Skip to Content
Precision Trigger Control Lock Pick Gun - Dark Steel

Price:

41.22


Precision Access Automotive Jiggler Lockpick Set - Silver Steel
Precision Access Automotive Jiggler Lockpick Set - Silver Steel
12.15 12.15
Signal Lifeline Survival Paracord - Cardinal Red Camo
Signal Lifeline Survival Paracord - Cardinal Red Camo
4.02 4.02

Precision Control Lock Pick Gun - Dark Steel

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/9188/image_1920?unique=fd46d6c

11 sold in last 24 hours

This isn’t a toy lock gun; it’s a precision control lock pick tool built for techs who care about feel. The cold rolled steel frame and brass knurled wheel let you dial needle tension from light to heavy, so you can match feedback to the lock. Interchangeable needles and an included tension wrench make it a complete, field-ready lock picking system for professionals and serious hobbyists.

41.22 41.22 USD 41.22

LPG1

Not Available For Sale

5 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

Precision Control Lock Pick Gun for Serious Locksmith Work

The CIA Lockaid Tool is a professional-grade lock pick gun built for technicians who understand that control matters more than gimmicks. The cold rolled steel frame, brass tension wheel, and interchangeable needles give you a repeatable, tunable platform for working pin tumbler locks under real-world conditions. This is the lock pick gun you buy when you’re done playing with cheap throwaways.

Lock Pick Gun Mechanics: Why Adjustable Needle Tension Matters

Most entry-level lock pick guns are simple impact tools: pull the trigger, the needle snaps up, and you hope the lock sets before something bends. The Lockaid Tool takes a different approach. The brass knurled adjusting nut on the side controls needle tension, clearly marked from L to H. That means you decide how hard the needle strikes the pins.

On tighter, cleaner pin tumbler cylinders, you can run the needle light to feel the feedback and avoid oversetting. On grimy, high-friction locks, you can turn the adjuster toward H for a more decisive impact. Instead of one fixed behavior, the gun becomes a lock-picking system you can tune by lock type and condition.

Trigger Geometry and Impact Consistency

The curved trigger is set into a pistol-grip handle, giving you a familiar, stable hand position. That matters when you’re cycling the trigger repeatedly. A consistent index-finger pull translates into consistent needle strikes, and over time your muscle memory tunes to how this lock pick gun behaves. The riveted metal construction keeps flex to a minimum so the energy goes into the needle, not wasted in the frame.

Interchangeable Needles and Included Tension Wrench

The Lockaid Tool ships with multiple forked pick needles and an L-shaped tension wrench. The needles slide into the front slot of the gun, allowing quick swaps when a tip wears or you want a different geometry. The included wrench gives you the other half of the equation: stable, controlled torsion on the plug while the gun does the impact work. It’s a complete out-of-the-box kit for professional lock picking, not just a bare tool body.

Built Like a Shop Tool: Materials and Construction

Lock guns get abused. They ride in van drawers, get dropped on concrete, and bounce around in tool bags. That’s why the Lockaid Tool is built from cold rolled steel with a dark metal finish and riveted handle body. This isn’t a plastic-bodied gadget—it’s an industrial tool with real mass in the hand.

The brass knurled tension wheel doesn’t just look good; the metal-on-metal thread interface holds its setting even under repeated trigger pulls. The L/H marking on the body lets you quickly return to a preferred setting without guesswork. The LIFE LOCKAID branding is embossed into the side of the body instead of printed on, so it survives years of use.

Who This Lock Pick Gun Is Really For

The CIA Lockaid Tool is designed first for locksmiths and security professionals who need a reliable, repeatable method for rapidly working standard pin tumbler cylinders. It’s also a strong choice for serious hobby lock pickers who have already spent time with traditional picks and want to add an impact gun to their toolkit, without downgrading on quality.

If you’re looking for a novelty pick gun to play with once and throw in a drawer, this isn’t it. If you want a lock pick gun that rewards technique, lets you tune tension exactly where you want it, and stands up to years of shop use, the Lockaid Tool earns its place in your case.

Workflow in the Field

In actual use, you set light rotational tension on the lock with the included wrench, insert the appropriate needle, and dial in the brass wheel to match the lock’s feel. Then you work the trigger in controlled pulls, letting the needle strike the pins in quick succession. As sets register, you can feel the plug begin to turn under your fingers. The adjustable tension means you can back off if you’re oversetting or add force if you’re getting nothing but dead clicks.

Legal and Ethical Use of Lock Picking Tools

Owning and carrying a lock pick gun like the CIA Lockaid Tool is regulated differently depending on where you live. In many U.S. states, lock picks and lock guns are legal to own as long as you do not use them for criminal purposes. Some states, however, treat possession of lock picking tools as potential evidence of intent if you don’t have a legitimate locksmith, security, or hobby justification.

It’s your responsibility to understand the laws in your jurisdiction before you buy and carry any lock pick tool. Use the Lockaid Tool only on locks you own or have explicit permission to work on, and consider professional training if you’re adding this to a commercial locksmith workflow. Respect for legal and ethical boundaries is part of being a serious practitioner in this field.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (often called switchblades) are largely regulated by the Federal Switchblade Act, which focuses on interstate commerce and shipping rather than simple ownership. Many states allow some form of automatic knife ownership or carry, but the rules vary sharply: some restrict blade length, others limit carry to law enforcement or military, and a few still ban automatic knives outright. Before you buy an automatic knife or have an automatic knife for sale shipped to you, check both your state and local laws. Federal law also restricts mailing automatic knives through the U.S. Postal Service except for certain exempt categories like military and law enforcement.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

“Automatic knife” is the umbrella term: a folding or telescoping knife that opens by pressing a button, switch, or similar control in the handle. A switchblade is a specific legal term usually referring to side-opening automatic knives where the blade pivots out from the handle under spring tension. An OTF (out-the-front) knife is an automatic where the blade travels linearly out the front of the handle instead of swinging from the side. Many OTF knives are double-action automatic knives, meaning the same control deploys and retracts the blade; others are single-action, where the spring drives deployment and you manually reset the blade. All OTFs in this context are automatic knives, but not all automatic knives are OTFs.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

When you evaluate any automatic knife for sale, look past the marketing. The real value lives in three areas: the reliability of the action, the quality and heat treat of the steel, and the precision of the lockup. A serious automatic should fire decisively from any reasonable grip, with consistent lock engagement and no vertical play. Blade steel should be chosen and treated for the balance you care about—edge retention, toughness, or corrosion resistance—rather than a buzzword. Finally, examine the fit and finish: clean machining, centered blade, and a handle geometry that lets you control recoil when the spring drives the blade open. That’s what separates a collectible-grade automatic from a disposable switchblade.

Choosing Tools Like a Professional

Whether you’re selecting a lock pick gun like the CIA Lockaid Tool or hunting down the best automatic knife for EDC, the same principle applies: buy the tool whose mechanics you actually understand. The Lockaid Tool earns its spot because you can see and feel what the brass adjuster, steel body, and interchangeable needles are doing for your technique. That’s the same mindset that drives serious buyers when they decide which automatic knife for sale is worth their money and daily trust.

If you’re the kind of buyer who cares how the mechanism works—not just how it looks—you’re exactly who this tool was built for.

No Specifications