Door knobs are available in a variety of styles for different applications.
Here is a breakdown of the kinds you can get that will help you determine
what you need.
1) Entrance Door Knobs - Entrance knobs have keyed cylinders and are
generally used on exterior doors.
2) Privacy Door Knobs - Privacy Door Knobs are generally used on bedrooms
and baths. They are lockable but do not have a keyed cylinder. They can be
unlocked with a generic tool that is provided.
3) Passage Door Knobs - Hall and Closet or Passage knob sets do not lock.
They are generally used on closets or other doors where a lock is not
required.
4) Dummy Door Knobs - Dummy door knobs are just one knob that face mounts to
any surface. This is the perfect solution for ball catch doors or other
applications where a latch mechanism is not needed, but the look of a door
knob is desired. If your door has a predrilled hole in it for a door knob,
but no mechanism is needed. The best option is a passage knob omitting the
latch mechanism.
5) Mortise Locks - Mortise locks are intended to be used as a privacy door
knobs when the knob can be unlocked with a skeleton key provided. Please be
aware that a mortise lockset cannot be installed on just any door. The
mortise locksets are great for replacing your old antique hardware and can
be used on new doors, but preparations need to be made to do so. 

Are your door knobs sold as complete sets?
Yes. Our door knobs are sold with knobs for both sides of the door, latch
mechanism, strike plate and mounting screws. Only dummy knobs are sold
individually as they are intended to be mounted with screws to the surface
of a door. 

 Are the knobs defective?
No, none of our knobs or lever handles are defective products. We buy most
of our products directly from the manufacturer, and even ship from their
warehouses a lot of times to assure that we can pass the saving on to our
customers. All of our door knobsets are new, in the box door hardware
products that are equivalent and similar to other major brands you may find
in your local hardware store.

How do I know if your door knobs will replace my exiting knobs?
The most important thing to check is the backset. The backset is the
distance from the center of the bore hole, ot the edge of the door. The
brands that we currently carry are available in 2 3/8" and 2 3/4" backsets.
These are pretty standard and should replace just about any knob, but
occasionally someone calls that has something different - generally old
homes. If the backset is right, the knobs should work. 

Do I have to specify door handing when ordering door knobs?
No, door knobs are not specific to door handing like lever handles are. 

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to