Combination Lock Picks, Bypass Mini-Knife Set (2)
Pick, feel, and decode the matching keyway in one tool
A 2-in-1 style tool gives you a different kind of lesson from ordinary hooks. You are not fishing blindly in the keyway. You are working pin by pin, watching the grid, and learning how picking and decoding connect.

Combination Lock Picks, Bypass Mini-Knife Set (2)
The job
Designed for the matching keyway or lock family named in the product title.
Where it fits
Useful when you want a precise, guided tool for one lock profile rather than a general pick set.
Why it matters
It shines when the lock profile matches the tool and you want feedback that is easy to repeat and record.
Start slow, feel more, learn faster
Start on the correct practice cylinder, use feather-light tension, move one space at a time, and let the scale teach you where each pin sits.
Pair it with matching practice cylinders and a general pick set so you understand both guided and freehand picking.

Build the setup around the job
Pair it with matching practice cylinders and a general pick set so you understand both guided and freehand picking.
Lishi Tools
Compare the wider 2-in-1 tool family before choosing a keyway.
Practice Locks
Use known cylinders while you learn spacing and lift.
Tension Tools
General tension tools round out the rest of the bench.
What to know before you buy
| Brand | Dangerfield |
| Product type | Lock Pick Set |
| Best use | Focused lock picking practice and kit building |
| Tool family | 2-in-1 Pick and Decoder |
| Practice route | 2-in-1 tool |
Quick answers from the LockPickWorld bench
What is this used for?
Use it for the specific lock picking or tool-kit job described on this page. It is here to make one part of the work clearer, cleaner, or easier to practise.
Is it approachable if I am still learning?
Yes. Start on practice hardware, use light hands, and treat it as a way to learn one focused skill at a time.
What should I pair it with?
Pair it with suitable practice locks and tension tools so you can feel what the tool is doing instead of guessing.
How should I begin?
Work slowly on a known lock first. Once the motion and feedback make sense, move into harder locks or tighter keyways.
Add the tool that gives this job a proper place in your kit
It shines when the lock profile matches the tool and you want feedback that is easy to repeat and record. Pair it with the right practice setup, take your time, and let the feedback teach you.