|
I ended up looping my cable around a post on my desk, I think it's easier than drilling holes in the desk and a little less destructive to the furniture which means something to me since i'm in a college dorm
I would suggest, if Kensington wanted this thing ridiculously secure, is to make the sheathing out of metal (not plastic as it is now). kensington locks are pretty solid in general; although, there's not much security you can gain from three small screws (in wood per say).
In this so called "kit" you will receive some screws, the metal anchor point, and a plastic cover. I think amazon should have pointed this out to me before I bought it. I bought this thinking it would be a cheap way to lock up my new monitor, with its Kensington Security hole. You will NOT receive a physical lock and cable. As for the security it should provide, all you gotta do is unscrew it and guess what- not much better than the cable and lock itself. And, amazon's product picture clearly shows a lock and cable included. However, what amazon shipped me was clearly not what I expected.
A plastic cover is then snapped over the base to cover the screws.I only gave it 4 stars because the plastic cover looks kind of cheap. No instructions needed.Just use the 3 included self tapping screws and screw the metal hook plate into your chosen location. No surprises with this anchor. It arrived in a plastic OEM bag and was an easy install.
|