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Shirt-Pocket Vault 19-Piece Lock Pick Set - Clockspring Steel

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16.99


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Shirt-Pocket Vault Discreet Training Lock Pick Set - Clockspring Steel

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7531/image_1920?unique=2014773

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Late call in a dim Houston parking garage, stuck filing cabinet in a Hill Country shop, classroom demo in Austin — this shirt-pocket lock pick set stays out of sight until it’s needed. Nineteen clockspring steel profiles ride in a flat black zip case that slips into a breast pocket or organizer pouch. Picks stay polished, organized, and ready for lawful practice, instruction, or professional use when a drill or pry bar would only make things worse.

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Shirt-Pocket Control When the Door Won’t Cooperate

You know the moment. End of a long shift in San Antonio, last set of keys gets mixed up, and the only thing between you and going home is a stubborn file cabinet or interior deadbolt. This is where a shirt-pocket lock pick set earns its place. No drill, no busted hardware, no explaining damage to a property manager — just a quiet, precise tool you already have on you.

The black leather zip case rides flat against your chest in a work shirt, or disappears into the map pocket of a patrol vest. When you open it, nineteen polished clockspring steel profiles lay out clean and ready, each one tuned for smooth travel in real locks, not just practice cutaways.

Why This Lock Pick Set Belongs in a Texas Kit

Across the state, from Corpus maintenance shops to Plano IT back rooms, the problem is the same: locks fail, keys walk off, and the job still has to get done. A full locksmith rig lives in the truck. This lives on you.

Tempered clockspring steel gives each pick the balance you want when you’re working on wafer locks in an office park or a six-pin tumbler on a storage unit in Lubbock. There’s enough flex to read feedback, but enough backbone to stand up to daily training sessions. The polished finish cuts down on drag in older, dusty cylinders — the kind you find on gates and sheds that haven’t turned since last deer season.

For Texas buyers who already carry blades, lights, and multi-tools, this set fills the quiet gap: lawful lock work, done with finesse instead of force.

Built for Training, Teaching, and Real-World Use

This isn’t a novelty bundle. It’s a compact training lock pick set laid out the way working hands expect. Hooks, rakes, and balls cover the standard profiles you’ll use on everyday residential and light commercial hardware that shows up from El Paso strip malls to Dallas copy rooms.

The tension wrenches come in several thicknesses and leg lengths, giving you the control you need whether you’re working a loose-fitting knob lock on a rental in College Station or a tighter euro-style cylinder on an office door in the Medical Center. The separate handle piece lets you swap in different tools while keeping a secure, familiar grip, especially useful in long classes or extended practice sessions.

Locksport clubs in Austin, criminal justice programs in community colleges, and security trainers around Houston all need sets that look professional, not flashy. The smooth black leather and unbranded exterior match that culture: nothing to draw attention, everything focused on the work.

Texas Context: Lawful Use and Responsible Carry

In Texas, the law draws a line between tools and intent. A lock pick set like this is legal to own and carry when you’re using it for legitimate purposes — locksmithing, instruction, security work, or hobby locksport. The trouble starts when prosecutors can argue you’re carrying it for burglary or another crime.

Lock Picks, Texas Law, and Common Sense

Texas Penal Code doesn’t ban lock picks outright the way some states do. Instead, it looks at how and why you’re carrying them. If you’re a maintenance tech in Waco with written work orders, a locksmith apprentice in Amarillo headed to class, or a hobbyist driving to a sanctioned locksport meet in Austin, this shirt-pocket lock pick set fits that picture of lawful use.

Keep it with your credentials when you can — a company badge, student ID, or locksmith license if you have one. Store it with your work tools rather than loose in a glovebox full of random gear. It’s the kind of quiet detail a Texas officer or DA will notice if questions ever come up.

Discreet Carry in Real Texas Settings

On a summer day in the Valley, you’re not wearing a jacket just to hide tools. This case is sized for true shirt-pocket carry, even in light workwear. It slides into a front pocket of a pearl snap, the inner pocket of a duty shirt, or the pen slot of a radio chest rig. In cooler months, it tucks into a light softshell without bulking out the profile.

For plainclothes security in a Houston high-rise or a superintendent walking an older Fort Worth campus, that discretion matters. You’re not advertising that you carry a lock pick set, but you’re also not stuck waiting on a vendor every time a core sticks.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Lock Pick Sets

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Switchblades and OTF knives are legal to own and carry in Texas for most adults, thanks to changes in state law that removed the old switchblade restrictions. The main limits now come from location-restricted areas and blade length rules for certain venues. The same principle applies here: a lock pick set is legal as a tool, but how you use it and where you bring it still matters.

Is this lock pick set suitable for Texas locksmith and security training?

Yes. The 19-piece layout gives instructors enough variety to cover the locks students actually see from Houston apartments to Panhandle farm gates. The mixed profiles and tension tools work well for classroom boards, practice rigs, and real hardware salvaged from Texas job sites. The discreet case lets students move between campus, job, and home without carrying something that looks tactical or out of place.

How does this compare to carrying a full locksmith kit in Texas?

A full rig in the truck is how most Texas locksmiths and serious hobbyists operate. That handles rekeys, hardware swaps, and big jobs. This shirt-pocket vault is for when you’ve already walked three flights of stairs in a Dallas office tower or hiked a half-mile down a gravel drive outside Nacogdoches and realize you need just a few picks and tension wrenches, not fifty pounds of gear. It saves trips, saves time, and keeps you working instead of walking back for tools.

Where This Lock Pick Set Fits in Your Texas Day

Picture a Tuesday morning in Midland. Wind pushing dust down the alley, property manager waiting by a jammed steel door with a clipboard and a schedule that’s already behind. You pull a small black case from your shirt pocket. Zipper runs smooth. Picks line up like they should. A minute later, the latch throws, the door swings, and the day moves on.

No drama. No damage. No trip back to the truck. Just a shirt-pocket lock pick set that quietly earns its keep in the places Texans actually work and live — from refinery offices on the coast to metal barns in the Hill Country. For the buyer who understands that not every problem is solved with force, this is the small piece of kit that makes the rest of your tools look smarter.

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