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Conference terri::cars_uk

Title:Cars in the UK
Notice:Please read new conference charter 1.70
Moderator:COMICS::SHELLEYELD
Created:Sun Mar 06 1994
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:2584
Total number of notes:63384

1565.0. "Yet Another Alarm Topic YAAT" by TASTY::NISBET (Open the pod bay doors, Hal.) Fri Oct 11 1991 16:14

    Yes - another alarm topic. 
    
    Over the next week or so, I'll be getting an alarm fitted in my Fiesta.
    (It's a G-Reg Special Edition - no central locking)
    
    Any new suggestions on make and where to get it fitted? (I'm thinking
    about Jackson's in Basingstoke at the moment).
    
    I'll go for a more expensive model. c. 200 pound.
    
    Any last minute advice?
    
    Thanks,
    
    Dougie
    
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1565.1Cheaper MOSS ones are crap, My Sonar was 223 quid fittedBELFST::FLANAGANToo much alcohol is a good thingFri Oct 11 1991 19:0711
    Don't get one that has a connector plug on the back (of the siren) such
    that all that has to be done to turn off the siren is pull the plug
    (and hence all the wires out of the alarm). MOSS 715s & 705s(?)are like
    this. If a theif wants a car with a MS715 on it it is easy.
    All you have to do is break into the car, open the bonnet, pull the
    wires out of the back of the alarm and join the two grey ones together
    with a little pice of wire !! Then you are free to commence hot wiring
    - don't know how to do that though :-)
    
    Gary. (I've got a Sonar on mine and I recommend them)
        
1565.2There must be a catchTASTY::NISBETOpen the pod bay doors, Hal.Fri Oct 11 1991 19:2512
    Gary - get back into DECITS where you belong ;-}
    
    I've just discovered that DEC employees can get alarms fitted using the
    same people that do the Fleet cars - and at the same discount. I
    believe this discount is quite significant. (So the chap at VSL told
    me). They're sending me some info on Monday.
    
    Has anyone else had a non-fleet car fitted with an alarm this way. I
    bet there's a catch. They come and fit the alarm in the car park.
    
    Dougie
    
1565.3BELFST::FLANAGANToo much alcohol is a good thingFri Oct 11 1991 19:287
    Oi Dougie, what are you doing reading DECITS !!??
    
    Are you an IT ?
    
    Gary.
    
    PS. Don't take anything you might read in there seriously ! :-)
1565.4SHIPS::ALFORD_Jan elephant is a mouse with an oper. sys.Mon Oct 14 1991 11:087
Re: .2

Can you post that info here when you get it, especially what the discount is
and if possible the end price.

(No point in having a discount if the starting price is much higher than 
normal !)
1565.5Third time luckyTASTY::NISBETDELETE/TOO_LATE DOCDB.DAT;Thu Oct 24 1991 18:1813
    Re: .4
    
    Still now news from VSL, the company concerned. Their telephone is;
    	0582 423269 
    and the man to ask for (whom I've never go) is Bob Freeman.
    
    I phoned them for the Third time today, and was promised, again, that
    am information pack would be sent to me right away.
    
    If nothing arrives this time, then they don't sound up to much anyway.
    
    Dougie
    
1565.6Some prices from VSLTASTY::NISBETDELETE/TOO_LATE DOCDB.DAT;Tue Oct 29 1991 16:5641
1565.7SHAWB1::HARRISCNot very nice at allTue Oct 29 1991 17:003
    re -1
    
    Do these prices include installation??  (I hope so at the price)
1565.8YesTASTY::NISBETDELETE/TOO_LATE DOCDB.DAT;Wed Oct 30 1991 10:5813
    Yes, the company come to the Car Park and install it while you work.
    They are exclusive of VAT. 
    
    So, are they overpriced? I don't know much about alarm prices.
    
    Dougie
    
    P.S.
    I wouldn't mind paying a bit extra to get one which doesn't make Poncy
    WoopWoopLookatMeI'veJust Activated my Alarm noises.
    
    And doesn't give false alarms.
    
1565.9Where'd it go?WELCLU::NISBETLowland Scot, with English habitsThu Oct 31 1991 14:168
    I must be hallucinating! My batch Notes reader picked up a note which
    doesn't seem to exist! wierd.
    
    Dougie
    
    Non-Fleet Car owner :-[]
    
    
1565.10False economy ?SBPEXE::PREECEJust gimme the VAX, ma'am...Sun Feb 09 1992 00:4334
    Now, here's food for thought.....
    
    
    Last night, I came back to my car to find it missing a window, and my
    breifcase and sundry other bits of kit, (including  AAAAGH, my Time
    Manager !!!!), in the centre of sunny Reading.
    
    The kindly lady constable, doing her best to supress the "well, waht do
    you expect if you park in Reading" expression, asked why, as it was a
    fleet car, the company don't simply fit alrams to all of the cars by
    default....
    "{mumble} percent of car-busts are just kids who don't really know waht
    to do with the stuff anyway.   Any hint of an alarm and they're off
    over the horizon."
    
    It's now going to cost DEC a good deal more than the price of an alarm
    for me to spend time reassembling all the information that was in my
    case (see, I *do* take work home with me, if my boss should happen to
    read this !!!...;-).   Add to that, the fact that I'm out the rpice of
    a new case and a new Time Mgr....(and we'll set aside the argument
    about DEC's niggardly personal-belongings insurance, for the
    moment....)
    
    Seems a pretty convincing argument, to me.
    
    
    Ian
    
    PS, If I was due to come and see you any time this year, let me know,
    I've lost my diary !
    
    PPS If anyone offers you a cheap Time Manger in a pub, let me know,
    I've got a pointed stick I'd like to interest them in......;-)
    
1565.11They're only donkeysPLAYER::WINPENNYMon Feb 10 1992 15:2511
    
    Where did you leave your briefcase?
    
    If it was on the seats what do you expect?
    
    There are constant warnings about leaving valuables on display. It's
    no excuse for breaking into a car but dangling a carrot in front of a
    donkey will cause it move forwards.
    
    Chris
    
1565.12Visible articles are asking for troubleJANUS::BARKERJeremy Barker - T&N/CBN Diag. Eng. - Reading, UKMon Feb 10 1992 15:299
Re: .10

Anyone who parks a car in Reading with anything like a case visible inside
unfortunately is asking for trouble.

One should *always* follow police advice and lock away everything out of
signt.

jb
1565.13Wire-cutters, anyone ?SBPEXE::PREECEJust gimme the VAX, ma'am...Mon Feb 10 1992 15:3816
Err, excuse me, let's clear up this little misapprehension right away.....

I did NOT leave anything in sight, every detachable item in the car was 
either locked in the boot or shut away in the glove-pocket, with the door shut.
There was not a single "loose" item visible.  This is my normal policy, on
leaving the car anywhere.


Of course, Peugeot being smart, they design their cars such that, once you've
punched the window in and opened the door, the wonderful central-locking
widgetry unlocks the boot, too !!!!

Anybody know how easy it would be to disconnect that bit ?

Ian
1565.14A little tipPLAYER::WINPENNYMon Feb 10 1992 15:4922
    
    Thieves usually break the rear quater window for a number of reasons
    the most 'important' being that you can open the rear doors by putting
    you arm through the hole. The rear doors rarely turn on the courtesy
    light and this alone renders most alarms ineffective. In addition the
    seats hide the beam of ultrasonic type alarms making the rear seats an
    easy target. The vibrations from this type of break in will only set
    off the most sensitive of alarms.
    
    A simple solution is to trip the child locks whether you have children
    or not.
    
    Re. 10
    
    In reply eleven I only quesioned where the articles where left.
    
    Re .13
    
    Pull the plug out of the solenoid which works the boot lock.
    
    Chris
    
1565.15it'll only be safe when theyll all gone...BASCAS::BELL_A1Mon Feb 10 1992 22:3117
1565.16won't workBLKPUD::WILLIAMSHTue Feb 11 1992 16:197
    re .14
    
    if you have the child locks on.. then with your arm through the
    quarterlight you flip the lock from the inside and use the handle on
    the outside...   simple..
    
    Huw.
1565.17Different thing?NEWOA::SAXBYIs Bart Simpson the Anti-Christ?Tue Feb 11 1992 16:217
    
    Re .16
    
    Child locks on some (if not most) cars are operated from the actual
    catch bit of the door, which is only accessible with the door open.
    
    Mark
1565.18BLKPUD::WILLIAMSHTue Feb 11 1992 16:327
    RE.17
     
    I thought that if you flick the little lever, then you can't open the
    door from the inside, but you can from the outside..  hence stopping
    children from falling out onto the road.
    
    Huw. 
1565.19It's been dormant so let's revive itYUPPY::MINDHAMRTue Mar 28 1995 18:0633
    I've bought a car which is going to spend its time parked on the street
    in London and I am considering an alarm.  Reading the notes in this file
    there seems to be a mix of evidence on the benefits of alarms and
    immobilisers.
    
    My motivation in seeking an alarm is not so much to prevent someone
    stealing the car, more to stop someone making a mess of the windows,
    locks and interior when they steal it or investigate whether there is
    anything worth thieving from the car.  On this basis a Krooklok or
    equivalent is of limited value, as is a category 1 Thatcham
    immobiliser, since it won't prevent radio/glovebox investigators from
    causing damage.  The only thing that might deter the opportunist would
    seem to to be an audible indication of the car being disturbed, and the
    only type acceptable to insurance companies is a category 2 Thatcham
    alarm-immobiliser.  (An alarm which tells loiterers to stand clear won't
    do as it will be sounding constantly since children play in our street;
    also these alarms are not BS/Thatcham approved.)  Category 2's start at
    #250 and are mostly in the three hundreds.  Given the car cost #4000 the
    value of such a device is questionable.
    
    I'd appreciate some comments on pros/cons of the above.  Will a noisy
    alarm deter someone from sticking a chisel in a lock or a lump hammer
    through the window?
    
                           ====================
    
    In terms of immobilising the car, if I chose to do it the simplest would
    be for me to wire in a switch where there is no switch today, with this
    cutting the feed to the fuel pump.  This is significantly less than a
    Category 1 alarm and is going to be difficult for a car thief to tumble.
    
    Note: my insurer does not give a discount for having an alarm fitted
    altough they do knock #50 off the excess if it is Thatcham/BS-approved.