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Dangerfield Precision Handles for Praxis Lock Picks

$1999

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Acerca de este artículo

Bench Helper: Makes practice sessions cleaner and steadier.

Tool Support: Reduces fiddly setup around the lock.

Practice Fit: Works beside locks, picks, and vices.

Better Flow: Keeps attention on feedback, not clutter.

 

Descripción

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Praxis grip handles

Give Your Bare Praxis Picks Something to Hold

The Dangerfield Praxis picks are dual-gauge bare blades, slim by design so the set stays compact in its wallet. Slide one into a Praxis precision handle and the whole feel changes. You get a solid, textured grip that sits in the hand, your fingers stop cramping on a bare strip of steel, and the pin feedback travels up through a firm handle so you can read the lock more clearly. Sixteen colour-coded handles, gauge-matched to your Praxis picks.

16grip handles
2gauge colours
0.4 / 0.6marked on each
Praxisbare-pick fit
Sixteen Dangerfield Praxis grip handles in two rows, red handles marked PRAXIS 0.6 and blue handles marked PRAXIS 0.4
Eight red and eight blue handles. The colour and the moulded marking tell you which gauge each one is built for.
What this is for

A handle turns a bare pick into a comfortable tool

Quality picks like the Praxis are sold as bare blades on purpose. Thin steel keeps the set light, lets it fold flat in a leather wallet, and gives a direct, unfiltered read of the pins. The trade-off is grip. A long session on a narrow strip of metal gets tiring, and the blade can twist in your fingers right when you want a steady, fine touch.

These handles fix exactly that. Each one is a moulded grip body that the bare end of a Praxis pick seats into, so the blade does the work in the keyway and the handle does the work in your hand. The surface is lightly textured for a sure hold, the body is broad enough to rest against your fingers without digging in, and the solid mass actually helps feedback: pin movement and counter-rotation carry up through a firm handle better than through fingertips pinching thin steel. More comfort, more control, a cleaner read of the lock.

Comfort for long sessions

Swap a thin steel strip for a proper grip body so your fingers can stay relaxed through a full practice run.

Steadier control

A broad, textured handle resists twisting, so the tip stays where you place it for fine, deliberate picking.

Clearer feedback

You feel the pins better through a solid handle. Setting pins and false sets read more plainly in the hand.

Gauge-matched

Colour-coded to your dual-gauge Praxis picks

The Praxis set runs two blade thicknesses, and these handles are marked to match so you never have to guess which goes where. The colour is your shortcut on the bench: grab red for the thicker gauge, blue for the thinner, and the moulded text confirms it.

Red · PRAXIS 0.6
x8 handlesFor the thicker 0.6 gauge Praxis blades, the bit more rigidity for heavier or stubborn pins.
Blue · PRAXIS 0.4
x8 handlesFor the finer 0.4 gauge Praxis blades, the slimmer flex for tight keyways and delicate feedback.
Dangerfield Praxis grip handles beside a steel ruler, red 0.6 and blue 0.4 handles shown for scale
Bench-sized grip bodies, marked by gauge so the right handle pairs with the right blade at a glance.
How you'd use them

From bare blade to a pick that sits in the hand

Match the colour

Pick the handle that matches your blade gauge: red for 0.6, blue for 0.4.

Seat the pick

Fit the bare end of the Praxis pick into the handle so the blade points out ready to work.

Set your tension

Apply light tension in the keyway with a tensioner, then bring the handled pick to the pins.

Read and pick

Feel each pin set through the firm grip, adjust your touch, and work the lock to the shear line.

See it work
A bare Dangerfield Praxis lock pick laid beside a row of blue Praxis grip handles, showing how a bare blade pairs with a handle

Built around the bare Praxis blade

This is the point of the set. A bare Praxis pick on its own is a thin, capable blade. Bring it together with a gauge-matched handle and you have a tool that is comfortable for an hour at the bench and steady enough for the fine work where control decides the open.

Handles wear, get lost, and walk off in shared kit, so a fresh set of sixteen keeps every pick in your Praxis wallet ready to grip. Beginners feel the pins more clearly with a handle to hold. Experienced pickers get a consistent, repeatable feel across the whole set.

Build the kit

Handles for the picks, picks for the lock

These are made for the Dangerfield Praxis 21-Piece Set, the British-designed pro kit with 16 dual-gauge picks, 5 tensioners, 301 hardened stainless blades, and a leather wallet. If the Praxis is already your daily set, these handles are the upgrade that makes a long session easier on the hands. To put your handled picks to work, pair them with a steady target: a Lock Pickers Vice or a focused Euro Cylinder Support holds the cylinder while you read the pins, and a set of Dangerfield practice locks gives you something to learn on.

Sixteen handlesA grip for every pick in the Praxis set, with spares for the ones that go missing.
Two gauges coveredRed 0.6 and blue 0.4 so each blade thickness gets the handle it is marked for.
Better feedbackPin movement reads more clearly through a solid handle than through a bare strip of steel.
Comfort upgradeOne low-cost add-on that turns a fatiguing session into an easy one.
Details

What you get

Brand Dangerfield
What it is Precision grip handles for bare lock picks
What you get 16 handles total: 8 red and 8 blue
Gauge marking Red moulded PRAXIS 0.6, blue moulded PRAXIS 0.4
Fits Dangerfield Praxis dual-gauge bare picks (0.4 and 0.6)
Grip Lightly textured moulded body for a sure, comfortable hold
Best use Adding comfort, control, and clearer pin feedback to bare Praxis blades
Good companions Praxis pick set, lock picking vice or cylinder support, practice locks
Two rows of Dangerfield Praxis grip handles, red 0.6 handles above blue 0.4 handles on a white surface
Eight of each gauge, colour-coded and marked, ready to dress a full Praxis wallet.
The real buying reason is feel: bare Praxis blades that you can hold comfortably for a full session, with a firm handle that lets the pins read clearly in your hand.
FAQ

Questions buyers usually ask

What exactly are these?

Grip handles for bare lock picks. The blade end of a Dangerfield Praxis pick seats into the handle so you hold a comfortable body instead of a thin strip of steel. You get sixteen of them, eight red and eight blue.

Which picks do they fit?

They are built for the Dangerfield Praxis dual-gauge bare picks. The red handles are marked PRAXIS 0.6 for the thicker gauge and the blue are marked PRAXIS 0.4 for the finer gauge.

Do handles really improve feedback?

Yes. A solid handle carries pin movement and counter-rotation up to your hand more clearly than fingertips pinching a bare blade, so setting pins and false sets are easier to feel.

Do these include the picks?

This page is for the handles on their own. If you do not have the picks yet, start with the Praxis set and these handles will dress every blade in the wallet.

Are they good for beginners?

Very much so. A handle to hold makes the pins easier to read while you are learning the feel, and the colour coding keeps your set organised from day one.

What else should I have on the bench?

A way to hold the lock helps most. A lock pickers vice or cylinder support steadies the work, and a set of practice locks gives you a target.

Dress your Praxis picks for comfort and control

Sixteen gauge-matched handles, colour-coded to your dual-gauge blades. Seat a bare pick, feel the pins through a firm grip, and pick longer without the hand fatigue. The small upgrade your Praxis set has been waiting for.

Sixteen Dangerfield Praxis grip handles in two rows, red handles marked PRAXIS 0.6 and blue handles marked PRAXIS 0.4
Dangerfield

Dangerfield Precision Handles for Praxis Lock Picks

$19.99

Resumen

Bench Helper: Makes practice sessions cleaner and steadier.

Tool Support: Reduces fiddly setup around the lock.

Practice Fit: Works beside locks, picks, and vices.

Better Flow: Keeps attention on feedback, not clutter.

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