Home > General (L405) > The Last Post |
|
|
mzplcg Member Since: 26 May 2010 Location: Warwickshire. England. The Commonwealth. Posts: 4029 |
Hmmm, I still think that some kind of physical key needing to be put into the ignition is a far better solution. Keyless saves time opening the car but there is no change in terms of starting up. Far better to have a physical key with just tweaky locking. |
||
9th Aug 2017 3:16pm |
|
Markjohns1 Member Since: 17 Jan 2016 Location: Cheadle hulme Posts: 139 |
Good luck with your new purchase, always found Bmw stealers to be very good although with a price to match. Enjoy your new motor,its such a pity land rover continue to take customer loyalty for granted whilst offering very little in return. At some point poor after sales and customer service will bite them on the arse Full fat 4.2 Sc
|
||
9th Aug 2017 5:50pm |
|
RR-Si Member Since: 25 Jun 2017 Location: North West Posts: 4 |
Hi Tony
|
||
9th Aug 2017 7:17pm |
|
Red Merle Member Since: 19 Sep 2016 Location: Cornwall Posts: 2158 |
It seems that it's not unusual for people to queue up to give LR support a good kicking. In my experience of 5 (and shortly, 6) Land Rovers on the trot, driving around 35-40,000 miles a year, their support has had some issues but, overall, it's been darn good; certainly leagues ahead of Ford, Citroen and BMW and it's the best I've experienced since starting to do that kind of annual mileage in 1985! These experiences have been good enough to mean that I'm happy to sink eye watering amounts of my own money into a FFRR, confident that they will pick up the pieces with any fair claim. Last edited by Red Merle on 9th Aug 2017 9:13pm. Edited 1 time in total |
||
9th Aug 2017 8:21pm |
|
RR-Si Member Since: 25 Jun 2017 Location: North West Posts: 4 |
All the best Tony with the new BMW. |
||
9th Aug 2017 8:58pm |
|
Red Merle Member Since: 19 Sep 2016 Location: Cornwall Posts: 2158 |
How odd. A steel box, like a heavy duty biscuit tin, had no effect on suppressing the signal, but a single thickness of aluminium foil blocked the signal completely! Are there any physicists out there that could explain that one for me please? A shall now have to line my new metal strong box with aluminium foil... |
||
10th Aug 2017 5:47am |
|
stan Site Moderator Member Since: 13 Jul 2010 Location: a moderate moderated moderator moderating moderately in moderation Posts: 35262 |
you have spent thousands on your range rover and you want to put the keys in a 'biscuit box''...
|
||||
10th Aug 2017 7:27am |
|
peanutbob Member Since: 02 Mar 2013 Location: UK Posts: 57 |
It's very expensive
|
||
10th Aug 2017 8:19am |
|
Red Merle Member Since: 19 Sep 2016 Location: Cornwall Posts: 2158 |
It's not so much to do with being skinflint and everything to do with:
|
||
10th Aug 2017 10:05am |
|
Philip Member Since: 05 Jan 2010 Location: UK Posts: 2564 |
The X5 is the most commonly stolen car in the UK... |
||
12th Aug 2017 1:20pm |
|
Red Merle Member Since: 19 Sep 2016 Location: Cornwall Posts: 2158 |
How wonderfully ironic! |
||
12th Aug 2017 2:05pm |
|
mzplcg Member Since: 26 May 2010 Location: Warwickshire. England. The Commonwealth. Posts: 4029 |
Not a physicist, nor is this an explanation of the physics behind it but you get the same if you use chain link fencing on a bigger scale. If you took something like 1 inch square steel mesh, make a cage of 10 foot square, including the roof and base. Sit inside that and try to get a normal transistor radio to work. It doesn't. Unless the biccie tin is made of inch thick lead it is much less effective than a cage, dunno why though, it just is. |
||
12th Aug 2017 2:40pm |
|
Red Merle Member Since: 19 Sep 2016 Location: Cornwall Posts: 2158 |
Interesting, there's more to this than meets the eye |
||
12th Aug 2017 3:53pm |
|
GraemeS Member Since: 06 Mar 2015 Location: Wagga area Posts: 2469 |
Radio waves pass through steel but not through aluminium. |
||
12th Aug 2017 8:52pm |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis