Door Locks & Strikes
Showing Results for Door Locks & Strikes
-
Ubiquiti
SKU: UA-LOCK-MAGNETIC-540KG
Ubiquiti UA-LOCK-MAGNETIC-540KG Fail-Safe Magnetic Lock
540 kg fail-safe magnetic lock for UniFi Access control
- 540 kg (1,190 lb) holding force secures standard commercial single-leaf doors.
- Fail-safe design releases on power loss, meeting life-safety egress requirements.
- No moving parts reduce maintenance cycles across multi-site UniFi Access deployments.
$213.99 -
Ubiquiti
SKU: UACC-LOCK-STRIKE-SAFE-15MM
Ubiquiti UACC-LOCK-STRIKE-SAFE-15MM Fail-safe electric strike
Fail-safe electric strike with 1,200 kg holding force for UniFi access control
- Delivers 1,200 kg (2,645 lb) holding force for high-security single-door deployments.
- Fail-safe design releases on power loss; integrates via 12V DC/400mA with UniFi access control.
- DPS+/DPS- dry contact terminals enable configurable open/closed door status monitoring.
$109.17 $88.99 Save $20.18 -
Ubiquiti
SKU: UACC-LOCK-STRIKE-SAFE-8MM
Ubiquiti UACC-LOCK-STRIKE-SAFE-8MM Fail-safe electric strike
Fail-safe electric strike with 500 lb holding force for UniFi Access
- Delivers 500 lb (227 kg) holding force on wooden or metal door frames.
- Runs on 12V DC at 200mA; integrates with UniFi Access or any dry-contact system.
- NDAA compliant with FCC, IC, and CE certifications; rated -10 to 60°C.
$98.99 -
Ubiquiti
SKU: UACC-LOCK-STRIKE-SECURE-15MM
Ubiquiti UACC-LOCK-STRIKE-SECURE-15MM Fail-Secure Electric Strike Lock
Fail-secure strike lock, 1,200 kg holding force, UniFi Access ready
- 1,200 kg holding force resists forced entry on server rooms and secure perimeters.
- Fail-secure design keeps door locked during power loss, preventing unauthorized access.
- 12V DC at 400mA integrates directly into UniFi Access hubs without extra power supply.
$92.20 $87.99 Save $4.21 -
Ubiquiti
SKU: UACC-LOCK-STRIKE-SECURE-8MM
Ubiquiti UACC-LOCK-STRIKE-SECURE-8MM Fail-secure electric strike
Fail-secure electric strike with 500 lb holding force for 8 mm slots
- 500 lb holding force with fail-secure logic keeps doors locked on power loss.
- 12V DC at 200 mA integrates directly into UniFi access control via dry contact.
- Zinc alloy body fits 8 mm door frame recesses; rated -10 to 60°C for varied environments.
$98.99
Door Locks & Strikes
Electric strikes and electromechanical locks for access-controlled doors. Available in fail-safe and fail-secure configurations with ANSI/BHMA-rated durability for high-traffic commercial entry points.
Plan Your Deployment
- Match strike to door frame material and latch bolt geometry
- Confirm fail-safe or fail-secure mode per fire and building code
- Specify voltage and current draw for power supply sizing
- Evaluate weather-sealed models for exterior or parking garage doors
Door Locks & Strikes — Engineering-Grade Door Hardware for Commercial Deployments
This category covers 361 working models of door locks & strikes sourced manufacturer-direct or through channel-direct US distribution. Build the rest of your system around the architectural choices below — compatibility, environmental rating, and lifecycle decisions made here propagate through every downstream component you specify.
What to Look For
Fail-safe versus fail-secure determines what happens during power loss. Fail-safe locks unlock on power loss (used on egress doors where life safety dominates); fail-secure locks remain locked (used on storage, server rooms, and exterior doors where security dominates). Code typically mandates fail-safe on stairwell and egress doors. Confirm with the AHJ before specifying — misapplied lock mode is a common code violation.
Strike, mortise, magnetic lock, and electrified panic hardware each have distinct installation, current draw, and code implications. Electric strikes work with most mechanical locksets and are easiest to retrofit. Magnetic locks (maglocks) provide high holding force on glass and wood doors but require dedicated REX and panic-bar interfaces for egress compliance. Verify the door's existing prep before choosing.
Power draw and inrush current dictate power supply sizing. A 5-door system with 1A peak per lock can exceed an undersized 12VDC supply at simultaneous lock-down events. Account for accessories — REX motion sensors, door-position switches, electrified levers — when sizing the supply and the battery backup required for code compliance.
Tamper switches, door-position monitoring, and request-to-exit sensors generate the audit trail your security team needs. Mechanical contact switches are cheaper; magnetic reed switches resist tampering better. Pair each door with a position switch and a REX sensor at minimum — without door-position monitoring, you can't distinguish 'authorized entry' from 'door held open after authorized entry,' which is a common compliance gap.
Key Specs in This Category
| Spec | Available Options |
|---|---|
| Connectivity | Wired |
| Type | Controller, Lock/Strike, Reader, Access Point, Accessory, Credential, Control Panel |
Top Brands in This Category
Frequently Asked Questions
Fail-safe or fail-secure for stairwell doors?
Fail-safe is mandatory on most stairwell doors and other code-designated egress paths — the lock must release on fire alarm or power loss to allow evacuation. Fail-secure on those doors is a code violation. Confirm the local fire code and AHJ requirements; commercial buildings in the U.S. follow NFPA 101 and the International Building Code, both of which detail egress lock behavior in detail.
What current draw should I plan for electrified locks?
Typical 12VDC electric strikes draw 200-500 mA continuous, with inrush spikes of 1-2A at engagement. Magnetic locks rated for 1,200 lbs holding force draw around 500 mA continuous at 24VDC. Power supplies need to handle simultaneous lock-down current — emergency lockdown events activate all locks at once. Size the supply with at least 25% headroom and confirm battery backup runtime requirements.
Do I need a request-to-exit (REX) sensor?
Most code-compliant electrified door installations require a REX sensor to shunt the alarm during authorized egress. Without REX, every egress event registers as a forced-door alarm. PIR motion sensors are the common choice and integrate with the door controller's REX input. Mechanical push-bar REX is also acceptable for hardware that includes that switch natively.
Can I use one lock for both card and mechanical key entry?
Yes — most electrified strikes and locks allow mechanical key override on the same door. Maintaining a master key for emergency mechanical access is required by code in many jurisdictions and recommended in all. Document the master key holders carefully; an uncontrolled master key program undermines the electronic audit trail.
What's the lifespan of a magnetic lock?
Quality maglocks (Securitron M62, HES, von Duprin) typically last 15-20 years with no mechanical wear. Failure points are the connector, the armature plate-to-lock alignment, and contamination of the magnetic face. Plan for armature replacement at year 10 as a hedge against alignment drift. Strike-type locks with mechanical parts last 5-10 years before strike-plate wear becomes a reliability issue.
Need help choosing? Talk to a Senior Specialist — direct line 877-277-7147 or request a quote.