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The Delamu Cord Hider 157in Wire Wall Cover is a paintable plastic cable raceway — a flat, low-profile channel that fixes to a wall with an adhesive back and snaps shut over a small bundle of cables. Unlike a wire loom, a raceway is designed to hide cables on a visible wall surface: it can be painted the wall colour, so the channel becomes almost invisible. A typical kit ships as a length of channel pre-cut into shorter segments (commonly 12 to 16 inches each) totalling 157 inches, with corner and tee fittings to navigate around skirting boards and outlets. This Delamu 157in Cord Hider review covers material, mount, capacity, paintability and who it is for.

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Cable Raceways
DELAMU
amazon.com
4.5 (41.3K reviews)
In Stock
$14.99
Updated: May 27, 2026
Price as of May 27, 2026. We earn from qualifying purchases.

As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated.

Delamu 157in Cord Hider at a Glance

ComponentSpecification
TypeCable raceway (paintable wall-mounted channel)
Length per unit157 in (about 13 ft) total, supplied as multiple segments
Capacity (cord count)Around 3 cables of typical TV gauge per channel
Cord diameter rangeBundle up to roughly 3/8 in (10 mm) total inside the channel
MaterialRigid PVC plastic (white)
Color optionsWhite (paintable to wall colour)
Mounting methodAdhesive back (3M-style strip) on every segment
PaintableYes — PVC accepts wall paint over a light scuff
Approx priceAround $14

Material Quality and Durability

The Delamu raceway is moulded from rigid PVC — the same family of plastic used in conduit and trunking — so it is stiffer and more dimensionally stable than the flexible PE used in wire looms. The rigidity matters for a wall product: the channel must hold a clean horizontal or vertical line across a long run, and a flexible material would sag visibly between the adhesive strips. The two-part design (a base that mounts to the wall and a snap-on cover) lets you push cables into the channel and then close it cleanly; the cover is held by a snap fit that resists casual knocks but releases under fingernail pressure if you need to add a cable later. The PVC accepts wall paint readily after a light scuff with fine sandpaper, which is the whole point of choosing a raceway over a loom. Indoors and out of direct sun the material is essentially permanent — a Delamu raceway painted into a wall in 2026 will still be in place in five years.

Installation and Mounting

The raceway mounts with adhesive strips already fitted to each segment. Installation is straightforward but it rewards planning: measure the run from cable source (the back of a wall-mounted TV, for example) to cable destination (a floor outlet behind a piece of furniture), lay the segments along the run unstuck to confirm fit, and only then peel and press. Each segment grips the wall hard within a few minutes and is essentially permanent thereafter; the adhesive holds well on smooth painted drywall and on most modern wall surfaces but struggles on textured wallpaper or rough plaster, where you may want to add a fine bead of construction adhesive. Corner and tee fittings let the channel turn at skirting boards and step around an existing outlet. Cables drop into the base, the cover snaps on, and the result is a flat raised line on the wall waiting to be painted out. For a wall-mounted TV setup with one of the best monitor arms in our roundup, the raceway is the visible side of the same install.

Capacity and Cord Bundling

A 157-inch raceway run takes about three cables of typical TV gauge — for example an HDMI cable, a power cord and a soundbar power cable — comfortably inside the channel. Loaded that way, the cover snaps cleanly without bowing. You can push four thinner cables into the same channel if needed, but the cover begins to sit proud of the wall, which undermines the visual benefit. Where a TV install carries more than three cables — a TV power, two HDMI runs, an Ethernet cable and a soundbar power, for example — split the run into two parallel channels or step up to a wider raceway profile. The 157-inch total length is supplied as multiple shorter segments so the kit ships flat, which is also useful because the segments butt-join along a run without needing to be cut.

Aesthetics — Hide vs Cover vs Color Match

The defining feature of a raceway is paintability. Unpainted, the white PVC channel is a clean and modest visual element against a white wall — a low raised line you notice once and then forget. Painted the wall colour after install, the channel essentially disappears in normal viewing — you have to look hard, in raking light, to see it at all. That is the trick that justifies the raceway’s higher price over a wire loom: where the loom bundles cables into a visible tube, the raceway hides them into the wall surface. The result is the right product where the wall is the prominent visible surface — typically a wall-mounted TV install, a desk against a feature wall, or a hi-fi cable run between two rooms.

Use Cases — Desk, TV, Wall

The 157-inch Delamu raceway is sized squarely for the classic wall-mounted TV install. A typical 60-inch TV mounted 60 inches off the floor has about a 50-inch drop from the mount to a power outlet, plus 12 inches of lateral routing to clear a piece of furniture; the kit’s 157 inches covers that run with margin for an additional secondary cable to a soundbar or set-top box. It also suits a desk against a feature wall where the back of the desk does not touch the wall — the raceway covers the cables travelling between desk and outlet. It is less suited to long horizontal runs across the floor (use a loom or a heavier-duty floor channel), and to runs that need to flex (use a wire loom on a rolling chair mat instead).

Verdict

At around $14 the Delamu 157in Cord Hider is the right buy for anyone hiding cables on a visible wall — most commonly a wall-mounted TV install. The PVC construction is durable and paintable, the adhesive mount fits any modern wall without drilling, and the 157 inches of channel covers a typical TV-to-outlet drop with margin to spare. The trade-offs are honest: it is a rigid channel that does not flex, the adhesive struggles on textured walls, and the capacity is sized for a small bundle rather than a six-cable workstation. For a buyer pairing it with one of the best gaming desks in our roundup against a feature wall, the raceway is the visible cable management. Cleanly engineered and well-judged at the price.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you paint the Delamu cord hider?

Yes. The PVC accepts standard wall paint after a light scuff with fine sandpaper to give the paint a key. Two thin coats of the wall colour matching the surrounding paint render the raceway nearly invisible.

How is the Delamu raceway different from a wire loom?

The raceway is a rigid, paintable wall-mounted channel that hides cables into the wall surface; a wire loom is a flexible split tube that bundles cables into a single visible run on the floor or desk. Use the raceway on the wall, the loom on the floor.

Does the Delamu cord hider need screws?

No. Each segment has a pre-applied adhesive strip that mounts to a smooth painted wall without drilling. Screws are not supplied and are not normally needed on drywall.

Will the Delamu raceway damage the wall when removed?

Removal can lift a small amount of paint on textured or older walls because the adhesive grips hard. On smooth modern paint, a careful pull along the long axis usually releases the strip cleanly with a touch-up repaint at most.

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