Finally, after a 10 week wait, 4 keyed-alike sash locks arrived, and that triggered a bit of activity at the front door. First of all, we don't have a bell or a knocker.
That's a funny shaped piece of wood, Mike:
The bell pull had to be mounted in an unorthodox way because of the arched braces for the porch canopy, with the top element being rotated 90 degrees from the lower piece. Hence the funny shaped piece of oak:
The bell pull itself is a really nice bit of casting, but the screw thread used to join the two halves of the rod was appalling, and failed immediately. I welded it together instead:
Three metres away, inside, is the bell. There are various pulleys in between:
The awful stretchy nylon cord supplied with the bell will be replaced with some twisted wire cable (actually picture hanging wire) when that arrives.
Now, the lock/ latch. Firstly, the door is an inch thick boarded door, so a sash lock won't work in the ordinary way. A rim lock would be the usual answer, but the other three outer doors need a sash lock, and you can't get a sash lock and a rim lock on the same key without paying many hundreds of pounds so......
I then glued that all up:
Whilst the glue was drying, I decided I needed part of a wheelbarrow for the lock issue:
The following day I cleaned up the lock box, then did some drilling etc:
That's the woodwork done for the box. I set to with a file and hacksaw to sort out the metalwork:
I found a collection of gorgeous square headed black screws:
With a little box for the keep, it was time to screw that lot to the door (with the metalwork just resting in place):
After a bit of tiffling to get everything working smoothly, I obtained some old engine oil from my friendly local garage:
It wasn't really possible to take photos whilst using a blow-torch to get the metal glowing dull red, then plunging it repeatedly into the oil, burning off the excess, and repeating, but I did stop half-way through so that the before and after was obvious:
Once cool, I wiped them off, and screwed them in place:
Unfortunately those were all the screws I had, so I had to shorten some hand-made nails and use them at the ends of the straps:
Ideally, I would have liked a big black doorknob (and separate escutcheon) rather than a monkey-tailed handle, but I couldn't find any big ones with a return spring in them, which was essential for this latch.