Door Locks Diagram Upd

The heavy metal piece that extends into the door frame.

| Cylinder Type | Diagram Shape | Key Control Feature | Security Level | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Round plug with 5-6 vertical pin stacks | Standard key cuts | Medium | | Disc Detainer | Rectangular sidebar, rotating discs (not pins) | Laser-cut, often double-sided | High | | Wafer | Flat plug with stacked wafers (used in cars/cabinets) | Double-bitted key | Low-Medium | | Magnetic | Magnets instead of pins (no visible keyway in diagram) | Magnetic stripe key | Niche | door locks diagram

Modern electronic locks add layers of technology, replacing physical pins with digital authentication. The heavy metal piece that extends into the door frame

| Component | Function | | :--- | :--- | | | The round assembly where the key is inserted; rotates to retract the bolt. | | Cam | A metal arm attached to the rear of the plug that moves the latch or bolt. | | Latchbolt | The spring-loaded, angled bolt that keeps the door closed (retracts via knob/lever). | | Deadbolt | A square, throw-only bolt (not spring-loaded) for high security. | | Strike Plate | Metal plate on the door frame; receives the bolt/latch. | | Keyway | The shaped slot in the plug that guides the key to its pins. | | Driver Pins & Spring | Located in the housing (Bible); they block the plug from turning without the correct key. | | | Cam | A metal arm attached