Number Times Read : 43      
Categories

Advertising
Arts
Business
Computers and Technology
Cooking
Current Affairs
Education
Entertainment
Family Concerns
Food and Drinks
Gardening
Home Management
Hosting
Internet
Jobs
Legal
Our Pets
Outdoors
Parenting
Real Estate
Recreation
Relationships
Religion
Self Improvement
Society
Sports
Technology
Travel
Website Design
Wellness, Fitness and Di
Womens Interest
World Affairs
Writing
 
Stats
Total Articles: 135935
Total Authors: 36889
Total Downloads: 3297370


Newest Member
Vernon Ortners

 



   

Why Can I Not Have A Conventional Yale Lock On My Door?



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.newworldproducts.org/Articles/rss.php?rss=266
By : Paul Edwards    29 or more times read
Submitted 2009-04-25 03:46:49
When people refer to a conventional Yale lock, are they taking about a night latch or a chubb dead bolt?

We do get asked this question quite a lot and it basically comes down to security. Yes we could fit just a night latch and or a chubb dead bolt, but these do not provide enough security or performance to meet current legislations.

Security has moved on a great deal in the last few years and now even timber door systems have multi point locking systems to pass much harder security tests and achieve Secure by Design. This means the door will have been certified to British Standard PAS 24 1 ‘Doors of Enhanced Security’ (including impact resistance, operation and strength)

Nearly all modern doors whether they are uPVC, timber, aluminium or composite, lock using a multi point locking system as on our door.

This serves two purposes:

1: It provides superior locking at several points, not just one like a night latch or chubb lock

2: It compresses the door tightly into the seal to confirm to PAS 23 General performance requirements of a door’ (including weather tightness, wind loading and energy efficiency.)

Secure by Design (SBD) is an official Police initiative supporting the principles of ‘designing of out crime’. What this basically means is the police have developed a series of sophisticated tests based on real statistics on how a door has been broken into and are continually pushing manufacturers to improve their products to design out how the criminal gained entry. So every time the criminals figure out how to break into the house through the door, the Police SBD initiative devises a test to replicate the entry method. To achieve the much acclaimed Secure by Design accreditation the manufacturer must pass the new test and not allow entry during this test.

With a multi point lock there are 3 types of conventional handle operations:

Lever/lever – operation like a normal uPVC back door, means you can open the door without the need for a key, unless the deadbolt has been locked

Lever/pad to open the front door a key is required whether or not the deadbolt has been thrown. This means if you close the door behind you, the dead latch in the centre will not open when the handle is operated, a key will need to be used to open this. This is to stop people following straight behind you into your house. (Nb, the front door will not be fully secure to unauthorised entry until the multi point locks have been thrown and the deadbolt locked by the key.)

Split spindle lever/lever – this operates the same way as a lever/pad, but looks the same a lever/lever style handle. Basically, the internal spindle, as the name suggests is split and they operate different parts of the multi point lock.

To summarise:

Multi point locking systems are now the norm for modern front door and back door security, to ensure you keep burglars at bay.
Author Resource:- Paul Edwards is the MD of TFS Trade and are a leading composite door company http://www.compositedoorshop.co.uk
Article From Webmasters article directory

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
New Members
article directory
Sign up
top articles
learn more
Free Articles
Coming Soon!
 
Nav Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites

 
Sponsors

 


Webmasters Article Directory - For Article Promoting - Article Marketing

Hosted by website hosting services