Lojack
IF
you know your car has been stolen. is what i mean is if you park your car in your driveway at 7 pm and it is stolen 10 minutes later then come back to it at 7am the next morning and its not there, the theif has had almost 12 hours to do what they wish. unless you call the lojack system and have them page the transmitter in the car to turn on then you get no signal. you must do this immediately for them to get a local signal. now if the car was driven to fl yes a local officer there would be able to pick up the transmission. but since most cars are stolen and chopped then 12 hours is ore than enough time to hack a car up and sell it. if the car is put in a shipping container to go on a boat then your signal is not going to work. dont get me wrong i do beleive in lojack and would recommend it but it is only good if you know your car has been stolen.


Now, 2 years and 1 day later, I still doing really know how works or what it does; but my wife made me renew it earlier this year after we lost a key...
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I don't believe removing the exterior antenna will cripple Teleaid. Maybe reduce it's effectiveness some. It is only glued to the rear window, no physical electrical connection and no active components. Am I wrong?
The antenna is the GPS antenna. If it is snapped off, the GPS receiver can't receive the C/A signals from the satellites, so it can't compute the location of the car.
I don't get any more of a price break on my insurance so if my insurance company who is most at risk doesn't think it's worth it then why should I?




your parent's E - class on fire ?
A guy had his CL500 parked at the Tustin Marketplace, and it burnt down to the twisted frame!
His response to the newspaper staff, "I'm going to miss it,...but I guess that's what insurance is for."
Too bad too, he had great looking chromed 5-spoke wheels! At least they *look* like they used to be chromed,

Hope he's not an mbworld member, poor Ba$stard.
EDJ
I don't know this for sure, Lynn, but I was told by my service guy that there are several antennas in the car and they work redundently. If you were to have a roll-over accident and come to rest on the roof, antenna sheered off, I was told tele-aid will still uplink to the satellite (etc.) from one of the other antennas. I understand there is one in the rear bumper...
NO ONE uplinks to the GPS constellation, except the US Air Force Space Command Space Operations Center at Schriever Air Force Base which is east of Colorado Springs.
1. Unless it's professional there is no way a amateur (sp?) can steal a NEW Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Audi, or Jaguar because they all need the matching codes from the key to start the engine. Unless the owner leaves the key in the car, but that's another case.
2. How often do you see a stolen car get recovered without any damage to the car. It's most likely that the car will get stripped down. I don't think most people would want their car back if it's damaged after it's stolen. You never know what the crooks did in your car.
3. the Lojack slogan pisses me off. "if you don't get your car back we'll pay you back for the cost of Lojack" What good is that gonna do for us after our car is gone.
there is one plus side for the Lojack though. It can lower the rate of the insurance. The insurance company will give discount in the policy if the car has Lojack.
Carsdirect guy is bugging me about purchasing it. He says that the "upgraded" system can tell you (phone, e-mail, etc) if your car has been moved and the key is not in it. The upgraded system is about $950.
Still not sure if there is universal coverage in US, or only in major population areas.
It can lower the rate of the insurance. The insurance company will give discount in the policy if the car has Lojack.
BTW, while I called around different shops to see if it was worth it, I found the installer for the alarms for the MA state police. He said Lojack is not worth it on MBs because MBs are hard to steal w/o the key (they'd have to flatbed it). According to him, thieves around here know about Lojack, so they drive the car to a "safe" area for a while and leave it alone to see if it has Lojack. Or they just drive it 1hr across the border. Plus you have to have your Lojack inspected every year for some fee.
Not sure how it works where you are, but in MA, it only gets you a slight discount on comprehensive insurance which is only 40% of the total bill (the liability junk sucks up most of the cost). I calculated it'd take me about 8 yrs to pay off the cost of the Lojack. The insurance company accepted TeleAid for the same Lojack discount so that made the decision even easier ;-)
BTW, while I called around different shops to see if it was worth it, I found the installer for the alarms for the MA state police. He said Lojack is not worth it on MBs because MBs are hard to steal w/o the key (they'd have to flatbed it). According to him, thieves around here know about Lojack, so they drive the car to a "safe" area for a while and leave it alone to see if it has Lojack. Or they just drive it 1hr across the border. Plus you have to have your Lojack inspected every year for some fee.
I only knows that it can get you discount, but lojack is worthless to me as what i said before...
a lojack installer installs a transmitter in your car (fm).
the transmitter has a specific code asigned to it that transmits if your car has been stolen, and if you have reported it to the police.
your car is then entered into the NCIC computer as stolen.
the lojack computer is linked with NCIC and recognizes when your VIN# is reported as stolen.
when the lojack computer recognizes the VIN, it sends out a page if you will that turns on the transmitter.
the transmitter then sends a signal out every 15 seconds. the LOJACK transmitter is hooked to your car battery, but also has a backup of its own.
when a LOJACK tracker as in my police car gets a HIT there is a 5 digit code that is displayed on my tracker. i then give this code to the dispatcher and they enter it into their computer.
once this is entered, there is another signal that is then sent out and the transmitter will then send out a signal every second for tracking purposes, but will only stay in this mode for 30 minutes.
after 30 minutes the transmitter will automatically go back to one every 15 seconds
if the car is in a parking garage or buried in a shop somewhere, the signal may not be able to be tracked, or may be very weak. basically if your fm radio works and you can receive a signal then the LOJACK will transmit and the tracker will pick it up.
i hope this helps to dspael, or answer some of the LOJACK questions.
I cannot verify but there was an article in the paper about people getting the VIN number (anyone can just look through the windshield and get it) and making up a story to the dealer (MB, BMW etc.) to get a replacement key. Hopefully MB has increased their key replacement security after initial reports of this ruse was reported.
However car jackings are quite rare in the areas I travel so we decided to save some money and let a boa constrictor live inside the car.





