A solid metal ladder lock buckle built for smooth, secure strap adjustment on bags, backpacks, and belts. The ribbed grip bar keeps webbing locked in place without slipping. Widely used in outdoor gear, luggage straps, and tactical accessories. Free stock samples available; custom sample fees fully deductible from bulk orders.
When a customer sends us a webbing sample and asks for a metal ladder lock buckle that won’t slip under load, our first question is always about the webbing width and the tension they expect in daily use. Some buyers know this part by a different name — tri-glide slide buckle, webbing strap adjuster buckle, or simply strap tension adjuster — but the function is the same across all these terms.
This 24mm ladder lock buckle came out of exactly that kind of conversation — a backpack brand needed a slide adjuster that stayed put on the shoulder without buyers having to re-tighten it every few minutes. The three-bar ladder structure, paired with a ribbed grip bar on one side, is what makes that possible.
Every ladder lock buckle lives or dies on one trade-off: if the webbing slides too easily, the strap loosens over time; if it’s too tight, the buyer’s customer gets frustrated adjusting it. This is the single most common complaint we hear from bag and backpack strap hardware buyers switching suppliers, and it’s exactly why a good strap tension adjuster needs to be dialed in per webbing type rather than mass-produced with one generic setting.
The ribbed edge you see on one side of this buckle isn’t decorative — it’s tooled to a specific rib depth and pitch that we adjust based on webbing material (nylon, polyester, or cotton blend all grip slightly differently). During mold trials, we test the same buckle with three or four webbing types before locking the final tooling, because a rib depth that works on nylon can feel too loose on a stiffer cotton strap.
The middle and side bars aren’t just structural filler. They split the load path so the webbing doesn’t concentrate stress on a single point, which is where most cheap slide buckles crack or bend under repeated pulling. We run pull tests on sample batches before mass production to confirm the load path holds under the tension range typical for backpack straps and luggage straps.

This buckle is made from a zinc alloy (die-cast, then CNC-trimmed for edge cleanliness), which gives it the density and rigidity buyers expect from a metal buckle without the brittleness some lower-grade alloys show after repeated flexing. As a zinc alloy buckle, it also takes plating far better than aluminum alternatives, which matters a lot once you start requesting custom finish colors — a big reason many brands come to us specifically as a black metal ladder lock buckle supplier rather than sourcing generic stock finishes elsewhere.
One thing buyers often ask is why two “matte black” buckles from different factories can look completely different after a few months. It usually comes down to plating method. Rack plating (each piece individually racked) gives more even coverage on complex shapes like this ladder lock, while barrel plating (parts tumbled in bulk) is faster and cheaper but can leave thin spots on tucked-in corners like the underside of the ribbed bar. For this buckle’s geometry, we default to rack plating on the visible face and a shorter barrel cycle for the back, balancing cost and finish consistency.

Before any plating recipe goes into mass production, we run it through salt spray testing to check how the coating holds up against corrosion over time — this is especially relevant for buyers targeting outdoor gear or coastal markets where humidity and salt exposure are real factors. Buckles that fail early salt spray checks get sent back to the plating line before they ever reach a production order.
Most of the ladder lock buckles that leave our factory aren’t exactly this one — they’re a variation built off it. As a custom metal slide buckle manufacturer, we open new molds regularly based on buyer drawings, and this 24mm version is a common starting reference for width and load requirements. Whether you call it a custom bag strap buckle or an adjustable webbing buckle for bag straps, the development process is the same: confirm your webbing spec, then we scope the mold.
For buyers exploring their first custom order — including luggage brands looking for an OEM ladder lock buckle for luggage straps — this is typically where the sourcing process starts: confirm webbing width, pick a finish, and we move into sampling.

We run 100% outgoing inspection on finished buckle batches — not spot-checks, full checks — looking at rib depth consistency, plating coverage, and dimensional accuracy against the approved sample. For buyers who need documentation for their own compliance files, we maintain quality certification records and can walk through relevant testing standards such as ASTM reference methods used in our salt spray and pull-test protocols during your sourcing evaluation.
Material compliance is another recurring question, particularly from buyers shipping into the EU. If REACH documentation is a requirement for your market, let us know early in the sampling stage so we can confirm the plating chemistry aligns before mass production, not after.
A well-plated zinc alloy buckle should outlast the bag it’s attached to, but storage and handling do matter over the supply chain.

A mid-sized outdoor gear brand based in Germany came to us after their previous ladder lock buckle supplier kept sending batches where the webbing would gradually loosen during hiking use — enough that customers were leaving reviews about it. Their existing buckle used a smooth bar with no grip texture, which worked fine on stiffer webbing but slipped on the softer nylon blend they’d switched to for weight savings.
We reworked the tooling to add a deeper ribbed grip bar (similar to the structure on this DG-BK024 model) and adjusted the bar spacing slightly to match their exact webbing thickness. After two rounds of sample testing with their actual strap material, the slippage issue was resolved, and the brand moved their full backpack strap hardware line to this updated mold for their next production run.
Our standard MOQ for single-piece hardware like this buckle is 1,000 pcs, though this can be adjusted depending on your project details — smaller trial orders are sometimes possible once we understand your full requirement.
Yes, this is most of what we do day to day. Once you confirm webbing width, finish, and target volume, we quote based on quantity tiers — larger bulk orders typically bring the per-piece cost down and give more flexibility on custom finish requests.
Yes. This is one of our most common customization requests. Send us your webbing width and thickness, and we’ll confirm whether an existing mold fits or if a new custom mold is needed for your tri-glide slider or adjustable webbing buckle project.
Free stock samples are available for standard sizes like this one. For fully custom specs requiring new tooling, there’s a sample fee, which gets fully deducted from your bulk order once confirmed. Courier costs for samples are covered by the buyer.
Custom sample development typically takes 5-7 days once specs are confirmed. Stock sample requests usually ship within 1-3 days.
Mass production generally takes 15-20 days from order and deposit confirmation to finished goods, depending on order volume and finish complexity.
Mold costs for custom sizes are typically offset against future bulk orders rather than refunded outright — we can walk through the specific terms once we understand your order volume and mold complexity.
We can review compliance requirements for your target market during the sampling stage. If REACH documentation is required, flag it early so plating chemistry can be confirmed before mass production begins.

If you’re sourcing a ladder lock buckle for backpacks, luggage straps, or general bag strap hardware, send over your webbing width, preferred finish, and rough order volume — we’ll come back with a quote and, if it’s a stock size, Product Catalog,get a free sample moving right away. For fully custom projects, our team can walk through mold feasibility and timeline before you commit to anything.
Whether you need custom logo engraving on stock designs or fully custom molded shapes, our factory handles it all. From initial 3D engineering to zinc alloy die casting, 48-hour salt spray tested electroplating, and strict manual QC, we support complete OEM/ODM hardware development.
Tell us your project requirements today. We offer free stock samples (shipped within 12 hours) and our mold fees are credited back to you on mass production orders.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Metal Ladder Lock Buckle |
| Model | DG-BK024 |
| Material | Zinc alloy / Metal, matte black finish |
| Weight | 12.6g |
| Structure | Three-bar ladder slide with one ribbed anti-slip bar |
| Finish Options | Matte black, gunmetal, nickel, antique brass, custom electroplating |
| Size/Dimensions | Overall length 38.4mm; fits 24mm webbing width |
| Application | Backpack straps, bag straps, belts, luggage straps, outdoor/tactical gear |
| Installation Method | Thread webbing through the three slots to form the locking loop |
| Customization | Custom size, plating color, logo engraving/laser marking |
| Packaging | Poly bag / custom printed bag / bulk carton, per client requirement |
| MOQ | 1000 pcs (negotiable based on order details) |
| Sample Time | 5-7 days |
| Production Time | 15-20 days |
| Delivery Time | 10-15 days |
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