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A door latch is both a convenience component and a safety restraint
The latch rotates around the body striker and holds it through primary and secondary engagement positions. It must release when commanded yet resist opening under road vibration and crash loads. Door alignment and structural condition are therefore inseparable from lock operation.
Modern assemblies add motors, gears and switches. One mechanical housing can supply several body-control signals while performing central locking and deadlocking.
Door-lock components
| Component | Function | Typical fault |
|---|---|---|
| Rotary latch | Captures striker through safety and full-latch stages. | Wear, contamination or incomplete engagement. |
| Pawl | Retains the rotating latch in its locked position. | Damage can prevent holding or release. |
| Electric actuator | Moves lock/deadlock mechanism. | Weak motor, broken gears or seized linkage. |
| Microswitch/sensor | Reports door, lock and key-cylinder state. | False ajar warnings or alarm behaviour. |
| Handle cable/rod | Transfers interior or exterior release movement. | Stretch, broken end or wrong routing. |
| Child-lock mechanism | Disables rear interior release. | Stuck or mispositioned selector. |
| Striker | Body-mounted pin or loop engaged by latch. | Misalignment, wear or loose mounting. |
| Key-cylinder lever | Transfers mechanical key command. | Disconnected link or security damage. |
Locking functions
Single and central locking
A local mechanical lock secures one door, while central locking commands several actuators through relays or a body module. The controller may unlock only the driver's door on the first command.
Deadlocking
Deadlock or double-lock mode disconnects interior release to resist forced entry. Never activate it with occupants inside. Diagnosis must recognise that an interior handle intentionally does nothing in this state.
Child lock
A rear-door child lock disables only the interior release while exterior opening remains available. Mechanical selectors and electronic child locks have different test procedures.
Soft close and power doors
A motor can pull a partly latched door to full engagement. This adds pinch hazards, calibration and power-release functions beyond a conventional latch.
Exact fitment checks
| Check | Possible variation | Risk if wrong |
|---|---|---|
| Door position | Front/rear, left/right, sliding or hinged. | Latch and cable geometry differ. |
| Body style | Three-door, five-door, estate, saloon or van. | Pillar and striker arrangement change. |
| Drive side | Driver's key cylinder and selective unlock logic. | Missing mechanical linkage or wrong wiring. |
| Production date | Connector, switch and security revision. | Part fits but body module sees wrong states. |
| Deadlock/child lock | Mechanical, electric or absent. | Security and interior release are affected. |
| Keyless/soft close | Additional antennas, motors or release switches. | Features and calibration unavailable. |
| Cable ends | Ball, hook, clip and sheath length. | Handle travel cannot release the latch. |
How the latch engages
As the door closes, the striker rotates the latch through a first safety position and then full engagement. The pawl locks it. If the latch is accidentally rotated while the door is open, the striker cannot enter and the door appears to bounce back.
Reset an open-door latch only using the approved controlled method while operating the release handle. Keep fingers and tools away from the mechanism; it closes with significant force.
Door alignment and striker condition
Worn hinge pins, accident distortion or loose striker bolts make the door lift or drop as it closes. The latch then drags over the striker, creating a heavy handle and premature wear. Adjust hinges and striker to body dimensions rather than moving the striker merely to hide a sagging door.
Mark striker position before removal and use the published torque. The fastener may screw into a captive plate that can fall inside the pillar. A loose striker is a safety fault.
Symptom-led diagnosis
| Symptom | Possible lock cause | Alternative checks |
|---|---|---|
| Door bounces open | Latch already closed, seized or misaligned. | Striker position, hinge drop and frozen seal. |
| Unlocks then relocks | Actuator cannot reach position or switch disagrees. | Another door, low voltage and body-module logic. |
| Interior light stays on | Door-ajar switch in latch. | Bonnet/boot switches and wiring. |
| Actuator chatters | Broken gears, weak motor or binding linkage. | Supply voltage and repeated controller command. |
| Inside handle does not open | Cable, deadlock or rear child lock. | Handle pivot and trim interference. |
| Key turns without effect | Cylinder lever or rod disconnected. | Worn key/cylinder and security damage. |
| Fault only when wet | Connector or latch-switch ingress. | Door-harness boot and drainage. |
Electrical diagnosis
Scan the body-control and door modules for codes and view each latch state. Compare commanded lock, actual lock, door-ajar, deadlock and key-cylinder data. A controller may reverse motor polarity, so test across the actuator rather than assuming one permanent earth.
Check voltage under load and inspect wiring where it flexes through the door-to-body gaiter. Broken conductors can contact intermittently with door position. Repair with automotive-grade flexible wire and approved sealed splices, not rigid household connectors.
Mechanical handle and cable diagnosis
Observe cable sheath seating and lever travel with the trim removed safely. A cable can look connected while its outer sheath has left a bracket, absorbing handle movement. Exterior handles can crack at hidden pivots.
Do not shorten or overtension a cable to create earlier release. Insufficient free movement can hold the pawl partly operated and prevent secure latching.
When the door will not open
Confirm child-lock and deadlock state, battery voltage and emergency mechanical-key procedure. Try central locking only in controlled cycles; repeated actuator operation can overheat it. Apply gentle door pressure to unload a misaligned striker while operating the correct release.
If trim must be removed with the door shut, follow vehicle-specific access points. Cutting panels, drilling the latch or forcing a window risks airbags, glass, wiring and anti-intrusion structure. Specialist access is safer when the latch is deadlocked internally.
Side-airbag and power isolation
Doors may contain a side-impact sensor, airbag wiring or an airbag mounted to the trim or frame. Identify components before disconnecting anything. Follow battery isolation and waiting times, and never probe pyrotechnic circuits with a multimeter or test lamp unless explicitly permitted.
Window regulators can move unexpectedly and glass is heavy. Secure it with the approved supports if its guide, carrier or motor is disturbed. Keep hands away from scissor mechanisms.
Safe replacement sequence
- Confirm exact latch, door position, functions, codes, live states and emergency entry plan.
- Open the window where possible, switch ignition off and isolate power by the vehicle procedure.
- Remove trim using correct clip locations and identify side-airbag and wiring routes.
- Peel the moisture membrane without tearing it and preserve its sealing adhesive.
- Photograph handle cables, rods, clips and key-cylinder lever before release.
- Support the latch, disconnect its plug and remove fasteners with the correct bit.
- Withdraw the unit without bending window guides or damaging anti-theft shields.
- Transfer only specified cables, brackets or seals and install the replacement squarely.
- Test latch manually with the door open, then reconnect power and check every state.
- Restore membrane and trim, verify alignment and close the door gently for final testing.
Moisture barrier and drainage
Water normally enters the outer door past the window waist seal and drains through holes at the bottom. A bonded membrane redirects it away from trim and electronics. Failure to reseal the membrane causes wet carpets and connector corrosion.
Keep drain holes open and use the specified butyl or sealing method. General silicone can make future service difficult and may not adhere to contaminated surfaces.
Lubrication
Use only lubricant approved for latch pawls, pivots, cables and low-temperature operation. Thick grease can stiffen in winter or trap grit. Spraying penetrating fluid into an electric actuator can wash out factory grease and contaminate switches.
Clean the striker and apply a minimal specified lubricant where required. Do not coat painted seals or key cylinders with incompatible oil.
Programming and calibration
Many latches need no coding, but power doors, soft-close systems and door modules may require basic settings. Keyless entry also depends on antennas and handle sensors rather than the latch alone.
Clear codes only after recording them, then cycle lock, deadlock, child lock and emergency release. Confirm instrument and interior-light status. A latch that mechanically works but reports the wrong state still needs correction.
Common mistakes
- Ordering the wrong side because door position is viewed from outside inconsistently.
- Slamming the door before testing the new latch in the open position.
- Adjusting the striker to conceal worn hinges.
- Activating deadlock while a person remains inside.
- Trapping a handle cable or wiring loom behind trim.
- Tearing or failing to reseal the moisture membrane.
- Probing side-airbag wiring during electrical tests.
- Using general spray lubricant inside an electronic latch.
Safety, security and MOT relevance
| Condition | Risk | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Door will not reach full latch | It can open while driving. | Do not drive until secure engagement is restored. |
| Door cannot open from required side | Emergency egress is impaired. | Repair promptly and follow legal/test requirements. |
| Loose striker | Latch alignment and crash retention are compromised. | Stop use and torque/repair mounting. |
| Exposed damaged wiring | Short, fire or false locking command. | Isolate and repair correctly. |
| Child lock stuck | Rear occupant exit control is altered. | Inform occupants and repair without delay. |
| Alarm repeatedly triggers | Security and battery drain issues. | Diagnose switch data rather than disabling alarm. |
Door latches, security and the ability to open doors are relevant to UK MOT inspection according to door position and vehicle type. A tied, taped or partially latched door is not a roadworthy repair.
Door lock FAQs
Q: Is a door lock the same as a latch?
A: Modern assemblies commonly combine the mechanical latch, lock actuator and status switches.
Q: Why does the door bounce open?
A: The latch may already be rotated closed, seized or misaligned with the striker.
Q: Why does central locking unlock again?
A: A latch may not reach its commanded state or another door switch may report incorrectly.
Q: Can a latch cause the interior light to stay on?
A: Yes. The door-ajar switch is often integrated inside it.
Q: Why will the rear door not open inside?
A: Check the child lock, cable and deadlock state before replacing parts.
Q: Can deadlocking disable interior handles?
A: Yes, intentionally; never deadlock a vehicle with occupants inside.
Q: Should the striker be adjusted?
A: Only after checking hinge and body alignment and using the specified dimensions and torque.
Q: Can penetrating oil repair a slow actuator?
A: Not reliably; it can damage internal lubrication and switches.
Q: Does a replacement latch need coding?
A: Basic latches often do not, but powered or module-integrated systems may need settings.
Q: Why is the carpet wet after door repair?
A: The water-shedding membrane may not have been resealed correctly.
Q: Can I remove door trim with the door shut?
A: Sometimes through a vehicle-specific method, but forced access can damage airbags, glass and structure.
Q: Can a faulty door lock fail the MOT?
A: It can where the door is insecure or required opening and closing functions do not work.
Q: When must the vehicle not be driven?
A: Do not drive when a door cannot achieve full secure latch or the striker/mounting is loose.