Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I got quiktrak already installed on the car when I bought it. But it costs around $2000 to install. It uses broad radio frequencies instead of satellite.

Cost around $1 a day for monitoring.

There's 3 point immobiliser and a panic button (in case you get jacked), remote central locking etc...

Expensive but I'm happy with it.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/34758-club-locks/page/2/#findComment-696634
Share on other sites

Or of course they can just cut through the steering wheel with a hack saw, split it apart, pull steering lock off. I think the current world record for doing this is two seconds??

Steering lock = hardened steel. Steering wheel = 5mm mild steel + plastic.....

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/34758-club-locks/page/2/#findComment-696752
Share on other sites

In addition, some of the more expensive brands come with guarantees - ie., if your car is stolen, the company will pay your insurance theft excess up to $2,000.00.

THis is true but they all say only for 12 months after the date of purchase.

So you could buy a new club lock every year for $60 as a kind of "insurance theft excess insurance"

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/34758-club-locks/page/2/#findComment-697100
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Wife wanted basket things in the wardrobe in our temporary house. Thought about ripping our the wardrobe and fitting the entire IKEA set, but it's a temporary house and we want to move in a few years. So IKEA advertises this as a 50cm unit, however the actually basket and rails measure 46cm wide. Only issue was depth, IKEA stuff is quite deep, where as the builder special junk is super shallow at less than 40cm. Send it, chopped the rails, then offset the mounting holes, job done, happy wife, less shit scattered all over the bedroom. Did the same to the other side too. Also drove the Skyline shit box today, dropped off oil at Supercheap Auto. I didn't realise they only now take max 2x bottles per visit. I visited 2x Supercheap Autos.  
    • I've seen similar actually in my situation. You never know what tables are attempted to be used when the car thinks it's -99C or +200C. The fail state is not usually that extreme but you know what I mean - it was in my case though! This is where being able to read all the sensors is useful cause you see this stuff really quickly.
    • The above is very important. However as long as you keep timing relatively low, it's plausible to make your own knock ears and plausible to learn to tune with a modern ECU that can do wideband O2 correction like a boost controller. I mean if you only have one viable road to even drive the car on, learning to tinker to this level may be worth doing given you can't do much else with the car...?
    • I find the fact that the rear plate has to be bent inwards at the rear not so bad: but the front is just awful: It's like come on. (these are my very old, now retired/turned in plates) TBH it is a lot of money to fix a minor issue, the fact I said "I'll never really spend the money on doing this" is why people ended up buying them as a gift for a 'car guy' who can be hard to shop for.. for car guy things.
    • I just bent the ends of my premo plates. It even went through Regency like that after the engine conversion and the inspector (a great bloke!) just squinted his eyes and said "I didn't see that". Plates, and how they look, are just something that have zero importance to me.
×
×
  • Create New...