Police target bicycle cable locks

June 19, 2014

biccyle D-lock with cable

Bicycles secured with flimsy cable locks are being tagged as unsafe by police in America.


The yellow tags yellow read: “The Police Department stole your bike”

“Cable locks just aren’t safe,” Commander Jason Mollendor of Auraria Police, Denver, told metnews.org. “It takes a thief no time to get through them with wire cutters.”

Cyclists can buy a good quality lock and still fall prey to thieves on the look out for cable locks. Good quality, Sold Secure-rated D-locks are commonly sold with a cable accessory – a length of flimsy, plastic-coated metal cable intended to secure quick-release wheels and not the bike itself. Problems arise because it is easy to mistakenly assume the cable has the same security rating as the D-lock with which it is sold. The lock packaging does little to explain that the cable element is not security rated and must not be used to secure the bike.

cable lock


Even Sold Secure, the independent organisation that tests bike locks in Britain, rarely makes clear that its rating applies only to the D-lock in such cases.

Securing a bicycle with a cable accessory, using the D-lock as little more than a padlock, makes it incredibly easy to steal and falls foul of cycle insurance policy requirements. As demonstrated by our film, the cables can be cut in a second. Even a junior hacksaw, which can be bought for £1, can cut through the cable in only 80 seconds.

Bicycle thief vs cable lock

https://youtu.be/SMEQRV_TnbA

{{cta-cycling}}

How can I tell if my lock is secure?

Most good locks sold in Britain have been tested by Sold Secure and awarded a rating of either bronze, silver or gold. Using a Sold Secure-rated lock when a bike is left in public is a staple requirement for most cycle insurance policies.

Unfortunately, when a D-lock and cable set is marked as Sold Secure, the rating applies only to the D-lock element.

Use cables with care. They can be useful to secure quick-release wheels, but they offer very little security and if used incorrectly, invalidate cycle insurance.

A fully-comprehensive cycle insurance policy will cover quick release wheels against theft and not specify that they be locked with a cable.

Information correct at time of publication.

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