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| TCGS |
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 TCGS Borekit Bruiser
Joined: 17 Jul 2008 Karma :    
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| prawny1 |
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 prawny1 World Chat Champion

Joined: 28 Jun 2005 Karma :    
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| That_Hornet |
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 That_Hornet World Chat Champion

Joined: 23 Apr 2009 Karma :     
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 Posted: 21:44 - 30 Apr 2010 Post subject: |
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Don't get one. more hassle that its worth.
Mine is not working. I beat it to death with a rather large flat bladed screwdriver and a hammer when it fucked up. But still on there for insurance.
Most will just fail on your and leave you stranded miles from home.
I say get some decent security (chains etc) No one cares about alarms anymore. I stuck one on the garage just for my attention. So i know there's some thieving toad in my domain.
But yea, alarms = bad. (my experience) |
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| prawny1 |
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 prawny1 World Chat Champion

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| prawny1 |
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 prawny1 World Chat Champion

Joined: 28 Jun 2005 Karma :    
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 Posted: 21:46 - 30 Apr 2010 Post subject: |
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bcf server playing silly buggers again
double post sorry  |
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| Walloper |
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 Walloper Super Spammer

Joined: 24 Feb 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 22:41 - 30 Apr 2010 Post subject: |
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| ThatHornet wrote: | Don't get one. more hassle that its worth.
Mine is not working. I beat it to death with a rather large flat bladed screwdriver and a hammer when it fucked up. But still on there for insurance.
Most will just fail on your and leave you stranded miles from home.
I say get some decent security (chains etc) No one cares about alarms anymore. I stuck one on the garage just for my attention. So i know there's some thieving toad in my domain.
But yea, alarms = bad. (my experience) |
That's not entirely troo.
I've had alarms fitted to all my bikes and never once has an alarm caused any kind of problem. Ever.
They will cause problems if they are fitted to a system that has already been compromised by amateur bodging. Then it's the pre existing problems that the alarm gets blamed for. ____________________ W-ireless A-rtificial L-ifeform L-imited to O-bservation P-eacekeeping and E-fficient R-epair |
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| Ingah |
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 Ingah World Chat Champion
Joined: 10 Apr 2009 Karma :   
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| panrider_uk |
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 panrider_uk World Chat Champion

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| Paxovasa |
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 Paxovasa World Chat Champion

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| Ingah |
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 Ingah World Chat Champion
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| metalangel |
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 metalangel World Chat Champion

Joined: 27 Feb 2009 Karma :     
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 Posted: 07:56 - 01 May 2010 Post subject: |
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Be more interested in something that stops them taking it away than just making a big fuss.
Did see a good alarm many many years ago, an obnoxious recording of 'NEE NAAW NEE NAW THIS BIKE IS BEING STOLEN, HELP! NEE NAW NEE NAAAAW' ____________________ Previous: 2002 Honda CB500 (sold), 2007 Suzuki SV650SK6 (crashed), 2005 Yamaha FZ6 Fazer (sold). Currently bikeless
"A faired bike will get you 10x more clunge than a unfaired one." -Marlboro Matt |
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| Wafer_Thin_Ham |
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 Wafer_Thin_Ham Super Spammer

Joined: 18 Nov 2005 Karma :    
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| JP7 |
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 JP7 World Chat Champion

Joined: 22 Dec 2008 Karma :   
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| Bendy |
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 Bendy Mrs Sensible

Joined: 10 Jun 2002 Karma :   
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 Posted: 09:13 - 01 May 2010 Post subject: |
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I've always considered the point of an alarm to be that it alerts me to the fact that someone's tampering.
They can pick it up and put it in a van, but I'd like to hear that they're doing it. I could have it chained up, but if I'm asleep the thieves have got all night to work their way through the chain without waking me up.
At least with an alarm, I'm gonna hear someone's fucking about. What exactly I do about it is another matter, but I'd like to know at the time, not in the morning.
I guess I'm fairly 'pro' alarm because the one time people tried to nick my bike, the alarm did scare them off. Someone had been watching it, as this was the single night I wasn't able to chain it up (car had blocked 'my' lampost). 1am in the morning I hear a diesel outside, didn't think anything of it as this was on-street in London and it was probably a cab. Then my bike alarm goes off and there's a screech of tyres. Leg it outside to find bike cover half off, alarm screaming away and quite a few people in other flats looking out of their windows. Paid for itself in one go, there.
The motion sensor was also useful when parked on street and a couple of times someone in a car nudged it. No damage was ever done, but again I knew it happened at the time, not later when I'd go outside and find the bike on its side. |
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| The Artist |
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 The Artist Super Spammer

Joined: 06 Jan 2008 Karma :  
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| TCGS |
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 TCGS Borekit Bruiser
Joined: 17 Jul 2008 Karma :    
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| tsmith |
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 tsmith Traffic Copper
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| Ingah |
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 Ingah World Chat Champion
Joined: 10 Apr 2009 Karma :   
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 Posted: 12:17 - 01 May 2010 Post subject: |
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I've posted this previously, but i want to disagree with all of you that are discounting the value of proper security, this is what i've wrote previously:
"[What you're all saying] sounds almost too much like "meh, may as well not bother as it won't really make a difference - it won't stop theft" (or at least gives that impression).
Obviously anything human made can be beaten by other humans - so any security can theoretically be beaten, given TIME, but it's TIME that you can deprive a thief of to the extent where they either simply won't try (the best security ), or where they'll give in or get caught before they're done beating it.
Example for you: Living in a town/city. If you use an Almax Series 4 chain (as an example of the "best" imo, chain) through the frame of your bike, to a lamp post near your house (or better yet, a decent ground anchor) - i can pretty much guarantee you no one will steal your bike. If you combine this with a motion-sensing alarm that covers the area around your bike (i got my fully-featured system for £70 and i'm sure you can use a baby monitor or something cheaper if desired) then you're laughing as not only will attacking the chain be making a *loud* noise, but the alarm is sure to be blaring too. No one is going to be able to steal the bike, especially if you're in (unless you prefer to cower under the bed than go out there and hit the attempted-thieves) - or of course unless you leave your keys somewhere they can easily get to if they break in to your house (*facepalm*). They won't have it away in time via the standard means - it'll take too many minutes to break the chain with their loud power tools. And they can't use silent tools like bolt croppers - as even the Almax Series 3 guarantees you can't break them with croppers, and there's independently verified videos floating around proving it. [Compare this with the "up and away" end-result of having a bike "secured" with only an alarm.] It's for that reason i personally won't use any other chain than Almax, because if it can be silently bolt-cropped/similar [as with almost every other chain on the market], then what's the point in bothering, as yes, it will just "slow them down" rather than stop them.
My point is that with low-grade security i think it's more of a deterrant and a slow-them-down, but with properly thought out security, you can pretty much (as in nearly but not quite) prevent theft of your bikes. Unless you've peed off the British secret services or equivalent (or are trying to protect a £40K bike..), of course  ____________________ -- Ingah
Last edited by Ingah on 12:19 - 01 May 2010; edited 1 time in total |
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| colin1 |
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 colin1 Captain Safety
Joined: 17 Feb 2005 Karma :  
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| Paxovasa |
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 Paxovasa World Chat Champion

Joined: 25 Apr 2010 Karma :   
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 15 years, 275 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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