![]() ![]() It's the same way I'm going to cut the key. I will decode this, starting on the right side and going to the left or clockwise. This will help you not to get confused and lose anything. On a sticky note or a piece of paper, do this. The first thing you need to do is to know that there will be seven cuts on here. Do the same process when shifting back to C. Once you got it there, tighten it down using the Allen wrench. Make sure that the little shoulder is facing O. Once loose, hold the tubular key and turn it from C to O. Once you have that, take the Allen wrench, put it into the bottom hole, and loosen it. Set it up to where that little shoulder on the top of the key, and put it right in line with the C. ![]() If you're going to be doing offset, take a tubular key, it comes with two any of them is fine. The center is the standard, and then there's offset. We've done a basic overview of how this works. This is where we're going to be putting the key you want to cut. ![]() So when dial-in, you're not going to have to worry about messing anything up. 'How do you hold in place the depth that you've set?' All you need to do is take the piece with two long metals in it and push it through the holes of your depth, and it will lock it in place. Wherever you set that, that's where you're going to be able to turn this cutter too, and that's how it's going to stop it. The part where the numbers 1 – 7 are, sets the depth. Typically, there's a belt and a motor that move in something like this on a standard key machine, but you will be doing this by hand. You need to dial at the end, and as you start spinning, it will begin cutting. The on the left is what stabilizes and holds the key and everything into place. Here are the parts and the pieces and what they are for. This machine has been set up and ready to go right out of the box. 016 depth increment, which is the most popular out there, and almost all the locks you're going to encounter tubular-wise. It does both the standard with a center cut and the offset cut. The HPC Pocket Cut-Up comes factory preset to cut seven-pins, both Chicago Ace and Fort lock tubular keys. You can duplicate as well by first decoding and cutting them. To be more specific, this will allow you to cut tubular keys by code. Are you familiar with the HPC Pocket Cut-Up, part number TKM-90? If not, it's a little manual tubular key machine. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |