Ruko desk lock made to work with cabinet
I was really proud I could find a use for another one of my locks other than picking it! Hahaha I got a great deal on this Ruko desk lock off of eBay from Jimu57 and wanted to put it to good use. It became more of a challenge than I thought it would be but it's installed and working great.
The first thing I had to do was make the tail piece work horizontally instead of vertically. Which I thought would be just taking it off and rotating it and done. But it wouldn't not work like that and Ruko seems to have a pretty specialized tail piece. So I came up with the idea of cutting off the eye and rotating the ear where I needed it and welding it back together. As shown here
With the tail piece off I decided to gut it and it is just as beautiful inside as it is out. Sleaved with Assa spools in all chambers:D
I cut a hole in the door and made it to fit the lock but I needed to secure it somehow. It was set up to work with thin sheet metal but I was using it in a 3/4" door so I was planning on using some sort of nut to thread on the back but not only were the the threads very hard to find nuts for, not much of the lock stuck out of the back of the door far enough to get a nut on the back. So then I took a play out of the Adams rite playbook and thought about using a set screw. And that was really easy. Drill a hole in the profile of the door and into the side of the lock a few mm and buy a set screw slightly larger than the hole I drilled and thread it in. As you can see I started out thinking I needed a 1/4" set screw and realized it was too big so I went to a smaller one...
Then the last thing I had to do was cut a slot into the profile of the door jam to make a space for the tailpiece to latch. Not the prettiest thing but it works hahaha
So now everything works perfectly as a Ruko would and now the cabinet where I keep some of my lock projects and practice locks in is a lot more secure than it needs to be hahahah. But it's really cool for me to have a working Ruko in my house:D
The first thing I had to do was make the tail piece work horizontally instead of vertically. Which I thought would be just taking it off and rotating it and done. But it wouldn't not work like that and Ruko seems to have a pretty specialized tail piece. So I came up with the idea of cutting off the eye and rotating the ear where I needed it and welding it back together. As shown here
With the tail piece off I decided to gut it and it is just as beautiful inside as it is out. Sleaved with Assa spools in all chambers:D
I cut a hole in the door and made it to fit the lock but I needed to secure it somehow. It was set up to work with thin sheet metal but I was using it in a 3/4" door so I was planning on using some sort of nut to thread on the back but not only were the the threads very hard to find nuts for, not much of the lock stuck out of the back of the door far enough to get a nut on the back. So then I took a play out of the Adams rite playbook and thought about using a set screw. And that was really easy. Drill a hole in the profile of the door and into the side of the lock a few mm and buy a set screw slightly larger than the hole I drilled and thread it in. As you can see I started out thinking I needed a 1/4" set screw and realized it was too big so I went to a smaller one...
Then the last thing I had to do was cut a slot into the profile of the door jam to make a space for the tailpiece to latch. Not the prettiest thing but it works hahaha
So now everything works perfectly as a Ruko would and now the cabinet where I keep some of my lock projects and practice locks in is a lot more secure than it needs to be hahahah. But it's really cool for me to have a working Ruko in my house:D
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