Quakehold! 2930 4-Inch Steel Furniture Cable



Key features
- •Secure tall and heavy furniture to the wall
- •Powerful steel coated aircraft cable holds furniture upright during earthquakes, windstorms, and protects children when climbing
- •Anchors unsteady and top heavy furniture
- •Use on entertainment units, file cabinets, grandfather clocks, china cabinets, book cases, and wall units
- •Over 1000 lb. break strength
- •4-inch steel-coated furniture cable
Quakehold! 2930 4-Inch Steel Furniture Cable
List Price: $9.02$8.12DEALYou Save: $0.90 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 23, 2026In Stock (9)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers3.7
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
60%
4★
30%
3★
0%
2★
0%
1★
10%
Excellent!!
Josh•February 16, 2018
This works great!!
Five Stars
M. Baber•February 15, 2017
Excellent.
Solid
The Fonz•February 9, 2017
Works great, but 4 inches is pretty short when you're working with a stiff cable behind a dresser. Would recommend the 7 inch instead for most uses. Also it would be nice if it came with a drywall anchor.
Will buy again. Bought it for my TV support ...
MAK•October 10, 2016
Will buy again. Bought it for my TV support on my fireplace mantle. Had to Jimmy rig it to get it to work.
Cable broke with minor strain
M.B.•April 30, 2016
Purchased these and the 7" cables to secure some dressers and bookcases to the wall in my toddler's room for all the same reasons others mention--they are steel, seem more secure/stronger than plastic tethers, etc. But less than a year after installation, one snapped apart as I moved my toddler's dresser away from the wall slightly to clean. See pictures. I did not apply undo stress, just angled the dresser slightly out, while the cable was still attached (we have 2 cables on the dresser; I had removed one, and was angling the dresser out to sweep). Not sure whether the cable itself snapped, or it broke loose from where it was soldered to the end bolt, but it is broken (and not just because the cap came off the end, that part still works fine--it is the cable itself that is broken). Maybe I got a bum one, but it isn't the kind of product you want to take chances with. If you do use, be sure to give the cables a good tug once in a while.
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