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These latches reach around outside corners to draw two surfaces together—use them to secure cases, toolboxes, and other containers.
To prevent accidental opening, these latches have a safety catch.
A plastic-coated handle and hook prevents the release of particles from metal-to-metal contact, which makes these latches good for clean room applications.
These latches use downward compression to pull surfaces together for sealing gasketed doors.
A safety catch prevents accidental opening.
Easily snap these latches into cutouts without tools or other hardware.
These latches are typically used to secure hoods and covers.
Designed with compression springs to withstand vibration better than standard draw latches, these offer a more secure hold.
Mount these latches on a corner to draw perpendicular surfaces together.
An integrated slide bolt extends into the strike plate to resist pull and vibration from side-to-side, front-to-back, and up-and-down forces.
The latch arm is coated with vinyl so it won't scratch surfaces.
No need for a strike plate, these latches hook into a lip or notch.
Adjust the latching distance for a tight fit over gasketing and to compensate for misalignment.
These latches have a safety catch to prevent accidental opening.
These latches hook into a lip or notch and have an adjustable latching distance to compensate for gasketing and misalignment.
Each latch comes with a variety of strike plates for different mounting options.
Draw lightweight surfaces together with these latches.
Use these L-handle latches to draw lightweight surfaces together.
Lift and turn the handle 180° to open and close these latches.
With a spring-loaded handle, these hold tighter than other turn-to-open draw latches and compensate for slight misalignment.
Use a 5/16" hex key to open and close these locks.
These latches snap in place to eliminate rattling and hold access doors, screens, windows, and panels.
To secure overlapping components, pull the slide over the stud until they snap together. These latches resist shock and vibration.
Open these locks with a slotted screwdriver.
Open these locks with a Torx driver or the included Torx keys.
Add a padlock to secure these latches, which reach around corners to pull two surfaces together.
For use on gasketed doors, these latches use downward compression to pull surfaces together. They have a safety catch to prevent accidental opening.
Mount these latches on a corner to draw perpendicular surfaces together. They have a safety catch to prevent accidental opening.
Secure surfaces together with these padlockable latches; built-in springs withstand vibration better than other latches.
Adjust the latching distance to compensate for gasketing and misalignment.
Lift and turn the handle 180° to open and close these latches. Add a padlock to secure.
For use on gasketed doors, these latches use downward compression to pull surfaces together.
Lift and turn the handle 180° to open and close this lock.
Secure cases, toolboxes, and other containers—these locks reach around outside corners to draw two surfaces together.
Open several draw locks with the same key.
Quickly push these hasps closed to conveniently secure doors. They’re nonlocking, and there’s no opening for a padlock.
Install these hasps over a cam lock and secure them with a padlock to increase security on cabinets and chests.
Turn the padlock eye to fasten these hasps without a padlock.
The steel housing conceals the mounting bolts and included padlock for extra security, preventing others from prying it open.
Mount these hasps around complex curves, angles, and corners that other corner hasps can't reach.
Designed for use with cut-resistant padlocks, these hasps have a padlock shackle protector on the strike plate for added cut and pry resistance.
Choose this hasp if you need several hasps that open with the same key.
Choose these hasps if you need hasps that each open with a different key.