I think the first line of defence is not to specify Comfort Access.Fairynuff wrote: ↑Thu Dec 27, 2018 8:02 am
I read it and it's all good but it doesn't give me the answers I want. Taking aside cloning of keys and remote capturing of key signals for later cloning in my experience the most likely and most frightening scenario is the drug addict or Rumanian gypsy who will burgle my home for the keys. The solution to this in the article is "make it easy for them so they don't come into the bedroom." Surely someone has come up with better solutions than that? So far it seems to come down to 'give them the keys or buy a gun, surely there's a middle ground'.
The second line of defence is to use the built-in tracker system, which in my experience works very well. All you have to do is remember to have a little electronic fob in your wallet every time you get into the car. My car had a warning message the other day telling me that the fob needed a new battery. I set off to Halfords to buy a battery and had travelled less than half a mile from home when Vodafone called me to ask whether the car had gone walkabout.
The third line of defence is to have decent insurance!