot was marked by the warding and try again. Either the lock will open, or new markings will appear, which again need to be removed. This process can sometimes be slow and tedious, but one will end up with a usable key, greatly increasing the value of the lock to a collector.



              Lever locks have one or more levers that must be lifted to the correct height to allow the bolt to move. Lever locks will often have a different feel from warded locks, since warded locks will usually block the key before it has a chance to engage the mechanism, while lever locks will allow the key to engage the mechanism but will block the mechanism from moving fully unless the levers are lifted to the correct height. Many lever locks can be picked relatively easily with the proper tools, but picking would require using a pair of tools, with one being used to try to operate the mechanism which is blocked by the levers, while the other tool is used to try lifting the levers. Often, there will initially be one lever blocking the bolt; once that lever is moved to the right position (i.e. "set"), the bolt will be able to move a little bit before being blocked by another lever. If the bolt is kept under tension, this will rather conveniently hold the first lever in place while the picker focuses attention on the next lever that needs to be set.



              The best locks combine these two approaches, requiring intricately-cut keys which need to move several different levers simultaneously by relatively precise amounts. Such locks are much more expensive to manufacture than current designs. Although they may be as secure or even more so than most recent locks, the additional security they offer is not sufficient to justify their cost.



              I would not expect a closet door to have a particularly high-quality lock. If the lock uses warding to distinguish correct and incorrect keys, picking with crude tools may be easy. If it uses levers for that purpose, picking will require the simultaneous use of two tools that are designed to work together. There are many youtube videos and web tutorials that would explain how to make the required tools. If you can find some old keys that look like they would fit, I would suggest trying them and seeing what happens. If the key is blocked by something in the lock without engaging a mechanism, you probably have a warded lock. If the key engages the mechanism but the mechanism itself feels blocked, it's probably a lever lock.






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              supercat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.




















                up vote
                14
                down vote










                up vote
                14
                down vote









                Vintage locks employed two concepts, sometimes individually and sometimes together.



                A warded lock has structures within the lock, called warding, which are designed to fit in notches carved into the key. A quality warded lock will be constructed so that the only way for a key to reach the mechanism is for it to snake around some complicated warding, but many cheaper warded locks can be opened with a skeleton key, which is a key blank that is filed down to remove everything except one or two simple projections or pairs of projections that will operate the mechanism. The way to defeat a quality warded lock is to construct a key by starting with a suitable key blank, covering it with soot or similar material, attempting to open the lock, moving the key back and forth a little at the place it is blocked, carefully removing it, and looking for markings in the soot. Cut, file, or otherwise remove the parts of the key where the soot was marked by the warding and try again. Either the lock will open, or new markings will appear, which again need to be removed. This process can sometimes be slow and tedious, but one will end up with a usable key, greatly increasing the value of the lock to a collector.



                Lever locks have one or more levers that must be lifted to the correct height to allow the bolt to move. Lever locks will often have a different feel from warded locks, since warded locks will usually block the key before it has a chance to engage the mechanism, while lever locks will allow the key to engage the mechanism but will block the mechanism from moving fully unless the levers are lifted to the correct height. Many lever locks can be picked relatively easily with the proper tools, but picking would require using a pair of tools, with one being used to try to operate the mechanism which is blocked by the levers, while the other tool is used to try lifting the levers. Often, there will initially be one lever blocking the bolt; once that lever is moved to the right position (i.e. "set"), the bolt will be able to move a little bit before being blocked by another lever. If the bolt is kept under tension, this will rather conveniently hold the first lever in place while the picker focuses attention on the next lever that needs to be set.



                The best locks combine these two approaches, requiring intricately-cut keys which need to move several different levers simultaneously by relatively precise amounts. Such locks are much more expensive to manufacture than current designs. Although they may be as secure or even more so than most recent locks, the additional security they offer is not sufficient to justify their cost.



                I would not expect a closet door to have a particularly high-quality lock. If the lock uses warding to distinguish correct and incorrect keys, picking with crude tools may be easy. If it uses levers for that purpose, picking will require the simultaneous use of two tools that are designed to work together. There are many youtube videos and web tutorials that would explain how to make the required tools. If you can find some old keys that look like they would fit, I would suggest trying them and seeing what happens. If the key is blocked by something in the lock without engaging a mechanism, you probably have a warded lock. If the key engages the mechanism but the mechanism itself feels blocked, it's probably a lever lock.






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                supercat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.









                Vintage locks employed two concepts, sometimes individually and sometimes together.



                A warded lock has structures within the lock, called warding, which are designed to fit in notches carved into the key. A quality warded lock will be constructed so that the only way for a key to reach the mechanism is for it to snake around some complicated warding, but many cheaper warded locks can be opened with a skeleton key, which is a key blank that is filed down to remove everything except one or two simple projections or pairs of projections that will operate the mechanism. The way to defeat a quality warded lock is to construct a key by starting with a suitable key blank, covering it with soot or similar material, attempting to open the lock, moving the key back and forth a little at the place it is blocked, carefully removing it, and looking for markings in the soot. Cut, file, or otherwise remove the parts of the key where the soot was marked by the warding and try again. Either the lock will open, or new markings will appear, which again need to be removed. This process can sometimes be slow and tedious, but one will end up with a usable key, greatly increasing the value of the lock to a collector.



                Lever locks have one or more levers that must be lifted to the correct height to allow the bolt to move. Lever locks will often have a different feel from warded locks, since warded locks will usually block the key before it has a chance to engage the mechanism, while lever locks will allow the key to engage the mechanism but will block the mechanism from moving fully unless the levers are lifted to the correct height. Many lever locks can be picked relatively easily with the proper tools, but picking would require using a pair of tools, with one being used to try to operate the mechanism which is blocked by the levers, while the other tool is used to try lifting the levers. Often, there will initially be one lever blocking the bolt; once that lever is moved to the right position (i.e. "set"), the bolt will be able to move a little bit before being blocked by another lever. If the bolt is kept under tension, this will rather conveniently hold the first lever in place while the picker focuses attention on the next lever that needs to be set.



                The best locks combine these two approaches, requiring intricately-cut keys which need to move several different levers simultaneously by relatively precise amounts. Such locks are much more expensive to manufacture than current designs. Although they may be as secure or even more so than most recent locks, the additional security they offer is not sufficient to justify their cost.



                I would not expect a closet door to have a particularly high-quality lock. If the lock uses warding to distinguish correct and incorrect keys, picking with crude tools may be easy. If it uses levers for that purpose, picking will require the simultaneous use of two tools that are designed to work together. There are many youtube videos and web tutorials that would explain how to make the required tools. If you can find some old keys that look like they would fit, I would suggest trying them and seeing what happens. If the key is blocked by something in the lock without engaging a mechanism, you probably have a warded lock. If the key engages the mechanism but the mechanism itself feels blocked, it's probably a lever lock.







                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                supercat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer






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                answered Nov 29 at 20:34









                supercat

                24112




                24112




                New contributor




                supercat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                New contributor





                supercat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                    up vote
                    13
                    down vote













                    I should suggest trying a bobbypin or a smaller flathead screwdriver if you'd like to save it. From my experience, these types of locks are very easily opened, even with almost no skill in lockpicking. After all, you might find the key again.



                    Another option could be to drill out the center of the lock, therein making it very easy to open the door. This would, of course, entirely destroy the lock, but you have already said this is not an issue.






                    share|improve this answer








                    New contributor




                    Paul Beverage is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                    • 1




                      I was maybe 10 years old and grandma used to store chocolates and condensed milk on a closet with a similar key/lock. It was easy to open and close it with a strong paper clip :)
                      – brasofilo
                      2 days ago








                    • 2




                      I'm not sure drilling the centre is going to help. You'll just destroy the mechanism but the bolt will still be in place.
                      – chasly from UK
                      yesterday










                    • @chaslyfromUK Then you can turn it sideways and shake and the bolt will slide out.
                      – wizzwizz4
                      yesterday















                    up vote
                    13
                    down vote













                    I should suggest trying a bobbypin or a smaller flathead screwdriver if you'd like to save it. From my experience, these types of locks are very easily opened, even with almost no skill in lockpicking. After all, you might find the key again.



                    Another option could be to drill out the center of the lock, therein making it very easy to open the door. This would, of course, entirely destroy the lock, but you have already said this is not an issue.






                    share|improve this answer








                    New contributor




                    Paul Beverage is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.














                    • 1




                      I was maybe 10 years old and grandma used to store chocolates and condensed milk on a closet with a similar key/lock. It was easy to open and close it with a strong paper clip :)
                      – brasofilo
                      2 days ago








                    • 2




                      I'm not sure drilling the centre is going to help. You'll just destroy the mechanism but the bolt will still be in place.
                      – chasly from UK
                      yesterday










                    • @chaslyfromUK Then you can turn it sideways and shake and the bolt will slide out.
                      – wizzwizz4
                      yesterday













                    up vote
                    13
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    13
                    down vote









                    I should suggest trying a bobbypin or a smaller flathead screwdriver if you'd like to save it. From my experience, these types of locks are very easily opened, even with almost no skill in lockpicking. After all, you might find the key again.



                    Another option could be to drill out the center of the lock, therein making it very easy to open the door. This would, of course, entirely destroy the lock, but you have already said this is not an issue.






                    share|improve this answer








                    New contributor




                    Paul Beverage is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                    I should suggest trying a bobbypin or a smaller flathead screwdriver if you'd like to save it. From my experience, these types of locks are very easily opened, even with almost no skill in lockpicking. After all, you might find the key again.



                    Another option could be to drill out the center of the lock, therein making it very easy to open the door. This would, of course, entirely destroy the lock, but you have already said this is not an issue.







                    share|improve this answer








                    New contributor




                    Paul Beverage is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer






                    New contributor




                    Paul Beverage is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                    answered Nov 29 at 16:10









                    Paul Beverage

                    2635




                    2635




                    New contributor




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                    New contributor





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                    • 1




                      I was maybe 10 years old and grandma used to store chocolates and condensed milk on a closet with a similar key/lock. It was easy to open and close it with a strong paper clip :)
                      – brasofilo
                      2 days ago








                    • 2




                      I'm not sure drilling the centre is going to help. You'll just destroy the mechanism but the bolt will still be in place.
                      – chasly from UK
                      yesterday










                    • @chaslyfromUK Then you can turn it sideways and shake and the bolt will slide out.
                      – wizzwizz4
                      yesterday














                    • 1




                      I was maybe 10 years old and grandma used to store chocolates and condensed milk on a closet with a similar key/lock. It was easy to open and close it with a strong paper clip :)
                      – brasofilo
                      2 days ago








                    • 2




                      I'm not sure drilling the centre is going to help. You'll just destroy the mechanism but the bolt will still be in place.
                      – chasly from UK
                      yesterday










                    • @chaslyfromUK Then you can turn it sideways and shake and the bolt will slide out.
                      – wizzwizz4
                      yesterday








                    1




                    1




                    I was maybe 10 years old and grandma used to store chocolates and condensed milk on a closet with a similar key/lock. It was easy to open and close it with a strong paper clip :)
                    – brasofilo
                    2 days ago






                    I was maybe 10 years old and grandma used to store chocolates and condensed milk on a closet with a similar key/lock. It was easy to open and close it with a strong paper clip :)
                    – brasofilo
                    2 days ago






                    2




                    2




                    I'm not sure drilling the centre is going to help. You'll just destroy the mechanism but the bolt will still be in place.
                    – chasly from UK
                    yesterday




                    I'm not sure drilling the centre is going to help. You'll just destroy the mechanism but the bolt will still be in place.
                    – chasly from UK
                    yesterday












                    @chaslyfromUK Then you can turn it sideways and shake and the bolt will slide out.
                    – wizzwizz4
                    yesterday




                    @chaslyfromUK Then you can turn it sideways and shake and the bolt will slide out.
                    – wizzwizz4
                    yesterday










                    up vote
                    8
                    down vote













                    The original image of the key is interesting to me. You could just wander into the local locksmith and ask if they have a set of keys that might fit. There's a limited number of variants on these keys and you may just be able to buy one off the shelf as the lock is only a token gesture towards security.



                    If you're not overly attached to the lock, there's the question of how firmly it's attached. many cabinet locks are lightly attached to the inside of the door and if you attach a decent handle to the outside you could possibly just force it open. Though the hinges are quite heavy duty which implies a more solid door and lock mechanism.






                    share|improve this answer

























                      up vote
                      8
                      down vote













                      The original image of the key is interesting to me. You could just wander into the local locksmith and ask if they have a set of keys that might fit. There's a limited number of variants on these keys and you may just be able to buy one off the shelf as the lock is only a token gesture towards security.



                      If you're not overly attached to the lock, there's the question of how firmly it's attached. many cabinet locks are lightly attached to the inside of the door and if you attach a decent handle to the outside you could possibly just force it open. Though the hinges are quite heavy duty which implies a more solid door and lock mechanism.






                      share|improve this answer























                        up vote
                        8
                        down vote










                        up vote
                        8
                        down vote









                        The original image of the key is interesting to me. You could just wander into the local locksmith and ask if they have a set of keys that might fit. There's a limited number of variants on these keys and you may just be able to buy one off the shelf as the lock is only a token gesture towards security.



                        If you're not overly attached to the lock, there's the question of how firmly it's attached. many cabinet locks are lightly attached to the inside of the door and if you attach a decent handle to the outside you could possibly just force it open. Though the hinges are quite heavy duty which implies a more solid door and lock mechanism.






                        share|improve this answer












                        The original image of the key is interesting to me. You could just wander into the local locksmith and ask if they have a set of keys that might fit. There's a limited number of variants on these keys and you may just be able to buy one off the shelf as the lock is only a token gesture towards security.



                        If you're not overly attached to the lock, there's the question of how firmly it's attached. many cabinet locks are lightly attached to the inside of the door and if you attach a decent handle to the outside you could possibly just force it open. Though the hinges are quite heavy duty which implies a more solid door and lock mechanism.







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered 2 days ago









                        Separatrix

                        1913




                        1913






















                            up vote
                            7
                            down vote













                            Other suggested methods of removing the hinge pins or picking the locks are good.



                            You can also try to depress the latch via a thin wire if the door opens out or a thin plastic card if the door opens inward. What you goal would be is to depress the latch as if the door were closing on its own.






                            share|improve this answer










                            New contributor




                            Gary Bak is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                            • 2




                              This is what used to be call "jimmying" the door, then later came be "carding" the lock. Works well for simple locksets intended for interior doors.
                              – Zeiss Ikon
                              Nov 29 at 20:17






                            • 3




                              That won't work because it is a deadbolt, not the ones with a spring
                              – Guillermo Vasconcelos
                              Nov 29 at 20:28










                            • @GuillermoVasconcelos - yes my suggestion would not work then, picking seems like the best bet.
                              – Gary Bak
                              2 days ago










                            • In BrE, a "jimmy" (or "jemmy") is usually a crowbar; it's not even vaguely the same as using a wire or card on the latch.
                              – Roger Lipscombe
                              2 days ago










                            • @RogerLipscombe Can't talk to older history, but when I was a kid, a jimmy was what later became a "slim jim" -- mainly for opening car doors when the key was locked inside. Thin and flexible. Still won't work on a deadbolt, though.
                              – Zeiss Ikon
                              2 days ago















                            up vote
                            7
                            down vote













                            Other suggested methods of removing the hinge pins or picking the locks are good.



                            You can also try to depress the latch via a thin wire if the door opens out or a thin plastic card if the door opens inward. What you goal would be is to depress the latch as if the door were closing on its own.






                            share|improve this answer










                            New contributor




                            Gary Bak is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                            Check out our Code of Conduct.














                            • 2




                              This is what used to be call "jimmying" the door, then later came be "carding" the lock. Works well for simple locksets intended for interior doors.
                              – Zeiss Ikon
                              Nov 29 at 20:17






                            • 3




                              That won't work because it is a deadbolt, not the ones with a spring
                              – Guillermo Vasconcelos
                              Nov 29 at 20:28










                            • @GuillermoVasconcelos - yes my suggestion would not work then, picking seems like the best bet.
                              – Gary Bak
                              2 days ago










                            • In BrE, a "jimmy" (or "jemmy") is usually a crowbar; it's not even vaguely the same as using a wire or card on the latch.
                              – Roger Lipscombe
                              2 days ago










                            • @RogerLipscombe Can't talk to older history, but when I was a kid, a jimmy was what later became a "slim jim" -- mainly for opening car doors when the key was locked inside. Thin and flexible. Still won't work on a deadbolt, though.
                              – Zeiss Ikon
                              2 days ago













                            up vote
                            7
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            7
                            down vote









                            Other suggested methods of removing the hinge pins or picking the locks are good.



                            You can also try to depress the latch via a thin wire if the door opens out or a thin plastic card if the door opens inward. What you goal would be is to depress the latch as if the door were closing on its own.






                            share|improve this answer










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                            Other suggested methods of removing the hinge pins or picking the locks are good.



                            You can also try to depress the latch via a thin wire if the door opens out or a thin plastic card if the door opens inward. What you goal would be is to depress the latch as if the door were closing on its own.







                            share|improve this answer










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                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited 2 days ago





















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                            answered Nov 29 at 20:07









                            Gary Bak

                            1712




                            1712




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                            • 2




                              This is what used to be call "jimmying" the door, then later came be "carding" the lock. Works well for simple locksets intended for interior doors.
                              – Zeiss Ikon
                              Nov 29 at 20:17






                            • 3




                              That won't work because it is a deadbolt, not the ones with a spring
                              – Guillermo Vasconcelos
                              Nov 29 at 20:28










                            • @GuillermoVasconcelos - yes my suggestion would not work then, picking seems like the best bet.
                              – Gary Bak
                              2 days ago










                            • In BrE, a "jimmy" (or "jemmy") is usually a crowbar; it's not even vaguely the same as using a wire or card on the latch.
                              – Roger Lipscombe
                              2 days ago










                            • @RogerLipscombe Can't talk to older history, but when I was a kid, a jimmy was what later became a "slim jim" -- mainly for opening car doors when the key was locked inside. Thin and flexible. Still won't work on a deadbolt, though.
                              – Zeiss Ikon
                              2 days ago














                            • 2




                              This is what used to be call "jimmying" the door, then later came be "carding" the lock. Works well for simple locksets intended for interior doors.
                              – Zeiss Ikon
                              Nov 29 at 20:17






                            • 3




                              That won't work because it is a deadbolt, not the ones with a spring
                              – Guillermo Vasconcelos
                              Nov 29 at 20:28










                            • @GuillermoVasconcelos - yes my suggestion would not work then, picking seems like the best bet.
                              – Gary Bak
                              2 days ago










                            • In BrE, a "jimmy" (or "jemmy") is usually a crowbar; it's not even vaguely the same as using a wire or card on the latch.
                              – Roger Lipscombe
                              2 days ago










                            • @RogerLipscombe Can't talk to older history, but when I was a kid, a jimmy was what later became a "slim jim" -- mainly for opening car doors when the key was locked inside. Thin and flexible. Still won't work on a deadbolt, though.
                              – Zeiss Ikon
                              2 days ago








                            2




                            2




                            This is what used to be call "jimmying" the door, then later came be "carding" the lock. Works well for simple locksets intended for interior doors.
                            – Zeiss Ikon
                            Nov 29 at 20:17




                            This is what used to be call "jimmying" the door, then later came be "carding" the lock. Works well for simple locksets intended for interior doors.
                            – Zeiss Ikon
                            Nov 29 at 20:17




                            3




                            3




                            That won't work because it is a deadbolt, not the ones with a spring
                            – Guillermo Vasconcelos
                            Nov 29 at 20:28




                            That won't work because it is a deadbolt, not the ones with a spring
                            – Guillermo Vasconcelos
                            Nov 29 at 20:28












                            @GuillermoVasconcelos - yes my suggestion would not work then, picking seems like the best bet.
                            – Gary Bak
                            2 days ago




                            @GuillermoVasconcelos - yes my suggestion would not work then, picking seems like the best bet.
                            – Gary Bak
                            2 days ago












                            In BrE, a "jimmy" (or "jemmy") is usually a crowbar; it's not even vaguely the same as using a wire or card on the latch.
                            – Roger Lipscombe
                            2 days ago




                            In BrE, a "jimmy" (or "jemmy") is usually a crowbar; it's not even vaguely the same as using a wire or card on the latch.
                            – Roger Lipscombe
                            2 days ago












                            @RogerLipscombe Can't talk to older history, but when I was a kid, a jimmy was what later became a "slim jim" -- mainly for opening car doors when the key was locked inside. Thin and flexible. Still won't work on a deadbolt, though.
                            – Zeiss Ikon
                            2 days ago




                            @RogerLipscombe Can't talk to older history, but when I was a kid, a jimmy was what later became a "slim jim" -- mainly for opening car doors when the key was locked inside. Thin and flexible. Still won't work on a deadbolt, though.
                            – Zeiss Ikon
                            2 days ago










                            up vote
                            2
                            down vote













                            Well, if you don't care about locking it again, I'd find my trusty old Fein multimaster cutter and just cut the lock open. Or if you want the gentle solution use a small hacksaw blade.






                            share|improve this answer





















                            • +1 to hacksaw. They cost pennies and you can easily fit the blade into that big gap
                              – Valorum
                              yesterday















                            up vote
                            2
                            down vote













                            Well, if you don't care about locking it again, I'd find my trusty old Fein multimaster cutter and just cut the lock open. Or if you want the gentle solution use a small hacksaw blade.






                            share|improve this answer





















                            • +1 to hacksaw. They cost pennies and you can easily fit the blade into that big gap
                              – Valorum
                              yesterday













                            up vote
                            2
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            2
                            down vote









                            Well, if you don't care about locking it again, I'd find my trusty old Fein multimaster cutter and just cut the lock open. Or if you want the gentle solution use a small hacksaw blade.






                            share|improve this answer












                            Well, if you don't care about locking it again, I'd find my trusty old Fein multimaster cutter and just cut the lock open. Or if you want the gentle solution use a small hacksaw blade.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 2 days ago









                            Stian Yttervik

                            1904




                            1904












                            • +1 to hacksaw. They cost pennies and you can easily fit the blade into that big gap
                              – Valorum
                              yesterday


















                            • +1 to hacksaw. They cost pennies and you can easily fit the blade into that big gap
                              – Valorum
                              yesterday
















                            +1 to hacksaw. They cost pennies and you can easily fit the blade into that big gap
                            – Valorum
                            yesterday




                            +1 to hacksaw. They cost pennies and you can easily fit the blade into that big gap
                            – Valorum
                            yesterday










                            up vote
                            1
                            down vote













                            Use a punch and hammer. Insert the punch where the key would go...use the hammer to drive the lock mechanism off the back of the door. A couple of good whacks and you should be wide open. Shame to bust it though..I would try the bobby pin method first.






                            share|improve this answer








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                              up vote
                              1
                              down vote













                              Use a punch and hammer. Insert the punch where the key would go...use the hammer to drive the lock mechanism off the back of the door. A couple of good whacks and you should be wide open. Shame to bust it though..I would try the bobby pin method first.






                              share|improve this answer








                              New contributor




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                                up vote
                                1
                                down vote










                                up vote
                                1
                                down vote









                                Use a punch and hammer. Insert the punch where the key would go...use the hammer to drive the lock mechanism off the back of the door. A couple of good whacks and you should be wide open. Shame to bust it though..I would try the bobby pin method first.






                                share|improve this answer








                                New contributor




                                dazrite is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                Use a punch and hammer. Insert the punch where the key would go...use the hammer to drive the lock mechanism off the back of the door. A couple of good whacks and you should be wide open. Shame to bust it though..I would try the bobby pin method first.







                                share|improve this answer








                                New contributor




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                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer






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                                answered 2 days ago









                                dazrite

                                111




                                111




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                                New contributor





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                                    up vote
                                    1
                                    down vote













                                    Is that a skylight window above the door? Perhaps you can gain access through it.



                                    I am not suggesting climbing in through the window -- that's probably not practical. But perhaps you can open it, and then with possibly reach through it with a stick or belt, open the lock from the inside.



                                    I am assuming the door has an inside lock latch (for safety) which you might be able to toggle with a broomstick.



                                    If such a latch is 'down' and you need to pull it 'up', a 1" eye-hook screwed into end of stick might give you the purchase you need to pull up on the latch. (You might need to screw the eye-hook in at 45degree angle on stick.)



                                    A knob would be much harder to turn, but perhaps you could buckle a couple of belts together into a 3-4' diameter loop which you dangle down from the skylight, perhaps with some resin on one of them to make it 'sticky', loop one end around the knob as if it was a pulley, then attempt to turn it.






                                    share|improve this answer








                                    New contributor




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                                      up vote
                                      1
                                      down vote













                                      Is that a skylight window above the door? Perhaps you can gain access through it.



                                      I am not suggesting climbing in through the window -- that's probably not practical. But perhaps you can open it, and then with possibly reach through it with a stick or belt, open the lock from the inside.



                                      I am assuming the door has an inside lock latch (for safety) which you might be able to toggle with a broomstick.



                                      If such a latch is 'down' and you need to pull it 'up', a 1" eye-hook screwed into end of stick might give you the purchase you need to pull up on the latch. (You might need to screw the eye-hook in at 45degree angle on stick.)



                                      A knob would be much harder to turn, but perhaps you could buckle a couple of belts together into a 3-4' diameter loop which you dangle down from the skylight, perhaps with some resin on one of them to make it 'sticky', loop one end around the knob as if it was a pulley, then attempt to turn it.






                                      share|improve this answer








                                      New contributor




                                      Ellies Dad is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.




















                                        up vote
                                        1
                                        down vote










                                        up vote
                                        1
                                        down vote









                                        Is that a skylight window above the door? Perhaps you can gain access through it.



                                        I am not suggesting climbing in through the window -- that's probably not practical. But perhaps you can open it, and then with possibly reach through it with a stick or belt, open the lock from the inside.



                                        I am assuming the door has an inside lock latch (for safety) which you might be able to toggle with a broomstick.



                                        If such a latch is 'down' and you need to pull it 'up', a 1" eye-hook screwed into end of stick might give you the purchase you need to pull up on the latch. (You might need to screw the eye-hook in at 45degree angle on stick.)



                                        A knob would be much harder to turn, but perhaps you could buckle a couple of belts together into a 3-4' diameter loop which you dangle down from the skylight, perhaps with some resin on one of them to make it 'sticky', loop one end around the knob as if it was a pulley, then attempt to turn it.






                                        share|improve this answer








                                        New contributor




                                        Ellies Dad is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                        Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                        Is that a skylight window above the door? Perhaps you can gain access through it.



                                        I am not suggesting climbing in through the window -- that's probably not practical. But perhaps you can open it, and then with possibly reach through it with a stick or belt, open the lock from the inside.



                                        I am assuming the door has an inside lock latch (for safety) which you might be able to toggle with a broomstick.



                                        If such a latch is 'down' and you need to pull it 'up', a 1" eye-hook screwed into end of stick might give you the purchase you need to pull up on the latch. (You might need to screw the eye-hook in at 45degree angle on stick.)



                                        A knob would be much harder to turn, but perhaps you could buckle a couple of belts together into a 3-4' diameter loop which you dangle down from the skylight, perhaps with some resin on one of them to make it 'sticky', loop one end around the knob as if it was a pulley, then attempt to turn it.







                                        share|improve this answer








                                        New contributor




                                        Ellies Dad is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer






                                        New contributor




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                                        answered yesterday









                                        Ellies Dad

                                        111




                                        111




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                                        New contributor





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                                            up vote
                                            0
                                            down vote














                                            1. One way is to cut horizontally through each hinge where the join is. Then the door will open outwards on the hinge side (provided it's not very stiff which is a problem anyway).


                                            2. Look on YouTube and you will find many videos showing you how to pick or bypass different kinds of lock.



                                            Example



                                            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiFj3_4ZJcA




                                            1. Get a quote from a qualified locksmith. They will do it in seconds without damaging anything. It might be worth the money. Otherwise you could be spending it on repairing the closet.






                                            share|improve this answer

























                                              up vote
                                              0
                                              down vote














                                              1. One way is to cut horizontally through each hinge where the join is. Then the door will open outwards on the hinge side (provided it's not very stiff which is a problem anyway).


                                              2. Look on YouTube and you will find many videos showing you how to pick or bypass different kinds of lock.



                                              Example



                                              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiFj3_4ZJcA




                                              1. Get a quote from a qualified locksmith. They will do it in seconds without damaging anything. It might be worth the money. Otherwise you could be spending it on repairing the closet.






                                              share|improve this answer























                                                up vote
                                                0
                                                down vote










                                                up vote
                                                0
                                                down vote










                                                1. One way is to cut horizontally through each hinge where the join is. Then the door will open outwards on the hinge side (provided it's not very stiff which is a problem anyway).


                                                2. Look on YouTube and you will find many videos showing you how to pick or bypass different kinds of lock.



                                                Example



                                                https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiFj3_4ZJcA




                                                1. Get a quote from a qualified locksmith. They will do it in seconds without damaging anything. It might be worth the money. Otherwise you could be spending it on repairing the closet.






                                                share|improve this answer













                                                1. One way is to cut horizontally through each hinge where the join is. Then the door will open outwards on the hinge side (provided it's not very stiff which is a problem anyway).


                                                2. Look on YouTube and you will find many videos showing you how to pick or bypass different kinds of lock.



                                                Example



                                                https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiFj3_4ZJcA




                                                1. Get a quote from a qualified locksmith. They will do it in seconds without damaging anything. It might be worth the money. Otherwise you could be spending it on repairing the closet.







                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered yesterday









                                                chasly from UK

                                                8982711




                                                8982711






















                                                    up vote
                                                    -1
                                                    down vote













                                                    If you were inside the cupboard with a table, what I would do is Bang your head against the wall until its sore, saw the table in half.
                                                    Two halves make a whole. Climb through the hole and your in !
                                                    (I still don't understand why my computer can't calculate I=V/R where R=0. but -0 is ok (ie OK like -0 even exists ? ... urgggh! )






                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                    New contributor




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                                                    • Yeah, very funny. Not exactly a new joke. And certainly not an answer.
                                                      – Stephie
                                                      18 hours ago

















                                                    up vote
                                                    -1
                                                    down vote













                                                    If you were inside the cupboard with a table, what I would do is Bang your head against the wall until its sore, saw the table in half.
                                                    Two halves make a whole. Climb through the hole and your in !
                                                    (I still don't understand why my computer can't calculate I=V/R where R=0. but -0 is ok (ie OK like -0 even exists ? ... urgggh! )






                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                    New contributor




                                                    baz the spaz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.


















                                                    • Yeah, very funny. Not exactly a new joke. And certainly not an answer.
                                                      – Stephie
                                                      18 hours ago















                                                    up vote
                                                    -1
                                                    down vote










                                                    up vote
                                                    -1
                                                    down vote









                                                    If you were inside the cupboard with a table, what I would do is Bang your head against the wall until its sore, saw the table in half.
                                                    Two halves make a whole. Climb through the hole and your in !
                                                    (I still don't understand why my computer can't calculate I=V/R where R=0. but -0 is ok (ie OK like -0 even exists ? ... urgggh! )






                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                    New contributor




                                                    baz the spaz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                                    If you were inside the cupboard with a table, what I would do is Bang your head against the wall until its sore, saw the table in half.
                                                    Two halves make a whole. Climb through the hole and your in !
                                                    (I still don't understand why my computer can't calculate I=V/R where R=0. but -0 is ok (ie OK like -0 even exists ? ... urgggh! )







                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                    New contributor




                                                    baz the spaz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                    share|improve this answer






                                                    New contributor




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                                                    answered 19 hours ago









                                                    baz the spaz

                                                    1




                                                    1




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                                                    • Yeah, very funny. Not exactly a new joke. And certainly not an answer.
                                                      – Stephie
                                                      18 hours ago




















                                                    • Yeah, very funny. Not exactly a new joke. And certainly not an answer.
                                                      – Stephie
                                                      18 hours ago


















                                                    Yeah, very funny. Not exactly a new joke. And certainly not an answer.
                                                    – Stephie
                                                    18 hours ago






                                                    Yeah, very funny. Not exactly a new joke. And certainly not an answer.
                                                    – Stephie
                                                    18 hours ago












                                                    Guillermo Vasconcelos is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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