 Hello again this is Alex with my second lock which claims to be from the former Soviet Republic. This is a euro cylinder looking thing. There's the key for it. It should be in focus. Not very exciting bidding. There it is working with the key. It's actually reasonably smooth considering. Very high tolerances on the can there. The keys again are made of steel. Where did my little tool go? There we go. The body feels possibly vaguely ferrous but probably not. It may just be feeling possibly drill pins in there but I think this is probably all brass but the keys are clearly steel. Okay, there we go. Let's see what pick do we want to use. I should probably work this out before I start the camera. I'm going to diamond. Why not? I'll peters some diamond. I have no idea what kind of pins this has. All I know is it is capable of functioning so which is good because a lot of locks I get kind of don't know what I see. Let's see if it likes that better. Two, three is kind of springy. Four feels set. I need a five actually. A little thinner. Get these deep ones into that. So, this is the trial and error process we were discussing with threats this week. Interesting thing to remember is sometimes obviously the direction can matter because it will usually change the binding order but changing where you're applying, where and how you're applying tension to the plug can often change the behavior because it affects the the size of the shear line. I don't potentially the alignment depending on how crappy the lock is. But definitely obviously if you're pressing down on the thing that's gonna compress the shear line give you less room for things to set but you could also help things stay in place depends on the situation. Okay, that is a good set. A little bit of movement there. You can see the cylinder moving quite a lot up and down here. I'm not happy with that so far. So, pry bar. I've got much luck with this type of rig. I've been bidding on this thing since I happened to know it. It might, it's pretty flat. It might actually give me a better result. Ah, there it is. Raked, well I'd call that sort of raked open. There it is open and you can see that we can re-aim the camera. There it is open and again, oops, there's the key. Very difficult bidding. You can see why that little rake worked so well. Where'd it go? The sparrows, double hump, whatever from the Wiswasl collection. Well, that ran longer than I wanted it to but so it goes. So, Soviet or alleged Soviet Eurocylinder and yeah, kind of neat. Let me know if you, someone wants to borrow it and take a look at it. I did not feel any security pins, pretty standard. Alright, thanks for watching. Have fun. It's always, keep it legal. Cheers.