helicopterjim R.I.P. Posted September 2, 2007 Posted September 2, 2007 How to unlock your car with a Tennis Ball
DeBenGuzzi Posted September 2, 2007 Posted September 2, 2007 don't think that would work on newer cars, mine is a slide lock type on the side of the door and the wifes car has a pivot style one that is also on the side of the door. its possible but I think they are seperated from the keyhole and done with actuators and little metal bits not air pressure
WitchCityBallabio Posted September 2, 2007 Posted September 2, 2007 As a working locksmith, I can assure you that this wouldn't work. It would be funny watching someone pressing a tennis ball against their car doors for a while though.
helicopterjim R.I.P. Posted September 2, 2007 Author Posted September 2, 2007 As a working locksmith, I can assure you that this wouldn't work. It would be funny watching someone pressing a tennis ball against their car doors for a while though. I am thinking that the whole point of this video is to see how many people will try the technique.
JoeV11 Posted September 3, 2007 Posted September 3, 2007 It only works with lock buttons that go up and down. If you have to turn them it won't work. The air pressure forces the lock button up. Joe
DeBenGuzzi Posted September 3, 2007 Posted September 3, 2007 It only works with lock buttons that go up and down. If you have to turn them it won't work. The air pressure forces the lock button up. Joe Maybe if you had a 25,000 PSI tennis ball. better yet, fill the tennis ball with lead and use it to open the window.
pasotibbs Posted September 3, 2007 Posted September 3, 2007 Maybe if you had a 25,000 PSI tennis ball. better yet, fill the tennis ball with lead and use it to open the window. This is really old here in the UK (maybe 20 yr's), I remember it from when I was training as a mechanic, the son of a police officer told me he'd seen his father actually do this when someone locked themselves out of their car (he claimed the police kept finding half a tennis ball at car theft sites and finally worked out why!).I seem to remember it only worked on the central locking Fords of the time (which could explain why Cosworths were never where the owner left them ) but a workmate (the bouncing Czech ) says he heard it worked on some Skodas, I figured it must have been a weakness in the electrical contacts that fire the central locking motors rather than the lock itself (you don't have to unlock the car with the air pressure but just get the central locking to switch) but never tried it out because it could dent the door panel. The other one I heard is that with Porches you kick the boot floor hard and the doors unlock because its designed to unlock the if it thinks its been rear ended But it just could be a myth ?
luhbo Posted September 4, 2007 Posted September 4, 2007 No myth, just pneumatic central lock systems, at least twenty years ago or so.
Martin Barrett Posted September 4, 2007 Posted September 4, 2007 The half tennis ball is true, I always had a piece of packing binder strap coiled in my helmet, smooth knobs were the end of that.
quazi-moto Posted September 5, 2007 Posted September 5, 2007 If one didn't have a tennis ball handy could one just fart into the keyhole?
luhbo Posted September 5, 2007 Posted September 5, 2007 Well, I think the trick was not only the tennis ball, also the smile looked important. This could make for a good youtube entry, indeed Hubert
TX REDNECK (R.I.P.) Posted September 6, 2007 Posted September 6, 2007 This is for people who are gullible.
pasotibbs Posted September 6, 2007 Posted September 6, 2007 This is for people who are gullible. I think that the video is a fake but I still think that to truly bust the myth they needed to try a selection of cars and older models . As I said before this story has been around in the UK for 20yrs and if I remember correctly was only linked to the central locking Fords of that time. If the myth is true then as I've said before its probably due to the electrical contacts being closed by the air being forced through the central locking switch (usually mounted on the back of the lock barrel) rather than the lock itself being breached ? If only we knew a UK Police officer, then he could ask the Traffic Division if its true
grossohc Posted September 6, 2007 Posted September 6, 2007 If only we knew a UK Police officer, then he could ask the Traffic Division if its true See post 10
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now