(09-24-2017, 01:19 PM)woodhead Wrote: One wrongly drilled hole and you get out the Bondo and paint!!
Al
This. I've done this before.
I replaced all of the house locks with electronic ones, and on one door - a patio door - the glass pane was large enough that the space between the edge of the "window" trim and the center of the deadbolt hole was just a hair too small for the electronic piece. There was about 1/16" - 1/8" of overlap with the edge of the window trim (small-ish decorative molding). I thought I could either chisel out a small section, which wouldn't look as good, or take the door off, clamp a straightedge to the door, and use a flush trim bit to shave off just a bit of the molding.
That didn't go perfectly, for whatever reason, and I ended up shaving off the moulding (in most spots) but also paint and steel in others. One spot on the door was apparently so high that I cut through the steel and exposed insulation. In any case, lots of Bondo, paint, and caulk, and you can barely tell the difference. Steel doors aren't hard to fix.
Back to the original point, you have two easier options. They do offer drive-in options, which is what you do in this case generally - use a hole saw to bore the hole, and drive in the bolt with a circular sleeve. This is common with interior doors and their strikes. The other option is to get a deadbolt installation jig - the Irwin one comes with hole saws and guides for multiple backsets and plate options. I did this to add a bolt to a door that didn't have one, so I was starting from scratch, and I didn't have a problem. You don't need to drill through the door, but it might help you just the same.