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In my mind, the trick isn't getting the repair cable (take a sample to Lowes or Home Depot and where you buy chain in the hardware department, you can get replacement cable), The real trick is anchoring the new cable.
Some cables depend on specialized anchors. If you can't duplicate how the ends are held down, you won't be able to replace the cable with anything but a replacement part.
I suggest taking the assembly apart and seeing how the cable ends are held in. If you can replicate that, then measure how much cable you need and take a sample down to Lowes or Home Depot or Ace Hardware and get some replacement cable.
Hope that helps! |