Monthly Archives: September 2014

Hardware Finishes

When I worked for a hardware distributor back in the 80's, I had a secret hiding place where I kept my prized possessions...including a small cardboard "book" that contained samples of each of the common finishes used for hardware. I had to keep it hidden, because people were always trying to steal it, or rip out the little metal pieces to send as finish samples...

By |2016-01-13T11:10:14-05:00September 30th, 2014|General Info|44 Comments

Another Open Fire Door

A 42-unit apartment building was destroyed by fire last week in Columbus, Ohio. The fire began in a second-floor apartment, and the door to the apartment was left open when the resident evacuated. According to investigators, fire doors in the corridor and stairwell were also propped open, allowing the smoke and flames to spread and leaving the residents no safe escape route...

By |2015-05-27T09:54:51-04:00September 29th, 2014|FDAI, Fire Doors, News|0 Comments

FF: The EasyLock

Most of you know that I'm not a fan of the retrofit security "inventions" that seem to be flooding the institutional market lately, but I do admire creativity, and since it's Fixed-it Friday I thought I'd share a product I recently saw in the news - The EasyLock. I have no idea how effective it is as a security device, but the design is pretty clever...

By |2014-09-26T10:00:33-04:00September 26th, 2014|Fixed-it Friday, Locks & Keys|5 Comments

Memo from the New York State Education Department

It seems like just about every week I see a new classroom security device that promises to thwart intruders and help keeps kids safe in school. As I've said multiple times, many of these devices are not code-compliant, and trade security for life safety. In evaluating these products, my criteria are...

By |2015-01-05T22:46:41-05:00September 22nd, 2014|School Security|3 Comments

Access to Panic Hardware

I'm sure you've seen panic hardware with some sort of guard or protection above, below, or around the panic. Should the codes define a certain area of free space around the panic hardware, ensuring that the actuating portion is obvious and readily available to someone using the exit? How much clear space is needed?

By |2014-09-19T12:52:04-04:00September 18th, 2014|Code Development, Means of Egress, Panic Hardware|11 Comments

Assembly Doors with Mag-Locks

In a recent discussion about code change proposals, there was a question about whether electromagnetic locks should be an acceptable alternative to panic hardware, on doors serving Assembly occupancies - essentially the application shown in the photos below. If approved, a door serving an assembly space, and perhaps even Educational occupancies depending on how the proposal was written, could have mag-locks released by a sensor, and no panic hardware - no latching device at all...

By |2014-09-18T00:20:20-04:00September 11th, 2014|Electrified Hardware, Means of Egress, Panic Hardware|13 Comments

WWYD? School Security

In addition to providing support and training on door-related code requirements, my job also includes participating in code development - helping to propose changes to the codes that affect our business, and reviewing proposals from others. There is currently research underway that may propose to add school security requirements to a national code...

By |2016-10-23T20:16:55-04:00September 2nd, 2014|Fire Doors, Means of Egress, School Security, WWYD?|10 Comments
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