Electricity strike
11 Mar 2009
by:
By John Adams
Installers and security managers need to take into account that in most access control systems electric strikes are the gatekeepers and they deserve more than passing attention. Buying low cost strikes and installing them in a slipshod fashion is like building a gaol with single lever locks.
IN a typical electric strike installation, there are 2
key components. The strike is fitted into the door jamb and has a bolt pocket
that holds the latch securely. When the strike is opened its pivoting lip, or
keeper, rotates away from the pocket allowing the bolt to be pulled away. The
latch is embedded in the door and has no moving parts or power demands.
The strengths of electric locks include their ability to
handle high traffic areas effectively (in really high traffic areas, magnetic
locks can be better), and the fact they cut down on manpower requirements.
Strikes also allow timed opening, multi-functioning and interfacing with
integral safety systems.
Strikes give positive door status and lock status
indications as well as allowing remote and automatic door control. They
eliminate the costly suiting of mechanical locks and end the need for key
cutting and copy controls. Using an overall access system with electric strikes
allows administrators to reprogram locks remotely.
“Probably the fundamental question security managers and
installers will face relates to whether or not the door is fire rated or simply
an internal access point”
There are a number of things to consider when buying
electric strikes. For a start it’s important that solenoid bolts are continuous
duty or CDR rated if they are fail safe. Of course, all fail-safe locks should
be DC-powered. A CDR rating is necessary to ensure they don’t wear out early
due to being constantly energised against a spring.
Non-CDR rating would mean a large current draw and an
unwelcome build up of heat that could slow the mechanism down. Installers and
specifiers should also ensure any fail secure locks installed are intermittent
duty rated (IDR). These locks need power to pull a bolt out of a lock or to
open a strike plate. The periods of idleness these locks experience mean it’s
vital that the right amount of magnetism is generated by the lock when needed.
Too much current would blow a fuse and too little would cause the lock to open
slowly or not at all.
Choosing a strike
One of the challenges faced when choosing an electronic
locking device is the enormous range that’s available. Along with this,
different types of lock are often generally suitable for a range of
applications making it hard to work out which option is going to be best. When
you’re making your selections, think about the realities of your own site.
Something to consider early on is the preload of an electric
strike – in specifications this force is often measured in Newtons which are a value of force rather
than weight or pressure. Essentially 1 Newton
is the force required to accelerate a mass of 1kg at the rate of 1 metre per
second, per second. If you find it easier to think of force in terms of weight
measurements, a Newton
is about 0.224809 pounds or 0.101972 kg of force.
This pre-load issue relates to jamming of electrically
operated doors caused by pre-loads that are higher than the strike is rated to
handle – a quality fire rated lock might have a pre-load rating of around 200N
and the entire locking solution will need to match this.
In addition, serious emergency escape locks will offer
side-load immune release mechanisms. You might want this capability if your
locks are going into egress points likely to carry large numbers of people in
the event of emergency evacuation.
And it goes without saying that all emergency doors – and
if possible all egress doors - should open outwards. Doors installed this way
guarantee a crush of people on the inside of a locked door can never block an
inward opening emergency exit.
Supporting this sort of installation, side-load immune
locking mechanisms guarantee that no matter how much pressure panicked people
put on the inside of an electrically locked door, the locking mechanism will
still release in the event of a fire alarm and/or a fail-safe event.
Probably the fundamental question security managers and
installers will face relates to whether or not the door is fire rated or simply
an internal access point. Fire rated doors need a heavy duty strike that has a
fire rating and is specifically designed for high use applications.
Adding to the security manager’s dilemma will be the
different types of door jamb – variations have differing needs and you’ll want
to assess these requirements before making a decision. The 3 most common jam
types are timber, aluminium and steel. You’ll most commonly run into timber and
aluminium door jambs in front and internal doors, with steel jambs used for
fire proof doors.
Complexity is also going to be introduced by relevant
building codes – some codes insist that in drywall installations (either metal
or timber jambs) only internal solenoid locks are used and teamed up with lanky
faceplates that ensure minimum gouging of the wall itself.
Typically, hollow steel or aluminium jambs will
accommodate pretty much any electric strike of suitable size. Things do get
complicated with aluminium-framed glass doors. The glass is usually encased in
the 3-odd centimetre wide jamb surface of the jamb making installing the strike
particularly hard.
Essentially it means the installer is required to put in
a strike that’s compact enough to fit the jamb width without cutting the glass.
Sadly, the most compact and most secure strikes are not the same thing and in
most cases finding some sort of balance between architecture and protection
will test security policy.
The same rules that apply for drywall installs should
also be used as guidelines for concrete filled metal jambs – concrete is often
used as a stabilizer in fire doors. Installs like this need a low profile
strike with an internal solenoid.
Another thing to take into account is the existing
lockset. No question, the lockset type will have a determining effect on the
strike chosen. Installers are usually expected to match whatever lock the
interior designer or architect has chosen with the needs of an electric strike
and seldom will the needs of the 2 mechanisms be met.
“In a good installation, the lock will be a press-fit.
Never overcut to allow for imperfections in your work. Any movement in the lock
may impact on the tolerances of the lock and lower its security levels”
At the very least though, security managers should make
sure installation teams get the benefit of working with an ANSI lock style that
is catered for by strike manufacturers. Trying to wring some sort of security
from architectural locks chosen on the basis of aesthetics will always
compromise security. You’ll obtain a seal but only if no force is applied to
the locked door.
The problem works in reverse, too. In the interests of
coming up with the most competitive quote, a non-grade electric strike will be
installed to keep a Grade 1 heavy duty lockset. These 2 will not be good
friends. The problem is that the lockset is burdening the strike – especially
if there’s any traffic using the egress point.
Any combination of heavy duty mortise lock incorporating
a steel 3-piece anti friction latch and an auxiliary dead latch feature; with a
light duty electric strike complete with a narrow style zinc cast faceplate, a
zinc cast latch keeper, and shallow cavity depth or height that’s designed for
light applications simply builds in malfunction.
All you installers forced to team up this sort of
combination on glass doors that lack the room for a properly matched and graded
electric strike should argue a case for electro magnetic locking solutions – at
least on internal doors.
Handling installations
Before you set out to the site before access control
installation, set up the locks properly at the work bench. First check to make
sure the DC diode that crosses the positive and negative wires is already in
place. If it’s not, the diode will be included in the packaging. Locate it and
tape it to the lock. Next, check if the lock will fail safe or fail secure in
the event of power failure.
If the lock needs to be set up manually, remove its cover
and access the lock’s relay. The brass locking pins can be removed and their
insertion pattern changed to fail safe. Decisions about fail safe and fail
secure will be influenced by a site’s application and the customer’s
requirements.
Good electric strikes are supplied with a template to
assist with installation. Once at the site place the template on the door then
mark it out so you can make the necessary cuttings. Cut out both top and bottom
marks on the jamb as well as the markings on the opening edge of the door and
once your initial cutting is completed, use the lock as a template.
In a good installation, the lock will be a press-fit.
Never overcut to allow for imperfections in your work. Any movement in the lock
may impact on the tolerances of the lock and lower its security levels.
Next step is to put in the cable. The method you’ll use
will be dictated by the construction of door frames and walls. You’ll either
come down the through the wall and then through the frame (timber frame, timber
door, gyprock wall) or you’ll conduit down the wall and come in through the
frame from the side (concrete-filled, steel frame, steel door, cement wall).
Never use external conduit runs on the unsecured side of
the door and try not to use them on the inside either. If you have to install
cable this way be sure to use steel conduit and if there’s camera support for
the door, include the external cable run in the camera’s field of view if
possible.
Major challenges will be fire doors. They have a
fire-rated steel frame filled with cement to absorb heat and to resist
buckling. Once your template is cut, use a cold chisel or similar tool to carve
out a cable channel in the cement and then drill a hole through the jamb or the
wall to carry cable from the lock to the controller.
Once the holes are drilled for wiring, take the cable
back to an input on the door controller located in the closest electrical riser
or wiring closet. Ensure your wiring is neat, firmly secured and tagged so it’s
way to identify. The cable will have a pair of power wires and additional wires
reporting lock status including open, closed or alarm.
With the wiring in, you can look at the installation of
the lock itself. Drill the top and bottom holes then tap them to suit the
screws supplied. To give yourself a third hand, turn the lock back to front and
screw it to its top positioning hole as you connect the exposed wiring. This
practice will ensure you don’t use too much wire and it’ll get the lock closer
to your face for the careful work needed.
Now twist the positive and negative wires together,
placing the DC diode in position across them. The anode of the diode will go to
the positive and the cathode to the negative wires respectively. You then
solder the diode into place using the minimum amount of solder for a firm
joint.
Once the solder has set, fold the joint down so it can be
heat shrunk. If it’s not your practise to heat shrink soldered joints, it
should be. Covering connections reduces the possibility of short circuits and
costly maintenance call-outs.
Before you turn the lock back around by removing the
third hand screw, make sure you label wires and once this is done, put the lock
into the door making sure wires don’t squeeze out the sides. Screw the lock
into position making sure the pivot lip is correctly aligned with the latch.
As you go through your commissioning procedure, check
that door handles are correctly orientated and egress is possible from the
secure side of the door by not the unsecured side. Now go to the reader and
test the lock’s function using the appropriate credential or switch. The
controller will power up the lock and the pivot lip will rotate, releasing the
strike.
“Once the solder has set, fold the joint down so it can be heat shrunk.
If it’s not your practise to heat shrink soldered joints, it should be.
Covering connections reduces the possibility of short circuits and costly
maintenance call-outs”