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Locksmith 101

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By workat.2009


Learning the Locksmith Craft


> Teaching the locksmith craft can begin at a very young age. When a child has an interest in the mechanics of things, in how things fit together and how they come apart, it can lead to a future with locks and other interesting mechanisms associated with locks.

The locksmith trade can be learned by experimenting, self-taught courses, apprenticeships, from a family member in the business, from videos, or through distance courses. It takes a combination of these things to advance to the professional status.

If you choose to learn by experimenting, you could be setting yourself up for suspicion if anyone knows of your skills and something is stolen from an area you visited. A lawsuit or jail time could ensue if the wrong person with a vendetta against you were to incriminate you falsely. Becoming certified may be a step towards a legitimate and positive image of your craft and your character.

Should you desire to become an apprentice from an established locksmith, it is best to determine that this person is certified. Know also that there are many aspects of the business to learn and you may need more training than an apprenticeship from one person. If that person specializes in automotive locksmithing and you desire to learn military locksmithing, you'll have a start in the right direction but will need more information and experience.

If you've considered becoming certified through a school or distance course, make sure that the school is certified and that the place where you purchase your distance course is legitimate and accredited. If the school is a sham, even though you may learn everything you need to know, it may make your certificate a sham as well. Your investment should be placed in respectable establishments.

Learning which area of locksmithing you'd be happiest choosing may require some research and/or experimentation. Even if you choose an area and later decide to change your focus, the knowledge you've acquired could still come in handy in your career path.

Courses in becoming a locksmith can take nine months to two years to complete. There is much to be learned through additional experience besides the courses. You'll need to update your knowledge and skills as time goes on.

The beginning of your career will usually involve books, hardware, and a key making machine. There are many helpful forums on the internet to point you in the right direction and provide helpful hints as well. Knowing which equipment to start with is a must. If you have a limited budget to begin with, you'll want to get the most from your money. You can't put all your money into the books and skip the key blanks. You'll need both.

Locksmiths service many types of businesses. Unlocking cars is not the only way to make money in the business. Many small towns don't even have locksmith services. If you can afford to run the business out of your home, you could be extremely helpful to people in rural communities. Building a name for yourself through word-of-mouth in small areas can lead to loyal customers who are happy to spread the word and advertise for you. This in turn leads to contracts with bigger businesses. Learning the locksmith craft involves people skills as well as book work.

The Cost of Being a Locksmith

A good, trustworthy locksmith must invest in more than just an education. But the bare minimum of education would cost close to $1000 for a home-study course, so the business does require an investment. The person must invest in themselves, their education, their equipment, their business location, advertising, insurance, and more.

Any business worth having is worth a quality investment. One might have to start out small with just the basics of everything and the cheapest of everything. As the business grows, the cost of running the business should also grow to improve the customer base and the modern technology as well as any refresher courses that may be necessary. An important point to consider is the quality of your equipment. If you can afford to invest in better equipment, it could save you money in the long run. Sometimes cheap supplies don't last long enough to make their purchase worthwhile.

Locksmith supplies are sold in many places, and it may pay to shop around. But the costs of being a locksmith will also be determined by what type of locksmith you would want to become. If you are only going to specialize in automotive work, you would not need to spend as much as you would if you were to invest in equipment for government security purposes.
Other costs of being a locksmith would include the sacrifices you would have to make to achieve the success you desire in the business. Being dedicated to learning the craft so that you can advance to the point where you can own a big business will leave less attention for other areas in your life. You must pay for your education, your tools, and your transportation. This may mean less money for family extras. Are you prepared to make sacrifices for the benefit of your future as a successful locksmith?

On the other hand, if it is only a small business you desire and the results don't need to come about soon, you may be able to learn slowly and still have plenty of time for your family life. If being a locksmith is only to be a hobby for you, there are even less sacrifices you would have to make.

There's also the issue of your business location. If your family would have to move for your business to flourish, other sacrifices could be at stake. If you live in an area where you wouldn't be able to work out of your home or where you wouldn't earn enough money to pay your work expenses, you face the choice of either putting your ideas of locksmithing aside or of uprooting your family. This means educational changes for children, possible career changes for the spouse, moving expenses, and so on.

Another cost of being a locksmith involves hiring employees. That leads to issues of worker's compensation, employee insurance, more paperwork, and time devoted to the hiring process. If you are determined and dedicated to the craft, you will be making an investment towards the future that could carry on for years to come. Weigh your options well. The cost may be overrun by the benefits!

What Are Some of the Dangers a Locksmith Faces?

Being a locksmith in today's world contains dangers as much for the locksmith as it does for the person who needs the locksmith services. People should be more suspicious of who they allow to work on locks for their businesses and homes because of the courage of today's criminals, the technology, and the availability of supplies that fall into the wrong hands. The locksmith has to be protected from false accusations, from being blamed for damage he or she did not do, and from being sued.

Being in the locksmith field of work is a career choice to take seriously and with pride for those who want to excel and be respected and recognized. As with any other career, there will be locksmiths who are trustworthy and reliable and those who are less worthy of the public's business.

For people who are forced to call a locksmith with no time for preparation to check into the different backgrounds of the locksmiths in an area, it can be a danger for their future sense of security. Anyone who has phobias or who is unnaturally suspicious could suffer severe health problems simply because they don't know how much they could trust the locksmith. A locksmith who is running the business as a sham can put the public in danger of theft, rapes, beatings, or even murder. The unknown can create problems mentally and emotionally for the person who is unstable.

Locksmith education is offered to anyone who is willing to pay for the course. This puts the public in danger because the student does not have to prove a criminal background before he or she is approved for the course.

There is also the danger the locksmith is put in because they have no assurances of the intent of the person for whom they are about to do business. The locksmith's safety is just as important as the safety of the customer. The locksmith must know their own rights and must be in charge of their own self-protection. Their reputation comes second to their own safety.

Locksmiths who are unfairly accused of wrong-doing are in danger of losing much-needed business. They must fight for their reputation and to be able to acquire new customers and keep them. The locksmith must also take precautions to arm themselves with the proper licenses, insurance, and certification as well as take steps to protect themselves physically.
There are dangers in having access knowledge to people's homes and businesses because of the potential for wrong-doing by trespassers, disgruntled family members or friends, divorcees in battle, unhappy business partners, and in being in any remote areas. Another danger lies in the locksmith hiring employees who may have questionable backgrounds. Besides the locksmith having to worry about protecting himself from his customers or other dangerous people or situations, he also has to protect himself from hiring the wrong employees.

Being a locksmith can be a profitable, enjoyable business with many rewards as long as the proper precautions are taken. Hiring a locksmith can safe and secure as long as the proper precautions are taken. Awareness pays off from both perspectives!

Things to Learn as a Locksmith

A locksmith must, of course, learn the basics of being a locksmith. The locksmith must learn the tools necessary, the machines used, the locks and systems on the market, key identification, panic hardware, electronic security, business security, home security, and tax information. The locksmith must also learn advertising, bookkeeping, employee information, hiring techniques, safety measures for him or herself, safety for the employees who will be left at the office, pricing, and customer relations.

Being a locksmith involves much more than a person might realize. This is a craft that is becoming more and more sophisticated as the technology and the laws increasingly become more complicated. The knowledge of the locksmith must change and grow with the business and the modern world.

Customer relations are important for any business. It is important to gain the trust and the respect of the customers to be able to maintain the business. The locksmith must learn how to respect the customers' privacy and private information. The locksmith must learn how to communicate effectively with the public.

Learning how to locksmith from an accredited institution is important both for the quality of information provided as well as the end results. If you learn locksmithing on your own through books or personal experimenting, you will not gain the necessary credibility to earn your place in the business world. This may gain you a very small following of customers, but it will also carry great risks. Knowing how to gain access into people's homes, businesses, and vehicles must be treated as highly confidential information.

It is possible to operate a small locksmith business. If you want to specialize in only automobiles, you can concentrate on an education and equipment for the locksmith knowledge for that particular field. You may want to expand your knowledge to focus on locksmithing for residences only or businesses only. Locksmiths have a choice of several areas to learn and specialize. You can choose to combine all the areas and learn one area at a time, expanding your knowledge and your business slowly.

One thing to remember when choosing the field of the locksmith is the demand in your area. How many locksmiths are already available? What are their specialties? Are there any public complaints about the local locksmith businesses? Are there any public needs that aren't being met? How can you put your business one level higher than those that are already available? Knowing which questions to ask is also an important learning step for a locksmith.

Being a locksmith can be very rewarding for the right person, but it is important to research the field to learn if this is the right business for you. Two more questions to ask while learning about being a locksmith are: what hours must you keep, and what demands will this field of work place on your family? The public can be unforgiving in times of desperation.

If a storm has damaged a home or a business, if a criminal has broken into a home or business, or if security system has malfunctioned, will you be able to accommodate the needs of your customers? As always, preparation is the key to success!

Tools and Equipment for Locksmiths

Locksmiths have to put several thousands of dollars into their tools and equipment investment. They may start out in the hundreds, but the cost will grow as the business grows. If a locksmith is interested in specializing in several areas, there are different tools for each area.

Aside from the normal tools of the trade, such as key blanks and a key making machine, a locksmith must break down the types of key blanks into different categories and buy other items to go along with these. Key blanks come as at least six different types of residential blanks (from $5 to over $50), ten brands of commercial key blanks, and automotive key blanks for domestic and foreign vehicles.

How is the locksmith to keep up with all the different keys? He/she must buy key tags, drawers, and key towers (tower only with no blanks, $500). These keys require key cutters. There are at least six different kinds of cutters. A manual duplicator costs $400-$600. A semi-automatic duplicator costs $655-$1600. An automatic duplicator costs $800-$1300. A tubular key duplicator costs $400-$1200. Code cutters cost $1900-$3100. Then there are your cutter wheels which cost in the range of $33-$340.

A locksmith must buy pins, pinning kits, picks, pick sets, tension wrenches, and many different locks. There are hospital locks, government locks, gate locks, electronic hardware, furniture locks, biometric fingerprint locks, and electromagnetic locks ($200-$700).

Every locksmith who has trained with a distance school will know about Kwikset locks and IICO key making machines. These are standard equipment for locksmiths-in-training. There are academies that teach courses on a course-by-course basis to further educate the craftsmen.

There are also transponder keys that require a code machine to code the key for the vehicles to work in the ignition. Newer model vehicles with added security methods use electromagnetic fields of energy that are sent to a computer in the car. (This is an example of technology and computers sneaking into yet another area of our lives.) Coding keys in this manner is a way to increase security for the automobile owner as well as reduce costs for the insurance companies.
There are older vehicles still in operation that require the simple use of the Slim Jim tool, so a locksmith must keep older tools around as well. Besides accommodating people who can't afford the newer, more sophisticated vehicles, there are collectors of antiques who won't want their cars damaged. So, the locksmith must know how to open the vehicles in a way that causes the least amount of forced entry. Even people who don't own expensive cars are proud of what they own and won't appreciate damage.

As is evident, there is much for a professional locksmith to learn. Much of it can be retained by repetition. There are many locks that use the same tools and methods to unlock. But for the loads of information that can't be retained, the locksmith must rely on paper tools. These exist in the manuals and written information that must be kept for reference purposes.

Being a Woman Locksmith

Being a locksmith is certainly not determined by whether or not a person is a man or a woman. Women who are interested in the field do face challenges a man doesn't necessarily face, but they aren't disqualified from becoming locksmiths solely because of their gender. Women are capable of performing the mechanical tasks the job requires and a few women over the years have bridged the gender gap to excel in the field.

If someone prefers to be in a career such as a locksmith, they will deal less with the public than they would if they were in a job such as waitressing or teaching. It is more of a one-on-one, in-the-shadows type of position. Although it does put a person in the public eye, it is not a socially demanding position.

There are female locksmiths in several parts of the world. There is one in Russia, one in North Carolina, one in England, one in California, and one in Rhode Island. There are very few documented in history, and the ones who are have low profiles. One of the few and most highly-esteemed women who have made history as a locksmith is Billie Boyd. She is noted as the first female locksmith in the Corps. Also chosen to be an official lockmaster and the second female for such a position in the Corps is Bernadette LeBleu. Both women can attest to the hurdles of having to prove themselves in a male dominated field. Women lock pickers enjoy the challenge and attend the conventions and events, but they are not given the public attention as these two women have been. Billie Boyd and Bernadette LeBleu have made locksmithing their dedicated career choice.

Some of the battles a woman locksmith would have to face include prejudice against their abilities, sexual harassment or insults, compromise of personal safety, being taken seriously in the profession, and being able to gain the deserved respect.
More is known about the women who compete in warfare than is known about women locksmiths. Apparently feminism has had little intrusion into this particular area. As a general rule, mechanical engineering is a field that leans towards the man's thought process rather than the woman's. The appeal just isn't there for most women.

One famous female who is not yet considered old enough to be a woman is an 11 year old lock picker recognized at an event held for amateurs and professionals alike. She wowed the adults at the Locksport International DEFCON 14 event, picking up the talent quickly in the competitions. There can always be an exception to the norm.

Being a woman locksmith has its advantages since there are so few women in the trade. A woman who does perform exceptionally will stand out more than usual because there are so few other women to compete. While there may be some drawbacks to such a career, there is also much to be respected about it. The type of personality required to perform the tasks must be the type to respect the privacy of others, be willing to be on call for emergencies, and be willing to work alone in many instances.

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