You slide into the driver's seat, insert your key into the ignition, and try to turn it—but nothing happens. The key is completely stuck, the steering wheel is locked tight, and no matter how hard you jiggle it, the car refuses to start. This is a highly stressful, mechanical failure that leaves you completely stranded. Before you call an expensive tow truck and let a mechanic charge you for a brand new steering column, call the automotive lock experts. We are Montclair State University, NJ’s specialists in ignition cylinder diagnostics, repair, and broken key extractions. We fix the complex mechanical heart of your vehicle's starting system right in your driveway, saving you massive amounts of time and money.
Key won't turn in the ignition? Do not force it! Call our diagnostic experts: 18884351439
When an ignition refuses to turn, many drivers make the mistake of gripping the key with pliers and forcing it, which only results in snapping the key in half. The problem is rarely the key itself; it is the tiny, fragile brass wafers inside the ignition cylinder. Every time you insert and remove your key, friction slowly wears down these wafers. Over years of daily driving, the wafers become bent, burred, or jammed with dirt and graphite. When this happens, the wafers no longer align properly to the shear line, and the cylinder lock seizes up completely.
We do not believe in blindly replacing expensive parts if they can be fixed. When our technicians arrive at your stranded vehicle, we carefully disassemble the plastic cowling around your steering column to access the ignition housing. We safely extract the seized lock cylinder and rebuild it on our workbench. We remove all the old, damaged brass wafers and springs, clean the housing, and insert a brand new sequence of factory-fresh wafers. We then reassemble the steering column, ensuring your original key turns as smoothly as the day the car was built.
If you have already tried to force a stuck ignition and the brass key snapped off deep inside the keyway, do not panic. Digging at it with a paperclip or tweezers will only push the broken fragment deeper into the lock, permanently destroying the fragile springs inside. Our technicians use microscopic, barbed spiral extractors and heavy-duty lubricants to gently slide alongside the broken brass fragment, hooking it and pulling it out cleanly. Once extracted, we can cut a brand new, structurally sound key for you on the spot.
Do not let a jammed ignition force you into an expensive trip to the mechanic. Let our specialized automotive technicians rebuild your locks and get you back on the road.
Call to schedule your ignition diagnostic and repair today: 18884351439
"My ignition cylinder jammed completely and I couldn't start my truck to get to work. They came out, took the steering column apart, and rebuilt the lock right in my driveway. Saved me a tow to the mechanic and a huge bill. Highly recommended."
"My key snapped off inside the ignition while I was trying to leave the grocery store. They extracted the broken piece in minutes, cut a brand new transponder key, and programmed it flawlessly so I could get home."
"The key would go into the ignition of my Honda but absolutely refused to turn. The technician explained how the internal wafers were bent, replaced them on the spot, and now it turns smoother than butter. Excellent service."
Plans for the State Normal school were initiated in 1903, and required a year for the State of New Jersey to grant permission to build the school. It was then established as New Jersey State Normal School at Montclair, a normal school, in 1908 approximately 5 years after the initial planning of the school. At the time, Governor John Franklin Fort attended the dedication of the school in 1908, and the school was to have its first principal Charles Sumner Chapin that same year. The first building constructed was College Hall, and it still stands today. At the time, the campus was around 25 acres (100,000 m2), had 8 faculty members and 187 students. The first graduating class, which numbered at 45 students, contained William O. Trapp, who would then go on to win the Pulitzer Prize for journalism in 1929. The first dormitory was then built five years later, in 1915, and is known as Russ Hall.
Zip Codes in Montclair State University, NJ that we also serve: 07043 07424