National Mfg. Aluminum Screen Door Latch N107797

MaxWarehouse_Store (364994)
98.9% positive feedback
Price:
$32.04
Free shipping
Estimated delivery Thu, Sep 4 - Mon, Sep 8
Returns:
30 days returns. Buyer pays for return shipping. If you use an eBay shipping label, it will be deducted from your refund amount.
Condition:
New
V99 Screen/Storm Latch - Aluminum. Building Materials And Products. Product is self-latching with a spring-loaded strike. Latch is furnished with break off screws and a locking device. Shower Rod Flanges, Concealed Screws, Satin Stainless Steel by Stone Harbor Hard.

About this product

Product Identifiers

BrandNational Hardware
GTIN0038613107793
UPC0038613107793
eBay Product ID (ePID)1200286521

Dimensions

Weight1.75 lb
Width5.63

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Ratings and Reviews

4.0
4 product ratings
  • 3 users rated this 5 out of 5 stars
  • 0 users rated this 4 out of 5 stars
  • 0 users rated this 3 out of 5 stars
  • 0 users rated this 2 out of 5 stars
  • 1 users rated this 1 out of 5 stars

Would recommend

Good value

Good quality

Most relevant reviews

  • looks good, but that's all... the lock is garbage (won't stay locked, easily defeated)

    Oh lookie. It opens two ways, by push-pull or by twisting. Isn't that.. special? It's not especially more useful than just push-pull, but they had to get cute. Only buy this if you don't need a latch that locks, because the lock on this is garbage. Too bad the engineers clearly didn't invest effort into the lock like they did with the cute and completely unnecessary dual-opening scheme. Although this latch can be installed on left-swinging doors (i.e. hinges on the left side, looking from inside to outside the door), the locking tab in this configuration is on the bottom, and you would pull it up to lock. The problem is that the tab only clicks in place in the UNLOCKED position — i.e., it falls back down about half way and fails to prevent the outside handle from quite easily forcing it down to unlocked position and thus opening the door. This requires hardly any more force than normally opening the latch. That's how bad it is. If that weren't enough, even with the locking tab held in place manually by the user, EITHER handle can easily force the slider bar backward inside the latch (not down, but back) and thus open the door. Yes, they actually left room in the latch body for the bar to be pushed back into the body, allowing the handle to disengage the striker. Whoever designed this should go back to digging ditches or flipping burgers. A 3-year old could defeat this crummy locking mechanism! Seriously, all the kid would need to do is put their weight on either handle and boom it's open. This is not merely a defective unit, it's a defective DESIGN. They may as well have just made the thing non-locking in the first place, because that's what it effectively is. Unfortunately, it was only after heavy modification of the door jamb, due to this model being so different from the old latch it replaced, that I discovered the craptastic lock design. I'll either have to install a secondary means of locking the door — which of course forces a different point of egress, since it won't lock behind me — or get rid of this POS and find a different brand 3" latch that actually works.

    Verified purchase: YesCondition: New

  • Good latch

    It is the only screen door latch I have ever seen that can be pushed, pulled of turned like a regular latch to open the door. I am replacing one I have had for many years. My comment on the value is I thought it was a little expensive but could not fine one locally so figured it is worth it.

    Verified purchase: YesCondition: New

  • Perfect Fit For Old Screen Door

    I could not find a replacement for a broken latch (spring broke) for a 50+ year old storm door. This seems like an exact copy of the original.

    Verified purchase: YesCondition: New

  • A

    I like the multi-directional latch movement - push, pull, up, down - very easy to open.

    Verified purchase: YesCondition: New