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No hands needed—step on the top cap to latch the bolt; retract it by pressing the side release button.
Push the bolt into the strike plate to secure doors, gates, and cabinets.
Also known as cane bolts, these latches have the added height that's needed to bridge large vertical gaps. Install them at the top or bottom of swinging doors and gates to hold them in an open or closed position.
The mounting screws on these latches are concealed to prevent tampering.
Slide the bolt and drop the knob into the notch to secure.
A large handle makes gripping these latches easier than other lift-and-drop barrel slide-bolt latches.
The spring-loaded bolt stays latched until you pull it back—slide the bolt and drop the knob into the notch to secure.
The strike has angled ends so these latches can accept their bolt even when doors become misaligned.
Bolts are spring-loaded to stay latched until you activate the pull.
Pull the chain-grip to unlatch hard-to-reach doors and panels.
Push the knob to slide the bolt that secures these latches and then press the button to release the bolt.
Slide the bolt and drop the knob into the notch to hold, then secure with a padlock.
A large handle makes gripping these latches easier than other lift-and-drop barrel padlockable slide-bolt latches.
To prevent tampering, the mounting screws on these latches are concealed.
The mounting screws on these padlockable latches are concealed to prevent tampering.
These padlockable latches are reversible for right- and left-hand mounting.
These padlockable latches have the added width that's needed to bridge large horizontal gaps. They are often used on double-door gates to hold them in an open or closed position.
The spring-loaded bolt stays latched until you pull it back.
Choose these locks if you need several locks that open with the same key.
Choose these locks if you need locks that each open with a different key.
A red indicator on the side of these locks is visible when they are open and hidden when they are locked.
Operate these padlockable latches from either side of the door—there is a handle on both sides.
To prevent snags and accidental bumps, these locks have a recessed grip instead of a standard handle. They keep doors shut when you push them closed.
This lock has a latch bolt to secure doors in the closed position.
Designed to withstand vandalism better than other deadbolt locks for double doors, these mortise mount into a cutout in the doors.
Slide these latches into the strike plate to secure bathroom doors.
Hold bathroom doors closed by swinging these latches into a notch in the strike plate.