Break-ins due to window/lock exploit
#46
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Break-ins due to window/lock exploit
chip <hs4797@brevard.net> wrote in
news:33ga91ltp4bf6k3o5lm388ut7e9d9qfepr@4ax.com:
>
> one way around an alarm is a piece of coat hangar straightened
> and heated on one end. poke it through the battery and the alarm dies.
> was a popular trick on the vette's years ago.
> Chip
>
I read that a drill was used.A hot wire is not going to pierce a metal
fender,either.
Now,alarms also sound when battery voltage drops.Some even have backup
batteries.
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net
news:33ga91ltp4bf6k3o5lm388ut7e9d9qfepr@4ax.com:
>
> one way around an alarm is a piece of coat hangar straightened
> and heated on one end. poke it through the battery and the alarm dies.
> was a popular trick on the vette's years ago.
> Chip
>
I read that a drill was used.A hot wire is not going to pierce a metal
fender,either.
Now,alarms also sound when battery voltage drops.Some even have backup
batteries.
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net
#47
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Break-ins due to window/lock exploit
chip <hs4797@brevard.net> wrote in
news:33ga91ltp4bf6k3o5lm388ut7e9d9qfepr@4ax.com:
>
> one way around an alarm is a piece of coat hangar straightened
> and heated on one end. poke it through the battery and the alarm dies.
> was a popular trick on the vette's years ago.
> Chip
>
I read that a drill was used.A hot wire is not going to pierce a metal
fender,either.
Now,alarms also sound when battery voltage drops.Some even have backup
batteries.
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net
news:33ga91ltp4bf6k3o5lm388ut7e9d9qfepr@4ax.com:
>
> one way around an alarm is a piece of coat hangar straightened
> and heated on one end. poke it through the battery and the alarm dies.
> was a popular trick on the vette's years ago.
> Chip
>
I read that a drill was used.A hot wire is not going to pierce a metal
fender,either.
Now,alarms also sound when battery voltage drops.Some even have backup
batteries.
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net
#48
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Break-ins due to window/lock exploit
Jim Yanik <jyanik@abuse.gov.> wrote in
news:Xns966288BE8968Ejyanikkuanet@129.250.170.84:
> chip <hs4797@brevard.net> wrote in
> news:33ga91ltp4bf6k3o5lm388ut7e9d9qfepr@4ax.com:
>
>>
>> one way around an alarm is a piece of coat hangar straightened
>> and heated on one end. poke it through the battery and the alarm dies.
>> was a popular trick on the vette's years ago.
>> Chip
>>
>
> I read that a drill was used.A hot wire is not going to pierce a metal
> fender,either.
>
> Now,alarms also sound when battery voltage drops.Some even have backup
> batteries.
>
And the South Africans have this:
http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/africa/9812...e.thrower.car/
I understand car thieves in South Africa are exploring other employment
opportunities. If only we were so civilized.
--
TeGGeR®
The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
news:Xns966288BE8968Ejyanikkuanet@129.250.170.84:
> chip <hs4797@brevard.net> wrote in
> news:33ga91ltp4bf6k3o5lm388ut7e9d9qfepr@4ax.com:
>
>>
>> one way around an alarm is a piece of coat hangar straightened
>> and heated on one end. poke it through the battery and the alarm dies.
>> was a popular trick on the vette's years ago.
>> Chip
>>
>
> I read that a drill was used.A hot wire is not going to pierce a metal
> fender,either.
>
> Now,alarms also sound when battery voltage drops.Some even have backup
> batteries.
>
And the South Africans have this:
http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/africa/9812...e.thrower.car/
I understand car thieves in South Africa are exploring other employment
opportunities. If only we were so civilized.
--
TeGGeR®
The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
#49
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Break-ins due to window/lock exploit
Jim Yanik <jyanik@abuse.gov.> wrote in
news:Xns966288BE8968Ejyanikkuanet@129.250.170.84:
> chip <hs4797@brevard.net> wrote in
> news:33ga91ltp4bf6k3o5lm388ut7e9d9qfepr@4ax.com:
>
>>
>> one way around an alarm is a piece of coat hangar straightened
>> and heated on one end. poke it through the battery and the alarm dies.
>> was a popular trick on the vette's years ago.
>> Chip
>>
>
> I read that a drill was used.A hot wire is not going to pierce a metal
> fender,either.
>
> Now,alarms also sound when battery voltage drops.Some even have backup
> batteries.
>
And the South Africans have this:
http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/africa/9812...e.thrower.car/
I understand car thieves in South Africa are exploring other employment
opportunities. If only we were so civilized.
--
TeGGeR®
The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
news:Xns966288BE8968Ejyanikkuanet@129.250.170.84:
> chip <hs4797@brevard.net> wrote in
> news:33ga91ltp4bf6k3o5lm388ut7e9d9qfepr@4ax.com:
>
>>
>> one way around an alarm is a piece of coat hangar straightened
>> and heated on one end. poke it through the battery and the alarm dies.
>> was a popular trick on the vette's years ago.
>> Chip
>>
>
> I read that a drill was used.A hot wire is not going to pierce a metal
> fender,either.
>
> Now,alarms also sound when battery voltage drops.Some even have backup
> batteries.
>
And the South Africans have this:
http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/africa/9812...e.thrower.car/
I understand car thieves in South Africa are exploring other employment
opportunities. If only we were so civilized.
--
TeGGeR®
The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
#50
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Break-ins due to window/lock exploit
Tomb said
"- (if nothing is worth stealing in the car) - consider even leaving it
unlocked. That might sound radical but at least it saves you having to
replace another window.
- use an immobilizing device such as a club. Yes, those can be cracked as
well (literally...) but it takes more time. Not worth for hobby thieves, and
pros don't mess with crappy little Civics (no insult, I have one too "
I disagree. NEVER leave a Civic unlocked! I may be gettin off-topic here
(break-ins for valuables vs stealing cars). Civics are high target cars for
theives primarly for their parts, not the valuables left inside. My 1992
Civic si was recently stolen. A few days later it was found. It was missing
the rims and tires (originals, not fancy aftermarket wheels), steering
wheel, instrument cluster, rear speaker covers (the factory ones, hard to
find for a hatchback!), rear deck lid, pistons for holding the rear window
open, plastic rocker panels and the trim around the radio antenna. The
theives also took the time to exchange the hood, both doors, and the
tailgate for junky parts.
Needless to say, I barely recognized my car when I went to ID the body. Also
needless to say, it was wrote off by my insurance company.
The one thing that surprised me was that the theives left my Alpine in dash
CD player put. I had neglected to remove the face but they left that on the
floor. They did take the remote though. Also the speakers along with the
doors. They also missed my two amplifiers which were well hidden under the
dash on passenger side.
Pros do mess with crappy little Civics! Mine had 384000 kms on it and was
barely driveable since the clutch cylinders were needing replacing...Oh man
I could make this post twice as long to list everything that waas wrong with
that car. Lets just say there was mixed feelings when I saw it gone and
realized some complete moron had stolen it!
James
"- (if nothing is worth stealing in the car) - consider even leaving it
unlocked. That might sound radical but at least it saves you having to
replace another window.
- use an immobilizing device such as a club. Yes, those can be cracked as
well (literally...) but it takes more time. Not worth for hobby thieves, and
pros don't mess with crappy little Civics (no insult, I have one too "
I disagree. NEVER leave a Civic unlocked! I may be gettin off-topic here
(break-ins for valuables vs stealing cars). Civics are high target cars for
theives primarly for their parts, not the valuables left inside. My 1992
Civic si was recently stolen. A few days later it was found. It was missing
the rims and tires (originals, not fancy aftermarket wheels), steering
wheel, instrument cluster, rear speaker covers (the factory ones, hard to
find for a hatchback!), rear deck lid, pistons for holding the rear window
open, plastic rocker panels and the trim around the radio antenna. The
theives also took the time to exchange the hood, both doors, and the
tailgate for junky parts.
Needless to say, I barely recognized my car when I went to ID the body. Also
needless to say, it was wrote off by my insurance company.
The one thing that surprised me was that the theives left my Alpine in dash
CD player put. I had neglected to remove the face but they left that on the
floor. They did take the remote though. Also the speakers along with the
doors. They also missed my two amplifiers which were well hidden under the
dash on passenger side.
Pros do mess with crappy little Civics! Mine had 384000 kms on it and was
barely driveable since the clutch cylinders were needing replacing...Oh man
I could make this post twice as long to list everything that waas wrong with
that car. Lets just say there was mixed feelings when I saw it gone and
realized some complete moron had stolen it!
James
#51
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Break-ins due to window/lock exploit
Tomb said
"- (if nothing is worth stealing in the car) - consider even leaving it
unlocked. That might sound radical but at least it saves you having to
replace another window.
- use an immobilizing device such as a club. Yes, those can be cracked as
well (literally...) but it takes more time. Not worth for hobby thieves, and
pros don't mess with crappy little Civics (no insult, I have one too "
I disagree. NEVER leave a Civic unlocked! I may be gettin off-topic here
(break-ins for valuables vs stealing cars). Civics are high target cars for
theives primarly for their parts, not the valuables left inside. My 1992
Civic si was recently stolen. A few days later it was found. It was missing
the rims and tires (originals, not fancy aftermarket wheels), steering
wheel, instrument cluster, rear speaker covers (the factory ones, hard to
find for a hatchback!), rear deck lid, pistons for holding the rear window
open, plastic rocker panels and the trim around the radio antenna. The
theives also took the time to exchange the hood, both doors, and the
tailgate for junky parts.
Needless to say, I barely recognized my car when I went to ID the body. Also
needless to say, it was wrote off by my insurance company.
The one thing that surprised me was that the theives left my Alpine in dash
CD player put. I had neglected to remove the face but they left that on the
floor. They did take the remote though. Also the speakers along with the
doors. They also missed my two amplifiers which were well hidden under the
dash on passenger side.
Pros do mess with crappy little Civics! Mine had 384000 kms on it and was
barely driveable since the clutch cylinders were needing replacing...Oh man
I could make this post twice as long to list everything that waas wrong with
that car. Lets just say there was mixed feelings when I saw it gone and
realized some complete moron had stolen it!
James
"- (if nothing is worth stealing in the car) - consider even leaving it
unlocked. That might sound radical but at least it saves you having to
replace another window.
- use an immobilizing device such as a club. Yes, those can be cracked as
well (literally...) but it takes more time. Not worth for hobby thieves, and
pros don't mess with crappy little Civics (no insult, I have one too "
I disagree. NEVER leave a Civic unlocked! I may be gettin off-topic here
(break-ins for valuables vs stealing cars). Civics are high target cars for
theives primarly for their parts, not the valuables left inside. My 1992
Civic si was recently stolen. A few days later it was found. It was missing
the rims and tires (originals, not fancy aftermarket wheels), steering
wheel, instrument cluster, rear speaker covers (the factory ones, hard to
find for a hatchback!), rear deck lid, pistons for holding the rear window
open, plastic rocker panels and the trim around the radio antenna. The
theives also took the time to exchange the hood, both doors, and the
tailgate for junky parts.
Needless to say, I barely recognized my car when I went to ID the body. Also
needless to say, it was wrote off by my insurance company.
The one thing that surprised me was that the theives left my Alpine in dash
CD player put. I had neglected to remove the face but they left that on the
floor. They did take the remote though. Also the speakers along with the
doors. They also missed my two amplifiers which were well hidden under the
dash on passenger side.
Pros do mess with crappy little Civics! Mine had 384000 kms on it and was
barely driveable since the clutch cylinders were needing replacing...Oh man
I could make this post twice as long to list everything that waas wrong with
that car. Lets just say there was mixed feelings when I saw it gone and
realized some complete moron had stolen it!
James
#52
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Break-ins due to window/lock exploit
If possible, park your car in plane sight under a light with no nearby
hiding places and no nearby highways that are noisy. Thieves love to go to
the back of the apartment complex next to a noisy Interstate and get the
cars in the shadows under carports and next to dumpsters and those parked
where they can see who's coming from all directions. I would also get a
steering wheel lock.
"WooHoo2You" <no@email.com> wrote in message
news:Obcje.7533$w21.6398@newsread3.news.atl.earthl ink.net...
>I have a 96 Honda Civic with manual door locks. I have had my car broken
>in to three times is the last ten months.(two times in the last three
>days.) I live in a apartment complex nice enough to attract thieves,
>however not nice enough to have overnight security. The break-ins were
>done in large waves. All the cars broken into on these nights were Hondas
>that cover the whole of the complex. In all three instances the police
>told me that Hondas are easily broken into due to an "exploit" in the
>windows/door locks.
>
> Is there a manufacture recall or a way to fix this problem?
>
> Thanks for any help you can offer.
>
> WooHoo2You
>
hiding places and no nearby highways that are noisy. Thieves love to go to
the back of the apartment complex next to a noisy Interstate and get the
cars in the shadows under carports and next to dumpsters and those parked
where they can see who's coming from all directions. I would also get a
steering wheel lock.
"WooHoo2You" <no@email.com> wrote in message
news:Obcje.7533$w21.6398@newsread3.news.atl.earthl ink.net...
>I have a 96 Honda Civic with manual door locks. I have had my car broken
>in to three times is the last ten months.(two times in the last three
>days.) I live in a apartment complex nice enough to attract thieves,
>however not nice enough to have overnight security. The break-ins were
>done in large waves. All the cars broken into on these nights were Hondas
>that cover the whole of the complex. In all three instances the police
>told me that Hondas are easily broken into due to an "exploit" in the
>windows/door locks.
>
> Is there a manufacture recall or a way to fix this problem?
>
> Thanks for any help you can offer.
>
> WooHoo2You
>
#53
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Break-ins due to window/lock exploit
If possible, park your car in plane sight under a light with no nearby
hiding places and no nearby highways that are noisy. Thieves love to go to
the back of the apartment complex next to a noisy Interstate and get the
cars in the shadows under carports and next to dumpsters and those parked
where they can see who's coming from all directions. I would also get a
steering wheel lock.
"WooHoo2You" <no@email.com> wrote in message
news:Obcje.7533$w21.6398@newsread3.news.atl.earthl ink.net...
>I have a 96 Honda Civic with manual door locks. I have had my car broken
>in to three times is the last ten months.(two times in the last three
>days.) I live in a apartment complex nice enough to attract thieves,
>however not nice enough to have overnight security. The break-ins were
>done in large waves. All the cars broken into on these nights were Hondas
>that cover the whole of the complex. In all three instances the police
>told me that Hondas are easily broken into due to an "exploit" in the
>windows/door locks.
>
> Is there a manufacture recall or a way to fix this problem?
>
> Thanks for any help you can offer.
>
> WooHoo2You
>
hiding places and no nearby highways that are noisy. Thieves love to go to
the back of the apartment complex next to a noisy Interstate and get the
cars in the shadows under carports and next to dumpsters and those parked
where they can see who's coming from all directions. I would also get a
steering wheel lock.
"WooHoo2You" <no@email.com> wrote in message
news:Obcje.7533$w21.6398@newsread3.news.atl.earthl ink.net...
>I have a 96 Honda Civic with manual door locks. I have had my car broken
>in to three times is the last ten months.(two times in the last three
>days.) I live in a apartment complex nice enough to attract thieves,
>however not nice enough to have overnight security. The break-ins were
>done in large waves. All the cars broken into on these nights were Hondas
>that cover the whole of the complex. In all three instances the police
>told me that Hondas are easily broken into due to an "exploit" in the
>windows/door locks.
>
> Is there a manufacture recall or a way to fix this problem?
>
> Thanks for any help you can offer.
>
> WooHoo2You
>
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