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Mark M October 9th 10 06:07 AM

strange locks
 
?Perhaps someone can fill me in on the manufacturer of some very strange
locks on a house we just purchased. I've never encountered locksets like
this before.

The mortised part has no name or code on it. The mechanism is odd: there
is a lever handle inside and outside the door, with a keyed tumbler below
the handle on the outside and knob on the inside. There is both a deadbolt
and latch in the mortised mechanism. To operate the unlocked door, you
depress the lever on either the inside or outside to withdraw the latch. To
lock, however, you RAISE the lever, extending the deadbolt. If you do not
then lock via the tumber or knob, depressing the lever will withdraw the
deadbolt and retract the latch. However, if the key or knob are turned to
the lock position, then the handle cannot be depressed, and thus the door
stays locked via the deadbolt.

The material seems to be a blackened brass, but I'm not sure.

On two French doors to the outside, we have the same hardware. However, the
setup on what would typically be the Dummy door is active. Using the same
philosophy of "raise the lever to extend deadbolt, depress lever to withdraw
deadbolt when key not locked." the deadbolt for the dummy door is actually
completely inside the door and extends upward into the upper jamb and
downward into the threshold. In other words, the dummy lever/handle locks
the inactive door by extending deadbolts both up and down.

Any ideas of the brand name, who makes it or who might service it when/if it
breaks?

Mark


Evan[_3_] October 9th 10 06:14 AM

strange locks
 
On Oct 9, 1:07*am, "Mark M" wrote:
?Perhaps someone can fill me in on the manufacturer of some very strange
locks on a house we just purchased. *I've never encountered locksets like
this before.

The mortised part has no name or code on it. * The mechanism is odd: *there
is a lever handle inside and outside the door, with a keyed tumbler below
the handle on the outside and knob on the inside. *There is both a deadbolt
and latch in the mortised mechanism. *To operate the unlocked door, you
depress the lever on either the inside or outside to withdraw the latch. *To
lock, however, you RAISE the lever, extending the deadbolt. *If you do not
then lock via the tumber or knob, depressing the lever will withdraw the
deadbolt and retract the latch. *However, if the key or knob are turned to
the lock position, then the handle cannot be depressed, and thus the door
stays locked via the deadbolt.

The material seems to be a blackened brass, but I'm not sure.

On two French doors to the outside, we have the same hardware. *However, the
setup on what would typically be the Dummy door is active. *Using the same
philosophy of "raise the lever to extend deadbolt, depress lever to withdraw
deadbolt when key not locked." the deadbolt for the dummy door is actually
completely inside the door and extends upward into the upper jamb and
downward into the threshold. *In other words, the dummy lever/handle locks
the inactive door by extending deadbolts both up and down.

Any ideas of the brand name, who makes it or who might service it when/if it
breaks?

Mark



When identifying door hardware pictures are worth a thousand words...

Also you might find a manufacturer name under the decorative plate
over the mortise lock set body on the edge of the door...

~~ Evan

LSMFT October 9th 10 01:47 PM

strange locks
 
Mark M wrote:
?Perhaps someone can fill me in on the manufacturer of some very strange
locks on a house we just purchased. I've never encountered locksets like
this before.

The mortised part has no name or code on it. The mechanism is odd: there
is a lever handle inside and outside the door, with a keyed tumbler
below the handle on the outside and knob on the inside. There is both a
deadbolt and latch in the mortised mechanism. To operate the unlocked
door, you depress the lever on either the inside or outside to withdraw
the latch. To lock, however, you RAISE the lever, extending the
deadbolt. If you do not then lock via the tumber or knob, depressing the
lever will withdraw the deadbolt and retract the latch. However, if the
key or knob are turned to the lock position, then the handle cannot be
depressed, and thus the door stays locked via the deadbolt.

The material seems to be a blackened brass, but I'm not sure.

On two French doors to the outside, we have the same hardware. However,
the setup on what would typically be the Dummy door is active. Using the
same philosophy of "raise the lever to extend deadbolt, depress lever to
withdraw deadbolt when key not locked." the deadbolt for the dummy door
is actually completely inside the door and extends upward into the upper
jamb and downward into the threshold. In other words, the dummy
lever/handle locks the inactive door by extending deadbolts both up and
down.

Any ideas of the brand name, who makes it or who might service it
when/if it breaks?

Mark

So you can't lock yourself out without a key? Not so strange.

--
LSMFT

Simple job, assist the assistant of the physicist.

dpb October 9th 10 04:02 PM

strange locks
 
Mark M wrote:
....

...who might service it when/if it breaks?

....

errr, a locksmith????

--


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