T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1393.1 | Undecided. | SHIPS::SAXBY_M | Smoke me a kipper... | Tue Mar 19 1991 13:03 | 11 |
|
The bleeper idea sounds good.
Personally having had my alarmless car broken into I do wonder if
they'd think twice about raiding my new alarmed car. I doubt it, but
I have considered the alternative of putting my new car in the same
place and then lying in wait with a baseball bat...
They MIGHT wake up when the alarm goes off...
Mark
|
1393.2 | | VOGON::ATWAL | Don't dream it, be it | Tue Mar 19 1991 13:19 | 18 |
| I really doubt the usefulness of car alarms - they just seem to serve to
irritate people...
You must have heard them going off in car-parks etc. - did you give the car a
second look to see if the person stood next to it was breaking in or whether he
was the owner having accidentally set it off? People just ignore their wailing
sirens (except when they go off at 2am). I suppose if I could recognise the
sound of the one on my car I might just rush out of the house on hearing it go
off - by that time the person breaking in would have fled; but I bet the
damage to the car would have been done by then.
Perhaps the choice of 'for or against' depends on what you keep in the car:
an alarm may save valuables that are regularly kept in the car (eg on bussiness).
However if the alarm's used to prevent people from stealing the car you may be
much better of with a good steering column or handbrake-gearlever lock (having
a removable stereo could be handy too)
...art
|
1393.3 | For | WOTVAX::MEAKINS | Clive Meakins | Tue Mar 19 1991 13:48 | 13 |
| I'm for car alarms.
I've only had a false alarm once in 6 or 7 years. When I picked up my
latest new car, the alarm wasn't fitted, it was fitted 4 days later
along with a new window and radio. The 4 days that I had no alarm cost
the insurance comapany dearly (and my time).
Having said the above, my main reason for wanting an alarm is to stop
joyriders taking the car. Most joyriders can't get around the ignition
disable circuit on alarms. The last thing I want is a wrecked car. A
professional is going to take the car, alarm or no alarm.
I believe most car thefts are not by professionals.
|
1393.4 | Remote beeper might be best | UNTADI::LEWIS | Have Bike, will Ski... | Tue Mar 19 1991 14:05 | 11 |
| I am interested in Alarms at the moment, as somebody knocked my bike
over last night.
I saw something demonstrated on Top Gear last year which shouted at
anyone who came near the car. Anyone know who makes it ?
That, with a remote beeper would be the answer for me - I want to know
*before* any damage is done.
PS in 2 years, the alarm went off twice in the Snail, once in the
middle of the night because the battery went flat, and once in the
Ferney car park because a fly got in the sunroof.
Am�d�n
|
1393.5 | 3 times in 2 weeks - with an alarm! | RUTILE::BISHOP | | Tue Mar 19 1991 14:24 | 31 |
| I'm for car alarms, and agree that it's the odd d******d who breaks in
to nick the stereo etc...
I had my car broken into 4 times... 1st time they nicked the stereo, i
had a courtesy light alarm, so they broke the window and jumped in. I
just lost a �500 stereo and a quarter-light (who designed these damn
things!!! ;-)).
Then i had a sensor alarm installed , and all i ended up with was a
broken quarter-light (again!) - twice - , and a busted hatch. It cost
less than �500.. only wish i'd hade the sensor before. These 3 times
were withing a 2 week span! (yea i was pretty gutted!). It gets to the
point where you wonder if it's worth having a nice car!
Why do most car alarms go off for `no' reason? Because the owner has
the sensitivity too high. There is a hell of a lot of difference
between a fly and a piece of glass! No offense Rob, i also have had
mine too high... various things have set it off... a leaf falling in
the sunroof, someone walking past... a car going past... etc
A pro (as stated earlier) will have the car with or without an alarm,
so it's not these kind of people you must look out for. Generally a
typical thief will see an alarm, and go for an easier unalarmed car.
You can bet your bottom dollar that for every car alarm, there is an
way to get around it, but lets hope it's not generally known...
Keep it out of site and locked,
Lewis.
|
1393.6 | Alarm, be blowed ! | UNTADI::LEWIS | Have Bike, will Ski... | Tue Mar 19 1991 14:29 | 8 |
| I did ask this morning in the motorcycles file if anyone had a source
of Claymore Mines for the purpose, but no replies...
Anyone here ?
Or a couple of Patriots ?
Am�d�n
|
1393.7 | DOG ALARM? | VIVIAN::C_MIDGLEY | | Tue Mar 19 1991 14:50 | 2 |
| The best car alarm you can get is two attack trained rottwiellers that
weigh 12st each that have not eaten for a week?????.
|
1393.8 | The Ultimate deterant | SUBURB::LAWSONM1 | | Tue Mar 19 1991 15:04 | 4 |
| Re previous. I have got a shitsoo that hasn't had his tea will it have
the same effect
|
1393.9 | GREAT...ish | UNTADI::LEWIS | Have Bike, will Ski... | Tue Mar 19 1991 15:58 | 10 |
| re .7
Brilliant !!!
That's just what I need !!!
Where can I get some ? How much ? How do I stop them walking off with
the bike ? How do I persuade them to let me near the bike ?
I think I better think it out again...
Am�d�n
|
1393.11 | Yes | GRANPA::63654::NAYLOR | Purring again. | Tue Mar 19 1991 20:55 | 17 |
| I've got one in the Alfa, but it came with it. That said, I think I'd save
the $600 this one cost and put a blinking red led on the dash in future - same
effect. The car was towed (when owned by the previous owner) and the alarm
went off when they jacked it up, so the tow-truck guy just cut the wires to the
siren! Left the beeper inside going, that's all!
With a rag-top, the only deterrent I have any confidence in is my Krooklok (or
at least the local equivalent thereof). Highly visible and stops the joy-rider.
If they can get the stereo out of the dash I'd be really pleased - the tape
player needs it's azimuth adjustment doing and I can't get it out to do it!!
Ideal alarm? One that lets the thief get inside the car then locks the doors
behind him and a tape starts screaming RAPE! at 200 watts, in stereo of course,
from hidden external speakers. In the meantime, a high power transducer emits
105 dB screams inside the car. Enough to hurt, but not harm permanently.
Brian
|
1393.12 | Now that's what I call an alarm | RUTILE::SMITH_A | No-one puts baby in the corner | Wed Mar 20 1991 08:34 | 16 |
| Interesting topic...
Personnally I'm indifferent about car-alarms for the reasons first
stated. Who pays any attention when they go off ?
IMHO the only effect car alarm is an 'offensive' rather than
'defensive' alarm. Big sign on, or in, the car to the effect "This car
is protected with an 'offensive' alarm - touch it and die". Then anyone
trying to pinch it gets the 105 Db, CS gas, and large spike through the
drivers seat, treatment.
I think the 12st Rottweilers are the same thing but for people that
can't read. aren't they ?
T.
|
1393.13 | | WOTVAX::MEAKINS | Clive Meakins | Wed Mar 20 1991 08:40 | 7 |
| Alarm stickers and flashing LEDs are certainly an attractive
alternative to an alarm. I personally would worry about what is quite
a common technique though:
potential thief walks past car
hits side window (most alarms activate this way)
if no alarm sounds, return to car
|
1393.14 | | TASTY::JEFFERY | I shot the sherrif (and the deputy!) | Wed Mar 20 1991 08:43 | 3 |
| Shouting "FIRE!" is more effective than shouting "RAPE!" apparently.
Mark.
|
1393.15 | I'd be heart-broken if it did get stolen. | SUPER7::BROWN | Tigers go WOOF!! | Wed Mar 20 1991 08:46 | 17 |
| In the Frogeye I rely on two things:
1) a Krooklock as a visual deterrent to the passing joy-rider.
2) a battery isolator switch stashed under the dash as a physical
barrier. Without the key, the whole car is dead.
It's true that rag-tops are more vulnerable, and my bonnet can easily
be opened from the inside, allowing access to the back of the isolator
switch for short-circuiting. However, it would take someone quite a
while to work out how to open the bonnet, another deterrent for the
casual tea-leaf.
The big-boys, in my opinion will steal your car if they really want it,
whatever you do to it. Truth is, I'm more worried about losing my tax
disc!
Laurie.
|
1393.16 | Vote against... | VOGON::MITCHELLE | Beware of the green meanie | Thu Mar 21 1991 15:16 | 11 |
|
A couple of weekends ago I had to wait about 15mins for Autocross to
open after lunch. There shop is under the multistory carpark in
Bracknell. There was a constant sound of car alarms, and kids laughing,
I assumed they were running round rocking the cars. I didn't do
anything about it because I assumed the Police wouldn't have been in
the slightest bit interested. We don't have a car alarm, and I think
they are only worth having if your car is normally kept where there is
a specific history of stolen vehicles, and where you are in a position
to hear it. No-one else is going to do anything about it......, and as
a deterant you might as well have a red flashing light.
|
1393.17 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Mar 21 1991 16:30 | 6 |
| > to hear it. No-one else is going to do anything about it......, and as
> a deterant you might as well have a red flashing light.
Aha, but a blue-flashing light might have more impact!
Heather
|
1393.18 | Another one goes of | SUBURB::LAWSONM1 | | Fri Mar 22 1991 08:40 | 4 |
| Thanks for your reply's but has anyone had the experience of being kept
up late with a siren going on down the street from someone's car.
" Not another alarm "
|
1393.19 | | KERNEL::PARRY | 16 bits R SXy | Fri Mar 22 1991 09:14 | 6 |
| Yes, and it wasn't even in the same street. It was
going off between 11pm and 3am due to the wind. I called
the Police who could just confirm that it was a car
alarm (great help that was). They are not allowed to
break in and stop it and couldn't trace the owner. I was
very tempted to go and turn it off myself with a hammer :-)
|
1393.20 | The current law doesn't go far enough | JANUS::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - T&N/CBN Diag. Eng. - Reading, UK | Thu Mar 28 1991 01:02 | 10 |
| The law requires that any alarm shuts itself off after no more then 5 minutes
and the the device which does this shutting off is kept in good repair.
I believe that the law should be changed so that a Polica Officer (or any
person operating with the authority of a Police Officer) can take any
action they see fit in order to silence a car alarm that goes off without
obvious cause. The owner of the vehicle would be liable for any damage to
the vehicle necessary to silence the alarm.
jb
|
1393.21 | | PRFECT::PALKA | | Thu Mar 28 1991 14:13 | 5 |
| re .20
Good idea. Should apply to all alarms, not just car alarms !
Andrew
|
1393.22 | Can't see any alternative to getting an alarm personally | 45538::CHRIS | Wewease Wogah | Tue Apr 30 1991 15:17 | 23 |
|
Well, after another bungled attempt to get my car/contents of, I feel
I've got no other alternative but to get an alarm fitted. A bit back I
had the lock drilled out of my Volkswagen Santana (not a very flash car
to want to nick at all, maybe that's why they went for it!), and a few
days back I had the front quarterlight window smashed. In both cases
the would-be-thieves had gained complete access to the car and I reckon
the only thing that stopped them completing the operation was that they
were disturbed by someone. Both attempts were literally less than
thirty (no I didn't measure the distance!) yards from where I was
sleeping. I don't know how bad the inconvenience of having an alarm is
going to be (false alarms etc.), but if it can wake me up when someone
is trying to nick my car I don't care...if it wakes everybody else up
in the street that's even better - OK I know that's a dodgy blanket
statement, but you must know what I mean! (In other words I don't want
an argument starting up around the fact that alarms annoy other people
more than they help! =;*) ).
All I've got to do now is find an alarm that I can fit myself and
doesn't cost the best part of a fortune...
Chris.
|
1393.23 | | SUBURB::SCREENER | Robert Screene, UK Finance EUC | Wed May 01 1991 19:09 | 6 |
| I have a few articles on Car alarms, in some f.fwd's.
Mostly high end stuff, the magazine is obviously trying to cultvate the
market. But the information contained within is very useful.
Let me know if you would like to read them.
|
1393.24 | | VULCAN::KING | Wewease Wogaah | Thu May 02 1991 10:12 | 8 |
|
Ta Robert, I'll have a look the next time I'm in DP. I'm looking for
summat about a hundred quid, if there are big benefits in getting
something more expensive I may go for it. I'm going to have to fit it
myself, 'cos I can't afford to have it fitted! (By some of the replies
in the other notes on alarms I think I'm doing the right thing!)
Chris.
|
1393.25 | Beware of cheap alarms | BAHTAT::BAHTAT::HILTON | How's it going royal ugly dudes? | Thu May 02 1991 11:10 | 7 |
| Beware of cheap alarms that monitor movement, I had a friend install
one in his car, thieves broke in at the back, nicked his jacket and the
alarm never went off - seems it was only powerful enough to monitor
the front!!
Greg
|
1393.26 | Who does the alarm belong to? | BAHTAT::BORKALA | ERIC MVS | Mon May 20 1991 18:32 | 12 |
| On the theme of Car alarms, does anyone know the answer to this.
When we have car alarms install by VSL, my understanding is that DEC
pays for the alarm. Therefore, when the lease expires, would it be
possible to take the alarm off my current car and put it onto my next
one, hence saving DEC money. Or does Both the car and alarm have to go
back to the lease company?
Eric
|
1393.27 | Convenient and easy to use, yes - but Bad News all the same | CRATE::RUTTER | Rut The Nut | Mon May 20 1991 19:18 | 10 |
| � possible to take the alarm off my current car and put it onto my next
I don't know about VSL, but most alarms seem to be fitted with
plentiful use of 'scotchloks'. These things should be banned !
They are destructive in their nature and should not be removed
once they have been used to knacker a particular piece of wire,
unless that wire is about to be replaced.
J.R.
|
1393.29 | | TASTY::JEFFERY | I shot the sherrif (and the deputy!) | Tue May 21 1991 15:59 | 3 |
| I know someone who did this.
VSL Seem OK about it.
|