Sabre Strike Locks ES-130NC
Rated 3.5/5 based on 11 customer reviews

Sabre Strike Locks ES-130NC

Available: All prices Exclude VAT. Shipping and Vat will be calculated at checkout
Wishlist Compare
R 316.52

Sabre Strike Locks ES-130NC

PRODUCT OVERVIEW — ES-130NC Electric Strike Lock

An electric strike lock is a device used in access control systems (intercoms, keypads, card readers, etc.) that releases a door latch electronically when energized. The ES-130NC model is a fail-safe (NC) variant — meaning it unlocks when power is supplied and locks when power is removed. This is often chosen for interior doors, fire escape gates, or situations where safety requires that power loss opens the door.

GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS (TYPICAL ES-130NC)

Model:

  • ES-130NC — electric strike lock, fail-safe / normally closed

Function:

  • Fail-safe (NC): Energize to unlock; locks automatically when power is cut

  • Ideal for emergency exit doors, interior controlled access, and safe egress compliance

Voltage:

  • 12 V DC (most common; some units also support 24 V DC)

Current:

  • ~0.2–0.5 A range (varies slightly by manufacturer)

Holding Force:

  • Depends on build — commonly between 250 kg to 500 kg holding strength

Material:

  • Heavy-duty steel housing

  • Stainless steel locking latch/bolt

Dimensions (approx):

  • ~150 mm × 28–40 mm × 30–35 mm (varies slightly by model/brand)

Operating Temperature:

  • Typically ~-10 °C to +55 °C

Suitable For:

  • Wooden doors

  • Metal doors

  • PVC doors

  • Frame installations where fail-safe release is needed

HOW “NC / FAIL-SAFE” WORKS

Normally Closed (Fail-Safe):

  • Locked when no power is applied

  • Unlocked when power is applied

This is the opposite of a fail-secure (NO) model — which stays locked without power.
Fail-safe is often used for doors where egress must be possible when power fails (e.g., fire door systems, safe exits).

WHERE ES-130NC IS USED

Common installations:

  • Fire escape doors

  • Internal office doors with access control

  • Doors that must unlock in an emergency

  • Systems integrated with
    • Push-to-exit buttons
    • Break-glass alarms
    • Fire alarms
    • Keypad or RFID access control

 

Sabre Strike Locks ES-130NC

PRODUCT OVERVIEW — ES-130NC Electric Strike Lock

An electric strike lock is a device used in access control systems (intercoms, keypads, card readers, etc.) that releases a door latch electronically when energized. The ES-130NC model is a fail-safe (NC) variant — meaning it unlocks when power is supplied and locks when power is removed. This is often chosen for interior doors, fire escape gates, or situations where safety requires that power loss opens the door.

GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS (TYPICAL ES-130NC)

Model:

  • ES-130NC — electric strike lock, fail-safe / normally closed

Function:

  • Fail-safe (NC): Energize to unlock; locks automatically when power is cut

  • Ideal for emergency exit doors, interior controlled access, and safe egress compliance

Voltage:

  • 12 V DC (most common; some units also support 24 V DC)

Current:

  • ~0.2–0.5 A range (varies slightly by manufacturer)

Holding Force:

  • Depends on build — commonly between 250 kg to 500 kg holding strength

Material:

  • Heavy-duty steel housing

  • Stainless steel locking latch/bolt

Dimensions (approx):

  • ~150 mm × 28–40 mm × 30–35 mm (varies slightly by model/brand)

Operating Temperature:

  • Typically ~-10 °C to +55 °C

Suitable For:

  • Wooden doors

  • Metal doors

  • PVC doors

  • Frame installations where fail-safe release is needed

HOW “NC / FAIL-SAFE” WORKS

Normally Closed (Fail-Safe):

  • Locked when no power is applied

  • Unlocked when power is applied

This is the opposite of a fail-secure (NO) model — which stays locked without power.
Fail-safe is often used for doors where egress must be possible when power fails (e.g., fire door systems, safe exits).

WHERE ES-130NC IS USED

Common installations:

  • Fire escape doors

  • Internal office doors with access control

  • Doors that must unlock in an emergency

  • Systems integrated with
    • Push-to-exit buttons
    • Break-glass alarms
    • Fire alarms
    • Keypad or RFID access control