No Consumable Digital Code Locker – 12-Door Steel Cabinet
When you buy a storage locker, the purchase price is just the beginning. Barcode lockers need thermal paper rolls. RFID lockers need IC cards. Those ongoing costs add up.
I visited a public library a while back to follow up on some cabinets we’d installed. The manager told me they’d gone through six boxes of thermal paper in three years. Enough to buy half a new cabinet. They switched to digital code lockers — users set their own password, store their stuff, come back and enter the same code. No paper, no cards, no ongoing cost. The library loves it. Install it and forget it.
Works the same way at supermarket entrances. Customers set a quick password, drop their bag in, shop, and retrieve. No waiting for a ticket to print.
Here’s the breakdown.

Zero Consumables
No thermal paper rolls to buy. No IC cards to stock. No barcode stickers. Once the cabinet is installed, your only cost is electricity. Period.
Independent Keypad Per Door
Each compartment has its own numeric keypad. You set your own password, I set mine. Twelve keypads, twelve independent locks, zero cross-access.
Self-Set Password, Easy to Remember
Users pick a 4-to-6-digit code. No ticket to lose. No card to forget. Just a number they already remember.
Compact 2-Column Design
Only 600mm wide — half the width of a standard 3-column unit. Fits in narrow hallways, small entryways, tight corners where a wider cabinet wouldn’t go.
0.8mm Cold-Rolled Steel
Body is 0.8mm thick. Stands up to daily use in high-traffic public spaces.
Powder Coating
Electrostatic powder coating. Not paint. Doesn’t peel, doesn’t rust. Easy to wipe down with a damp cloth.
Emergency Backup Power
Built-in battery keeps the system running for hours after a power outage. Manager can still open any compartment.
Custom Colors
Door panels available in any RAL color. Match your library’s interior or your supermarket’s brand.
How It Works
At a library: Place the cabinet near the entrance. 600mm wide — it sits against the wall without blocking the walkway. A student walks in, presses any key on an empty compartment, sets a 4-digit code, confirms it, the door pops open. Drops their backpack in, closes the door. When they’re done studying, enters the code, grabs their bag, leaves. No consumables, no staff involvement.
For a community library with about 200 daily visitors, 12 compartments handle the load. During exam season, they might fill up — that’s when you add a second unit.
At a supermarket: Same cabinet works at the store entrance. Customer walks in → presses a key → sets a password → door opens → drops bag → shops. To retrieve: enters the code → door opens → grabs bag. No ticket to lose, no card to carry.
If a customer forgets their code, the manager opens the compartment from the admin panel in about 10 seconds.

Buying Advice (Password Lockers Only)
A few things I’ve learned from years of selling password lockers.
Check the keypad waterproof rating. Worst case I’ve seen: a swimming pool bought password lockers, and the keypads started failing after six months from moisture. Our keypads are IP54 rated — splash-proof. Fine for a gym changing room, just don’t mount it directly across from the shower.
Know how to handle forgotten passwords. Before you buy, ask the supplier: how does the manager open a compartment when a user forgets their code? Is it a software override, or a master code? We offer both — single-compartment release from the admin panel, plus a manager card that opens everything.
Narrow cabinets can tip. A 600mm-wide cabinet at 1800mm tall has a narrow base. Ours has anchor holes at the bottom — bolt it to the floor with expansion screws. If the floor is tiled and you can’t drill, we can add a weighted base plate.
No Consumable Digital Code Locker 12-Door Specs
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Overall size | 1800 × 600 × 460 mm |
| Single compartment | 320 × 280 × 460 mm |
| Material | Cold-rolled steel with powder coating |
| Steel thickness | 0.8 mm (body) / 0.6 mm (door) |
| Number of doors | 12 (2 columns × 6 rows) |
| Lock type | Digital code (user-set 4-6 digits) |
| Control panel | Independent numeric keypad per door + LED display |
| Keypad rating | IP54 splash-proof |
| Color | Gray body, green/blue doors (custom RAL available) |
| Power | AC 220V + DC 12V backup battery |
| Delivery | Fully assembled, plug and play |

FAQ
Q: What happens if a user forgets their password?
A: The manager accesses the admin panel, generates a temporary code for that compartment, or force-opens it directly. We also include a manager card that opens any compartment instantly.
Q: No consumables means no ongoing cost?
A: Correct. Electricity and occasional keypad cleaning. The keypads are rated for 100,000+ presses.
Q: Is 12 compartments enough?
A: For a library with 200 daily visitors or a supermarket with 400 daily customers, yes. During peak hours it may fill up — if it does, add a second unit or go with an 18-door model.
Q: What if two users set the same password?
A: Doesn’t matter. Each compartment has its own independent keypad and lock. Twelve separate systems. Same password on different doors — no conflict.
Q: Can I use this in a swimming pool changing room?
A: Yes, with caution. The keypad is IP54 splash-proof. Install it in the changing area, not directly inside the wet shower zone. Make sure the cabinet base is raised off the floor to avoid standing water.
Q: Can I customize the color?
A: Yes. Any RAL color. No minimum quantity.
Get a Quote
Don’t just look at the upfront price — look at three-year total cost. Barcode lockers need thermal paper. RFID lockers need replacement cards. Password lockers need nothing after day one.
This 12-door digital code locker is already in use at libraries, supermarkets, and gyms. We’ll draw a free layout — send us your space dimensions, we’ll tell you exactly how many units fit and where to place them.
Click inquire below. We reply within 24 hours with a quote and delivery timeline.

Email:sarahhnl@outlook.com
