In 1919, Henry Lane opened a factory in Newcastle NSW to produce rabbit traps that were in great demand by farmers to fight the rabbit plague. In just a few short years, the company's product range had expanded to include such items as can openers, carpet sweepers, spirit stoves and, of course, locks.
In the 1920's, Lane manufactured the first Australian made Rim Lock. Although there have been other products along the way, locks & door furniture have remained the core competency of Lane.
In the 1990's, Lane made a decision to specialise in door hardware and added security to its name. Today, Lane Security™ continues to develop and bring innovation to the door hardware category.
Since then, the Lane Security™ range has evolved to provide a 'whole of house' solution for the DIY'er and builder alike through highly functional door furniture with contemporary designs for your home.
My mom has the dead Lock feature but somehow my granddaughter uses a credit card and gets in any way how can I fix this. And yes I make sure the door is locked every time I leave.
If the hole in the strike plate is too large, the dead latch will fall into it along with the plunger, and it will deactivate the security feature allowing you to use a credit card as if it were a normal plunger.
EXCELLENT CONTENT MY FRIEND! EXCELLENT!!! This is a perfect explanation of what I did not understand and should be doing! Changing out my strike for one of these in the morning!!! My Management co. is filled with idiots and don't care enough about us! My strike does not have this feature to retract the independent plunger.
Very useful explanation. My door has a same latch with lock on handle. The problem I have is, when I lock the door from outside, the latch does not stay solid lock and with a slight push from outside, the door opens even though it is locked.. Any Video are reply appreciated
Your latch mechanism is toasted, there is a camset in the latch assembly that allows the locking feature - latch assemblies can’t really be disassembled (not worth it) so just replace.
Hi, I have the second type of latch you describe on a door with a keypad lock going from my garage to the laundry room. i used to be able to just push the door closed once entering the laundry room. but now the plunger stays rigid and won't depress at all until you turn the handle or reenter the code from the garage side. what happened?