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Popular Models and Vehicle Options for Central Locking
Central locking combines mechanical latching with electrical command
A body controller interprets a key, remote, interior switch or passive-entry request and supplies an actuator or communicates with a door module. The actuator drives gears, a cable or rod to move the latch state. Microswitches can report open, closed, locked, deadlocked and key-cylinder positions back to lighting, alarm and convenience functions.
The mechanical latch must remain safe even if the electrical system loses power.
Actuator assemblies differ in how much they contain
| Assembly | Contains | Critical interface | Common selection error |
|---|---|---|---|
| Separate lock motor | Motor and reduction gear. | Rod travel and mounting direction. | Expecting latch or switches in the box. |
| Integrated door latch | Claw, pawl, motor and switches. | Door side, cables and striker geometry. | Using opposite-hand unit. |
| Tailgate actuator | Motor/solenoid and release mechanism. | Handle, latch and body style. | Confusing release with lock motor. |
| Boot-lid release | Pull actuator or powered latch. | Cable stroke and emergency release. | Wrong saloon/hatch application. |
| Slave actuator | Two-wire bidirectional drive. | Polarity and linkage adjustment. | Substituting for feedback-equipped master. |
| Module-integrated actuator | Electronics plus motor/sensors. | Network, coding and connector. | Assuming plug shape proves compatibility. |
Deadlocking changes the mechanical escape path
Some systems add a security state that disables the interior handle. The actuator and latch must support the exact vehicle strategy, and testing must keep an escape route available. Never activate deadlock with a person or animal inside or while hands are within the mechanism.
Understand normal lock, double-lock and emergency unlocking before closing a repaired door.
Fitment identifies opening, side and electrical functions
| Match point | Why it matters | Evidence | Mismatch outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| VIN/build date | Locates latch and controller revisions. | Vehicle build data. | Different connector or logic. |
| Door/tailgate/boot | Defines release travel and packaging. | Parts diagram and original reference. | No mechanical alignment. |
| Left/right and front/rear | Integrated latches are handed. | Catalogue position. | Cables or claw face wrong way. |
| Connector and pinout | Supplies motor and feedback switches. | Wiring diagram, not shape alone. | Faults or electrical damage. |
| Deadlock/child-lock | Changes safety and security behaviour. | Vehicle option data. | Missing required mode. |
| Included parts | Separates actuator from complete latch. | Itemised product contents. | Incomplete repair. |
Position switches serve more than the lock motor
A latch may tell the vehicle that the door is ajar, fully latched or locked. That data can control interior lamps, alarm arming, selective unlocking, automatic relock and powered-tailgate movement. A failed switch may therefore cause a warning or battery drain even though the motor moves.
Compare live data with physical states instead of testing only audible operation.
Bidirectional motors need a loaded electrical test
Many actuators reverse polarity for lock and unlock. A corroded wire may pass an unloaded voltage check but collapse under motor current. Measure supply and earth drop during a command and compare both directions. Electronic modules may use pulse-width control or current sensing, so follow the circuit diagram.
Do not bridge pins or apply battery power to an unknown feedback circuit.
Door-gaiter wiring is a frequent moving failure point
Wires flex each time a hinged door opens, and conductors can break inside apparently sound insulation. Pulling the loom taut may restore operation temporarily and mislead diagnosis. Inspect the entire flex zone, connector terminals and water sealing and use the approved flexible-wire repair.
Twisted bare joints or rigid household cable fail quickly in a moving gaiter.
Symptoms point to electrical or mechanical branches
| Symptom | Possible actuator/latch cause | Other checks | Safe response |
|---|---|---|---|
| Click but no movement | Stripped gear or seized latch. | Rod, cable and door alignment. | Stop repeated commands. |
| No sound on one door | Open motor or internal electronics. | Gaiter wiring and loaded supply. | Keep alternative entry available. |
| Locks then unlocks | Incorrect position feedback. | Ajar switch, obstruction and controller data. | Do not force repeated cycles. |
| Alarm sounds unexpectedly | Latch switch reports changing state. | Bonnet/tailgate sensors and battery. | Read alarm trigger history. |
| Interior lamp remains on | Door-closed switch not recognised. | Body data and wiring. | Prevent battery discharge. |
| Door will not latch | Claw/pawl fault or wrong assembly. | Striker, hinges and frozen mechanism. | Do not drive. |
Mechanical drag can destroy a new actuator
Corrosion, dried lubricant, bent rods, a misaligned striker or damaged door shell increases actuator load. A controller may reverse when it detects high current, making the fault look electronic. Disconnect the drive as instructed and check latch movement across open and latched simulations.
Lubricate only at the points and with the product specified; excess grease can contaminate switches.
Low battery voltage changes locking behaviour
Several motors operating together create a brief current demand. A weak vehicle battery, poor main earth or low key-fob battery can cause incomplete travel or selective failure. Confirm system voltage and battery condition before interpreting one missed remote command as an actuator defect.
Maintain electrical supply according to vehicle requirements during coding or diagnostic tests.
Trim removal exposes airbags, glass and sharp metal
Follow the vehicle's restraint-system isolation time and identify side-airbag connectors before unplugging anything. Use trim tools at the stated clip locations and support a window if its regulator or channel is disturbed. Door shells contain sharp flanges and can close in wind.
Wear hand and eye protection and keep fixings labelled by position.
Do not close an unproven latch
A replacement can remain locked, incorrectly clocked or disconnected from an emergency cable. Closing the panel too early can trap access to its fasteners. Use an approved tool to rotate the latch claw while the door remains open, then operate outside and inside handles, lock states and release functions.
Reset the claw to its open position before attempting normal closure.
Removal should preserve every linkage adjustment
Record rods, cables and clips
Photograph colours, lever holes, adjusters and routing before release.
Support the assembly
Disconnect the plug by its lock and prevent the latch scratching paint or glass.
Inspect the opening
Check water shields, drains, striker marks and wiring before fitting the new unit.
Linkage clips are small safety components
Plastic retainers hold rods in defined lever holes and prevent them disengaging. A reused brittle clip can pop open after the trim is refitted. Replace damaged clips with the correct orientation and ensure each lock tab closes fully.
Wire, adhesive and cable ties can obstruct other levers and are not suitable latch retainers.
Installation must preserve window and water paths
Route rods and harnesses through their original guides, away from the regulator and glass. Tighten latch and actuator fixings evenly, connect the exterior and interior releases and restore anti-rattle sleeves. Refit the moisture barrier continuously with compatible sealing material.
Blocked drains or a torn barrier can wet electronics and the cabin.
Coding and synchronisation are application-specific
A simple motor may work immediately, while a door module or powered-tailgate latch may require configuration, end-stop learning or key synchronisation. Use stable battery voltage and the current diagnostic procedure. Do not copy coding from another vehicle without confirming the options.
Mechanical emergency unlocking must be checked regardless of electronic learning.
Final testing covers all users and control routes
With the panel open, test latch capture and release, then lock, unlock, deadlock, child-lock, key cylinder, remote, interior switch, selective unlocking and tailgate release as fitted. Confirm ajar warnings, interior lamps and alarm arming. Finally close gently and verify primary and secondary latch engagement.
Never leave a child, animal or tools inside during lock testing.
Secure doors are a roadworthiness requirement
Doors, tailgates and boots must remain securely closed in use and must not create a danger. UK MOT inspection considers applicable door latches and security. A door that opens unexpectedly, cannot latch or defeats a required escape route needs immediate repair before road use.
Recovery is safer than tying a door shut or relying on central locking alone.
Practical central-locking FAQs
Q: Does an actuator always include the latch?
A: No. Check whether the product is a motor, release or complete latch assembly.
Q: Are left and right door units interchangeable?
A: Usually not; mechanisms and cable positions are handed.
Q: Why does the lock click but not move?
A: A worn gear, seized latch or disconnected linkage can be responsible.
Q: Can voltage at the unplugged connector prove the circuit?
A: No. Test voltage drop while the actuator is under load.
Q: Why do locks immediately reopen?
A: A controller may see an obstruction or incorrect latch-state feedback.
Q: Can the door-gaiter wires look intact but fail?
A: Yes. Conductors can break inside unmarked insulation.
Q: Should the latch be tested before closing the door?
A: Yes. Simulate closure while keeping the opening accessible.
Q: Can damaged rod clips be reused?
A: No. Fit the correct secure retainers.
Q: Does every replacement require coding?
A: No. Follow the vehicle procedure for that actuator or module.
Q: Can deadlock be tested with someone inside?
A: No. Keep people and animals out and maintain an escape route.
Q: Why restore the moisture barrier?
A: It directs water away from trim and electrical equipment.
Q: What requires immediate repair?
A: A door that cannot secure, release safely or report its state reliably.
Q: What proves a complete repair?
A: Sound latching, every commanded mode, correct warnings and emergency access.