View Poll Results: Does your Oldsmobile have an alarm?
Yes



3
8.82%
No



27
79.41%
Yes, it saved my Olds from being stolen.



0
0%
NEVER, they weren't available from the factory in 19XX.



3
8.82%
Yes, but it only goes off when I don't want it to.



1
2.94%
Voters: 34. You may not vote on this poll
Does your Oldsmobile have an alarm?
Does your Oldsmobile have an alarm?
I searched our site and threads I created in the past. I couldn't find any previous threads on this.
So, does your Olds have an alarm. Has it ever gone off and scared away a "would be" car thief?
Does your alarm go off at 0530 when your going to work and **** off your neighbors? That's what happened to me this morning. My alarm on my 96 Olds and my 20 F150 ALWAYS go off at the worst of times. Just because I carry the keys in my pocket.
FWIW, here's a similar thread on GPS trackers.
https://classicoldsmobile.com/forums...racker-155402/
So, does your Olds have an alarm. Has it ever gone off and scared away a "would be" car thief?
Does your alarm go off at 0530 when your going to work and **** off your neighbors? That's what happened to me this morning. My alarm on my 96 Olds and my 20 F150 ALWAYS go off at the worst of times. Just because I carry the keys in my pocket.

FWIW, here's a similar thread on GPS trackers.
https://classicoldsmobile.com/forums...racker-155402/
My opinion is that alarms are worthless. Has anyone ever called the cops after hearing an alarm? If you want the deterrence, get the decals and maybe a blinking LED. I'm a much bigger fan of hidden disabling devices.
Agreed, car alarms are IMHO not worth the dough. I'd rather get a steering column lock/cover (Car-Gard, etc), or the famous Air-Bag Club. As a means to slow down a potential theft.
At the Hurst Olds Nationals back in 2007 I won one of those Air Bag Clubs, the ones with the extra bar that was supposed to curtail someone stealing your air bag in your steering wheel (this practice was a problem in the 90's). I use it on either my 1994 or 1996 Cutlass Supreme. Nice, but I rather doubt anyone wants the air bag from those cars anymore.
At the Hurst Olds Nationals back in 2007 I won one of those Air Bag Clubs, the ones with the extra bar that was supposed to curtail someone stealing your air bag in your steering wheel (this practice was a problem in the 90's). I use it on either my 1994 or 1996 Cutlass Supreme. Nice, but I rather doubt anyone wants the air bag from those cars anymore.
I have old Chapmans on a number of vehicles. . Locks the hood and disables the starter. I think these were excellent. Back in the day, also prevented missing batteries.
A kill switch prevented my SRT Durango from going missing about a month ago. Of course a new window was req'd. Shame on Dodge for making key fobs so easy to clone.
A kill switch prevented my SRT Durango from going missing about a month ago. Of course a new window was req'd. Shame on Dodge for making key fobs so easy to clone.
I ended up in some sketchy spots during Drag Week. I pulled the ignition relay, radio face, turned off the fuel pump and clutch start safety. Plus, it's a stick, so I got that going against the younger hoodlums.
Nope!
No alarm, doors to the Olds are unlocked at home, locked when out and about. I do have an ignition cut off when I feel the need.
My car is only special to me and I value the windows more than the cheap radio.
My car is only special to me and I value the windows more than the cheap radio.
When my cars are in storage I disconnect the battery, more for fire prevention than theft prevention. No current, no (chance of) fire. I tend to worry about anything that might cause a short, like a varmint chewing through wires, etc.
I'm in the Insurance business so this stuff tends to keep me up at night more than the next guy. Unnecessarily, probably.
I'm in the Insurance business so this stuff tends to keep me up at night more than the next guy. Unnecessarily, probably.
same here. I have heard car alarms going off and wishing the car WAS being stolen, just to silence the damn thing.
I agree, make the potential thief question if they really want the car. Make it as un-appealing as possible. If someone wants the car bad enough, they will get it. The key is making it as time consuming and difficult as possible.
I think I did.... the police told us to unload the roof rack, so the race wheels got rolled into the hotel- Cahokia Heights. I knew we were in trouble when I saw "Heights" on the exit sign. There ain't no good "heights" anywhere in this country! The internet reservations left that out.
When I was car stereo slash alarm installer in the eighties and nineties you could buy a high pitched interior installed siren that would destroy your ears in less than a minute. They were outlawed. I still have three of them. I knew people that would epoxy razor blades to their stereo's. One customer had his truck broken into over and over. C-10. Super easy access. He did the epoxy razor blade thing. The thieves came back. When he brought his truck in there was blood everywhere. They never broke into his truck again.
When I was car stereo slash alarm installer in the eighties and nineties you could buy a high pitched interior installed siren that would destroy your ears in less than a minute. They were outlawed. I still have three of them. I knew people that would epoxy razor blades to their stereo's. One customer had his truck broken into over and over. C-10. Super easy access. He did the epoxy razor blade thing. The thieves came back. When he brought his truck in there was blood everywhere. They never broke into his truck again.
There's poetic justice! I love it!
When I was car stereo slash alarm installer in the eighties and nineties you could buy a high pitched interior installed siren that would destroy your ears in less than a minute. They were outlawed. I still have three of them. I knew people that would epoxy razor blades to their stereo's. One customer had his truck broken into over and over. C-10. Super easy access. He did the epoxy razor blade thing. The thieves came back. When he brought his truck in there was blood everywhere. They never broke into his truck again.
If nothing else, I did learn not to park the car out there to sneak in to the track.
…..
Pager alarm...😂🤣
Classic stuff right there. We sold and installed those also.
Total poetic justice in that customer's C-10. He took great pride in the blood on his carpet.
Had another customer that had an old bathtub Porsche ragtop. He always left the doors unlocked so nobody would damage his car if they broke in. One night someone shredded his convertible top to break in. The car was unlocked. They absolutely trashed his dash etc. I hate thieves.
Classic stuff right there. We sold and installed those also.
Total poetic justice in that customer's C-10. He took great pride in the blood on his carpet.
Had another customer that had an old bathtub Porsche ragtop. He always left the doors unlocked so nobody would damage his car if they broke in. One night someone shredded his convertible top to break in. The car was unlocked. They absolutely trashed his dash etc. I hate thieves.
I have an ignition cutoff switch on mine , then again the way they steel cash machines now driving through a store window hooking on a chain and drive away pulling it out of the floor. Wouldn’t take long to yank one out of a garage with a chain. Wireless cameras are getting cheaper, don’t help when you are out and about though with the car when you stop somewhere.
Reality is: not many radios are stolen anymore. Don't leave anything out in plain sight that would tempt a ne'r-do-well: wallets, phones, keys, media players, laptops, money, etc.
If they want your car, they're going to get it, probably with a rollback or ****** dolly. An alarm does nothing but annoy people.
If they want your car, they're going to get it, probably with a rollback or ****** dolly. An alarm does nothing but annoy people.
A coworker of mine had his daily driver Honda stolen from the parking lot when we went to lunch. It wasn't the best part of OKC, but it wasn't the "other side of the tracks" either.
The ****** dolly in action
Those are some scary machines. My uncle ran a used car lot and did not use them; he simply kept a set of keys for the car and dropped an employee off to drive the repossessed car away. I believe he gave very little time for the person paying monthly payments to come square up before he terminated the contract and cleaned the car up and put it back out for sale on the lot. He was a hard dude.
I would be very offended if someone tried to steal my car with that; not to the point of shooting the operator, but certainly to the point of disabling his rig and holding him at gunpoint until the police arrived to arrest him. I've always wanted to hose a radiator under pressure with an autoloading rifle; I bet the results would be spectacular.
I would be very offended if someone tried to steal my car with that; not to the point of shooting the operator, but certainly to the point of disabling his rig and holding him at gunpoint until the police arrived to arrest him. I've always wanted to hose a radiator under pressure with an autoloading rifle; I bet the results would be spectacular.
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Keieljun
Eighty-Eight
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Jul 26, 2007 05:56 PM




