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Lokko Manual Pick Gun / Snap Gun

Lokko Manual Pick Gun / Snap Gun

£ 1999
Delivery Sunday, Jun 21 Details
or fastest delivery Friday, Jun 19 Details
In stock (order now for earlier dispatch)
Delivery Sunday, Jun 21 Details
or fastest delivery Friday, Jun 19 Details
In stock (order now for earlier dispatch)
30 day returns. Secure Payments. Dispatches from the UK.

FREE Beginner Lock Pick Guide

Our short 30-page How to Pick Locks PDF online guide will be sent to you free after you purchase any lock pick set.

We do have 2 amazing real book upgrades customers love:

1. Illustrated 60 page Lock Picking Glossy Guide Booklet
2. Definitive 180 page Full Colour Visual Guide Book for all Lock Pickers

About This Item

  • Manual Gun: Snap-gun action with no batteries needed.
  • Needle Control: Practise timing, height and tension.
  • Spares Included: Spare needles for working parts.
  • Pin Cylinders: For suitable authorised practice locks.
  • Budget Route: Learn before moving to premium EPGs.

Beschreibung

Free UK delivery over £30Royal Mail dispatch30-day easy returnsBattery-free snap action
Manual pick gun

Snap the pins. Feel the bounce.

A manual pick gun is the classic kinetic route into pin tumbler locks. Hold light turning tension, slide the needle under the pin stack, and squeeze the trigger. The needle drives a sharp upward snap that knocks the driver pins toward the shear line together. Catch that moment of separation and the plug turns. Simple, lively kit, and a great way to feel how kinetic picking works. Spare needles are in the box.

Triggeryour hand sets the snap
UP actionflicks pins above the keyway
No batteriesalways ready to go
BudgetThis is a budget kinetic tool
Lokko manual pick gun on a white background showing the trigger and needle holder
What it is

Kinetic picking, controlled by your trigger finger

New to pick guns? Here is the short version. A standard pin tumbler lock keeps a row of spring-loaded pin stacks pressed across the shear line, which is the gap between the plug and the housing. Pick a lock by hand and you set those pins one at a time. A snap gun takes a different route: it sends a single kinetic jolt up through the whole row so the driver pins jump clear together, and the plug turns in that split second while you hold tension.

This Lokko model is the manual kind. The energy comes from your trigger pull, not a battery, so you control the strength and the timing of every snap. That makes it a budget, hands-on way to learn what kinetic feedback feels like before you decide whether a powered tool is worth it. Keep a spare needle to hand and you can practise for as long as you like.

Step 1

Tension first

Fit a tension wrench in the keyway and apply light, steady turning pressure. The plug should want to rotate.

Step 2

Place the needle

Slide the needle under the pin stack. This UP model sits the needle to flick pins that sit above the keyway.

Step 3

Snap and feel

Squeeze the trigger. The needle snaps up, the pins jump, and a clean snap with the right tension lets the plug turn.

See it work
Lokko manual pick gun angled to show the needle holder ready to snap

One tool, two jobs: tension and timing

The trigger does the loud part, but the win is in the rhythm. Snap, reset, ease the tension a touch, snap again. You are reading how the plug responds to each jolt and finding the tension that lets the pins stay set instead of dropping straight back.

Keep your turning pressure light. Too much tension binds the pins so the snap cannot lift them, and too little lets them fall back the instant the needle clears. That balance is the skill, and a manual gun is a forgiving place to practise it because your finger sets the pace.

Build the setup

Give the gun a wrench and something to open

A pick gun moves the pins, but it cannot turn the plug on its own, so a tension wrench is essential. If your kit needs one, the Lokko 5-piece tension tool set covers it. For visible, satisfying practice, pair it with the Dangerfield Eureka training locks so you can watch the pins behave through clear acrylic. And when you want a motor to do the snapping, the Dangerfield Machina electric pick gun is the EPG upgrade with adjustable power and rapid repeat snaps.

Needs a wrenchThe gun handles the pins, the tension tool turns the plug.
Practice locksA clear training lock shows you exactly what each snap does.
Upgrade pathWant powered, repeating snaps later? Step up to the Machina EPG.
Low-cost entryAn affordable way to learn whether kinetic picking suits you.
Details

Specs and use notes

Brand Lokko
Tool type Manual lock pick gun / snap gun
Action UP action for pins above the keyway. Rotate the tool when the pin stack sits below the keyway.
Power Manual trigger, no batteries or charging
In the box Manual pick gun plus spare needles
Weight Approx. 0.18 kg / 6.3 oz
Best use Pin-cylinder practice and learning kinetic snap-gun feel
Technique note Use a tension tool and light, controlled turning pressure.
SKU GO-PICKG-MAN
Close detail of the Lokko manual pick gun handle and trigger
Trigger and handle detail. Your finger supplies the snap, so you control every shot.
The real reason to buy is the job: a low-cost, battery-free way to feel kinetic picking, send a controlled snap through a pin stack, and learn the tension balance that makes a gun work. Needles are working parts, so keep the spares handy and inspect them now and then.
FAQ

Questions buyers usually ask

What is a manual pick gun used for?

It is for pin-cylinder practice. A snapping needle bounces the pin stack while you hold light turning tension, so the plug can turn in the moment the pins jump clear of the shear line.

What do I need to use it?

A tension wrench. The gun moves the pins, and the wrench gives the plug the turning pressure it needs. If your kit does not have one yet, the linked Lokko tension tool set covers it.

What does the UP model mean?

It flicks the needle upward, which suits pins that sit above the keyway. For pins below the keyway, rotate the tool so the snap drives in the right direction.

Can beginners use it?

Yes. Start on a simple practice lock you can already open by hand, keep the tension very light, and let the trigger teach you how kinetic feedback feels. Results still come down to technique, tension, and the lock, so treat it as a skill you build.

How is this different from an electric pick gun?

Your hand powers this one, one snap per trigger pull. An EPG like the Machina uses a motor for rapid, repeating snaps and adjustable strength. This manual gun is the budget, mechanical way in. The EPG is the upgrade.

A mechanical route into pick-gun work

Fit the needle, set light tension with a proper wrench, and let the trigger teach you how kinetic feedback feels. Simple kit, lively snap, an honest first taste of kinetic picking. Use lock picking tools responsibly, only on locks you own or have permission to open, and check local laws before buying.

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Lokko manual pick gun on a white background showing the trigger and needle holder
GOSO

Lokko Manual Pick Gun / Snap Gun

£ 19.99
Free UK delivery over £30Royal Mail dispatch30-day easy returnsBattery-free snap action
Manual pick gun

Snap the pins. Feel the bounce.

A manual pick gun is the classic kinetic route into pin tumbler locks. Hold light turning tension, slide the needle under the pin stack, and squeeze the trigger. The needle drives a sharp upward snap that knocks the driver pins toward the shear line together. Catch that moment of separation and the plug turns. Simple, lively kit, and a great way to feel how kinetic picking works. Spare needles are in the box.

Triggeryour hand sets the snap
UP actionflicks pins above the keyway
No batteriesalways ready to go
BudgetThis is a budget kinetic tool
Lokko manual pick gun on a white background showing the trigger and needle holder
What it is

Kinetic picking, controlled by your trigger finger

New to pick guns? Here is the short version. A standard pin tumbler lock keeps a row of spring-loaded pin stacks pressed across the shear line, which is the gap between the plug and the housing. Pick a lock by hand and you set those pins one at a time. A snap gun takes a different route: it sends a single kinetic jolt up through the whole row so the driver pins jump clear together, and the plug turns in that split second while you hold tension.

This Lokko model is the manual kind. The energy comes from your trigger pull, not a battery, so you control the strength and the timing of every snap. That makes it a budget, hands-on way to learn what kinetic feedback feels like before you decide whether a powered tool is worth it. Keep a spare needle to hand and you can practise for as long as you like.

Step 1

Tension first

Fit a tension wrench in the keyway and apply light, steady turning pressure. The plug should want to rotate.

Step 2

Place the needle

Slide the needle under the pin stack. This UP model sits the needle to flick pins that sit above the keyway.

Step 3

Snap and feel

Squeeze the trigger. The needle snaps up, the pins jump, and a clean snap with the right tension lets the plug turn.

See it work
Lokko manual pick gun angled to show the needle holder ready to snap

One tool, two jobs: tension and timing

The trigger does the loud part, but the win is in the rhythm. Snap, reset, ease the tension a touch, snap again. You are reading how the plug responds to each jolt and finding the tension that lets the pins stay set instead of dropping straight back.

Keep your turning pressure light. Too much tension binds the pins so the snap cannot lift them, and too little lets them fall back the instant the needle clears. That balance is the skill, and a manual gun is a forgiving place to practise it because your finger sets the pace.

Build the setup

Give the gun a wrench and something to open

A pick gun moves the pins, but it cannot turn the plug on its own, so a tension wrench is essential. If your kit needs one, the Lokko 5-piece tension tool set covers it. For visible, satisfying practice, pair it with the Dangerfield Eureka training locks so you can watch the pins behave through clear acrylic. And when you want a motor to do the snapping, the Dangerfield Machina electric pick gun is the EPG upgrade with adjustable power and rapid repeat snaps.

Needs a wrenchThe gun handles the pins, the tension tool turns the plug.
Practice locksA clear training lock shows you exactly what each snap does.
Upgrade pathWant powered, repeating snaps later? Step up to the Machina EPG.
Low-cost entryAn affordable way to learn whether kinetic picking suits you.
Details

Specs and use notes

Brand Lokko
Tool type Manual lock pick gun / snap gun
Action UP action for pins above the keyway. Rotate the tool when the pin stack sits below the keyway.
Power Manual trigger, no batteries or charging
In the box Manual pick gun plus spare needles
Weight Approx. 0.18 kg / 6.3 oz
Best use Pin-cylinder practice and learning kinetic snap-gun feel
Technique note Use a tension tool and light, controlled turning pressure.
SKU GO-PICKG-MAN
Close detail of the Lokko manual pick gun handle and trigger
Trigger and handle detail. Your finger supplies the snap, so you control every shot.
The real reason to buy is the job: a low-cost, battery-free way to feel kinetic picking, send a controlled snap through a pin stack, and learn the tension balance that makes a gun work. Needles are working parts, so keep the spares handy and inspect them now and then.
FAQ

Questions buyers usually ask

What is a manual pick gun used for?

It is for pin-cylinder practice. A snapping needle bounces the pin stack while you hold light turning tension, so the plug can turn in the moment the pins jump clear of the shear line.

What do I need to use it?

A tension wrench. The gun moves the pins, and the wrench gives the plug the turning pressure it needs. If your kit does not have one yet, the linked Lokko tension tool set covers it.

What does the UP model mean?

It flicks the needle upward, which suits pins that sit above the keyway. For pins below the keyway, rotate the tool so the snap drives in the right direction.

Can beginners use it?

Yes. Start on a simple practice lock you can already open by hand, keep the tension very light, and let the trigger teach you how kinetic feedback feels. Results still come down to technique, tension, and the lock, so treat it as a skill you build.

How is this different from an electric pick gun?

Your hand powers this one, one snap per trigger pull. An EPG like the Machina uses a motor for rapid, repeating snaps and adjustable strength. This manual gun is the budget, mechanical way in. The EPG is the upgrade.

A mechanical route into pick-gun work

Fit the needle, set light tension with a proper wrench, and let the trigger teach you how kinetic feedback feels. Simple kit, lively snap, an honest first taste of kinetic picking. Use lock picking tools responsibly, only on locks you own or have permission to open, and check local laws before buying.

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