

When the tension bar is properly positioned, a greater amount of pressure is applied increasing the chances that the control level will be picked.Īnother technique is to get pressure onto the control lug that protrudes on the left of the control shell. Unlike other tension bars, the handle is directed upward so that a better “bite” can be applied to the shell. In Figure 2, the tension bar is inserted into the core and positioned until it drops into access holes at the bottom of the control shell. Tension bars that grab the bottom portion of control shells can be made or purchased. To facilitate consistent control-level picking, two techniques that can be used: applying pressure to the control lug or shell or inhibiting the ability for the operating shear line to be picked. Often control levels are difficult to rotate. The primary reason why operating levels are easier to pick than control levels is the rotation of the operating level offers less resistance than the control level. If you don’t optimize your picking technique you will almost always pick the operating level. The locks have two different shear lines, the operating level that allows the lock to be accessed, and the control level that allows the core to be pulled from the lock. Picking Figure-Eight Interchangeable Coresįigure-eight interchangeable cores can be difficult and time-consuming to pick, especially seven-pin cores. If rekey job consists of many locks using the same control key, the options are: to sacrifice one lock or lock cylinder to remove a core and decode the control key to pick the control level of the core. If the rekey job entails one lock, removal options are: to drill out the core or housing and replace it with a new one or to pick the control level (shear line) of the core. To rekey the lock or lock cylinder, the core must be removed. Without a control key, the core is completely locked. When the rotation stops, the core is ready for removal by pulling it out of the cylinder, knob, lever, etc. Interchangeable cores are normally removed by inserting the control key then turning the key clockwise about 15 degrees. The film is produced by two-time Emmy® winner Marc Platt (“Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert,” “Grease Live!”), Miranda, two-time Emmy winner John DeLuca (“Tony Bennett: An American Classic”), and Rob Marshall, with Jeffrey Silver (“The Lion King”) serving as executive producer.Unlike other commercial lock cylinders, figure-eight (small format) interchangeable cores require special removal techniques when keys are not available. The songs feature music from multiple Academy Award® winner Alan Menken (“Beauty and the Beast,” “Aladdin”) and lyrics by Howard Ashman, and new lyrics by three-time Tony Award® winner Lin-Manuel Miranda. “The Little Mermaid” is directed by Oscar® nominee Rob Marshall (“Chicago,” “Mary Poppins Returns”)with a screenplay by two-time Oscar nominee David Magee (“Life of Pi,” “Finding Neverland”). The film stars singer and actress Halle Bailey (“grown-ish”) as Ariel Jonah Hauer-King (“A Dog’s Way Home”) as Prince Eric Tony Award® winner Daveed Diggs (“Hamilton”) as the voice of Sebastian Awkwafina (“Raya and the Last Dragon”) as the voice of Scuttle Jacob Tremblay (“Luca”) as the voice of Flounder Noma Dumezweni (“Mary Poppins Returns”) as Queen Selina Art Malik (“Homeland”) as Sir Grimsby with Oscar® winner Javier Bardem (“No Country for Old Men”) as King Triton and two-time Academy Award® nominee Melissa McCarthy (“Can You Ever Forgive Me?” “Bridesmaids”) as Ursula. She makes a deal with the evil sea witch, Ursula, which gives her a chance to experience life on land but ultimately places her life – and her father’s crown – in jeopardy. The youngest of King Triton’s daughters and the most defiant, Ariel longs to find out more about the world beyond the sea and, while visiting the surface, falls for the dashing Prince Eric. While mermaids are forbidden to interact with humans, Ariel must follow her heart.

“The Little Mermaid” is the beloved story of Ariel, a beautiful and spirited young mermaid with a thirst for adventure.
