 Okay. So I was attempting to open that Citadel lock on camera and just finding that I was mangling it and so I decided to leave it alone and let the next guy have a go at it and show you something else. This is also a mailbox lock that I got off of eBay completely unrelated to the other ones. This one says Eagle. I think some of the other ones say Yale. It has a Yale keyway. It came with keys and I picked it up in last night. I won't bother showing you that. It's a funny little lock. You can see it has this cam. Make sure you're still in frame, lighting, zoom, something. It has this little cam and that's the travel on it. So if I should have pulled the keys off before I started, but you can see it's picked open. There it is, reset. You can see the key just turns it that far. That's the full extent of the movement. So probably pulls a little latch out of the way on a door or something like that. So I thought I got it. It was giving me a little trouble opening it, but I suspect it was just the keyway. So let me zoom out and crank up the exposure a little bit so that you can see what the hell I'm doing. I'm happy with that. There we go. So the key in. The cam is held in by two flathead screws, which I've already started to loosen. It appears to be the only thing holding this together. This was sort of the nastiest looking of a bunch. It's overexposed a little bit, isn't it? Let's crank that down. The morning sunlight in my white background is conspiring to make this more difficult. Okay. So we take that off. I'm not taking one of these apart yet, so I'm not exactly sure what to expect. So there's that little cam. You can see the bottom of the key. Let me grab my sophisticated Styrofoam organizer here. Plug follower. Looks safe. Okay, that worked well. So here's the plug with the key pins. The key pins look like they might be not brass. Let's pop them out and see what we got. Focus. So I'm starting the first chamber. Where's the tweezers are? Elsewhere. Okay, well, we'll start with two then. Two. That's a big long one. That's probably not helping. So those are all normal. They do look a bit like they are steel. Get my little magnet and see what we got. Nope. So they may be nickel silver or they may be stainless. Who knows? And then let's have a look at the top pins. I have a feeling they're going to be equally unexciting. I've been trying to show off this plug follower that I use. It's a piece of aluminum round bar that I just filed a notch into for handling the backs of some of the plugs. And you can stay there for me. I like a solid follower because the pins have less of a tendency to go shooting out the back. And the little notch actually helps align things when you're reassembling the top pins. So there's there's pin top pin one also normal. I didn't really detect any serrated pins in this or security pins. Just top pin two and it's spring. Again, these appear to be some type of non-brass material but not ferrous steel or not sort of not to see how tiny that top pin is because of the bottom. So they're kind of balanced. That's the last one. The spring came at the bottom. All right. There's spring. There's that. Did I get any of that in frame? Yeah, I did. So funny little mailbox lock. There's the pins. Completely unimpressive. So no steel, no anti-drill, no nothing. Even the screws aren't ferrous. So screws appear to be brass actually. So one other little interesting thing. If you look at the key, there's the plug. It's really dirty. But if you look at the key, here's the first cut. One, two, three, four, five. You can see all this length. So there's this big dead area in here which just seems a little longer than a normal lock. You probably could have put another key pin in there. Not a hundred percent sure why they did that. But anyhow, the back of the plug is stamped with the code and the key. Since there's not much else interesting here, it has a code on it as well. And seven, one, five, nine, three, one, five, nine, three. It doesn't appear to be a direct bidding code. So that's just some other thing. And you can see USPS do not duplicate them above. So it's some type of postal, old postal lock. So on the reasonably shyness is because I haven't seen a lock of this sort of form factor before. Here's the little, the Bible and everything. I thought that was kind of neat and a little camera, just a piece of stamp sheet metal. Anyway, that's that. Got a bunch of these if someone wants to trade for one or just got one. Got probably about eight of them. So anyway, this is Alex. Have fun. Keep it legal. Thanks for watching. Bye-bye.