| About
your doors & frames |
| Flush |
Panelled |
Glazed |
Ledged
& Braced |
| Two Panel |
Four Panel |
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| NOTES |
| (a) |
Panelled doors can also
have a mixture of wood and glazed panels |
| (b) |
On glazed doors
the width of the “stile”
(the distance from the leading edge
of the door to the glazing bead) is
very important when deciding the type
of ironmongery that is to be fitted |
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| Frame Details |
Double Action Frame |
Plain
Meeting Stiles |
Rebated
Meeting Stiles |
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| About
your windows - Window types |
| Sash Window |
Casement
Window |
French
Window or Patio Door |
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| Interior
Door Furniture |
| Terminology |
| Knob Furniture |
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Knob furniture
is sold in pairs complete with screws
& spindle and supplied for use with
mortice locks or latches or rim locks
or latches.
Knob
furniture should be fitted to locks
or latches with a minimum backset
of 4” (100mm).
A
locking snib & outside release
mechanism is selected for knob furniture
for bathroom use |
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Lever
Furniture |
| Round Rose |
Latch Plate |
Lever Lock
Plate |
Cylinder Lock
Plate |
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| Lever furniture (usually sold in pairs
complete with screws & spindle) |
Lever furniture is usually
used with 67mm (2.1/2”) or 75mm (3”)
upright mortice locks or latches (See section
on Locks & Latches) |
| Flush
Door Furniture |
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| Where doors slide or fold back on one another
the above types of flush furniture or flush
handles are a sensible option |
| Cabin
(or Hinged Furniture) |
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Where
there is restricted space such as
in corridors in boats the above type
of door furniture is often specified |
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| Names
of Components |
| Backplate |
A
rectangular base which a lever handle
(or unusually a knob) rotates. Supplied
plain for use with simple mortice
latch mechanisms or with keyhole or
cylinder mechanism piercing |
| Escutcheon |
Plate
used as a mask for a keyhole or as
dressing where the lock is operated
by a cylinder mechanism (See section
on cylinder mechanisms) |
| Rose |
A
round base on which a lever handle
or knob rotates, supplied either with
face fixing (Screws showing) or concealed
fixing (Screws concealed)
e.g. knobs with Face Fixing Roses
or knobs with concealed fixing roses |
| Spindle |
The
square metal rod that operates the
lock or latch mechanism |
| Taylors Spindle |
A
fixed spindle that allows door furniture
to be fixed dead (non operable) e.g.
for decorative purposes on pairs of
doors |
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| Front
Door Furniture |
| Names
of Components |
Centre
Door Knob |
Primarily for pulling
the door closed. Is usually fixed to
the door from the inside to give a concealed,
thief proof fixing |
| Cylinder Finger
Pull |
A
simple pull that fits under the cylinder
rim light Latch (Yale Lock) to pull
the door closed |
| Hinge bolt |
A
pair of static security bolts fitted
between hinges to prevent forcing
open of the door on the hinge side |
| Knocker |
Mechanism for announcing
the arrival of a visitor available in
many decorative forms. Mostly used today
as a beautiful decoration as most houses
and apartments now we have bells or
audio or audio/visual entry systems
Types
available are Doctor’s Knockers,
Lion Head Knockers, Ring Knockers
or a host of other country side and
marine knockers depicting animals,
fishes, pixies, Masonic emblems etc. |
| Letter Plate |
Sometimes call a ‘letter
box’ but this is a misnomer.
There
are two vital dimensions required
when replacing a letter plate
(a)
the distance between the fixing studs
and
(b) the length and height of the cut
out in the door
If the letter plate to be replaced
is fixed within some form of constricting
panel the overall dimensions are required.
When
selecting a replacement letter plate
we advise to expand the aperture and
to replace a very small plate (as
supplied up until 1950) with a plate
with a flap of approx. 200x50mm to
accommodate A4 envelopes and to comply
with post office regulations.
Letter
plates with handles connected allow
pulling the door closed |
| Letter Plate
Hood |
A fixed Security baffle
on the inside of the door to prevent
viewing through the letter plate and
manipulation of the locks by putting
a hand through the letter plate. A
combined letter plate hood & tidy
is available but only manufactured in
one size |
| Letter Plate
Tidy |
A
flap on the inside of the door behind
the letter plate to hide the fixing
bolts, cut out draughts and cover
the aperture in the door. It must
be noted that this component does
not give any privacy or security but
is purely cosmetic |
| Postal Knocker |
A
letter plate as already described
but with an integral knocker |
| Security Chain |
A
security mechanism to stop a door
being pushed open by force by someone
trying to make an illegal entry |
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| Locks
& Latches |
| General
Terminology |
| Backset |
The
distance from the forend of the latch
or lock to the centre of the follower |
| Cylinder Mechanism |
The
‘pin tumbler’ mechanism
which enables a lock or latch to be
keyed differently. Generically known
as the ‘Yale’ System this
type of mechanism has the greatest
amount of compromise prevention owing
to the many new and complicated systems
available |
| Follower |
The
square hole turning mechanism through
which the spindle of the operating
furniture passes in order to operate
the lock or latch |
| Forend |
The
front plate of a mortice latch or
lock which is connected to the latch
or lock case |
| Horizontal |
A
term used in mortice latches or locks
to explain that the overall width
of the case is usually greater than
100mm and if it is lock mechanism
the control of the latch bolt is placed
behind the control of the lock bolt |
| Latch |
The
simplest mechanism for closing a door
without any additional locking bolt.
A latch is simply operated by a pair
of knobs or a pair of lever handles |
| Latch/Lock Case |
The
part of the latch or lock that contains
the working mechanism |
| Latch/ Lock
depth |
The
overall distance from the forend of
the latch or the lock to the back
of the lock case. It is this dimension
that is referred to when giving the
size of a lock or latch |
| Lever Mechanism |
The
system which enables a lock to be
keyed differently from other lock
case. It is this dimension that is
referred to when giving the size of
a lock or latch |
| Lock |
A
form of holding a door secure that
can only be released by a key or turn
mechanism |
| Mortice |
Whenever
a latch or lock is described with
the word ‘mortice’ it
means that it is installed within
the thickness of the door leaf i.e.
‘mortised in’ |
| Rim |
Whenever
a latch or lock is described with
the worg ‘rim’ it emans
that it is installed on the face of
the interior leaf of the door. E.g.
a Cylinder Rim Latch is the correct
terminology for what is commonly known
to most people as a ‘YALE LOCK’ |
| Spindle |
The
Square section connecting bar that
retracts a latch bolt by the turning
of a knob or the depressing of a lever
handle. In the UK the sectional dimension
of a spindle is 8mm |
| Spindle Fixing |
Any
method by which the knobs or lever
handles are connected to the spindle
usually by a hardened grub screw.
Spindle fixing is a way to prevent
any distortion of the face of the
door by the constant pulling on the
knob or lever handle |
| Striking Box |
The
box into which the latch bolt and/or
lock bolt of a rim latch or lock engages |
| Striking Plate |
The
plate into which the latch bolt and/or
the lock bolt of a mortice latch or
lock engages |
| Upright |
A
term used in mortice latches or locks
to explain that over all width of
the case is no more than 100mm and
if it is a lock mechanism the control
of the latch bolt is placed above
or below the control of the lock bolt |
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