Craziest antitheft idea yet.

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Jawzjeep

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How does a Cadillac trunk lid work? The ones that suck down the lid. Maybe something there could winch or pull on E brake Maybe? Some New cars have electric e-brakes now I think.
My 91 Camaro had the same kind of thing that would pull the back hatch down once you closed it. Just for another place to find this type of equipment if somebody wants to use it.

A buddy of mine hooked up his ignition switched so every time you turn the key it honks the horn. It won't start and makes a lot of noise when you try. Won't stop everybody but it helps. I also have a cheap driveway alarm that is very hidden
 
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squaredeal91

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My 91 Camaro had the same kind of thing that would pull the back hatch down once you closed it. Just for another place to find this type of equipment if somebody wants to use it.

A buddy of mine hooked up his ignition switched so every time you turn the key it honks the horn. It won't start and makes a lot of noise when you try. Won't stop everybody but it helps. I also have a cheap driveway alarm that is very hidden
Didn't know that some cameos had that. I always wanted to add that feature to my 83 pre Reagan regal cp. I think it would be a cool mod.
 

Jawzjeep

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Didn't know that some cameos had that. I always wanted to add that feature to my 83 pre Reagan regal cp. I think it would be a cool mod.
I have no idea how many of them had that. I bought and sold the Camaro really quick and it was something that didn't get power so I had to fiddle with it. I think it's pretty safe to assume the third gen have that. Then again it's never safe to assume anymore.
 

Hunter79764

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On a carb truck with electric fuel pump, I think a pump kill is about the best. Like y'all mentioned, they get in, start it up, drive away, and when the bowls run dry, the old truck just stalls out and won't fire up again. Hopefully in the middle of the street, where there's too much attention to mess with it.

On an EFI truck, I'm wondering about a time delay relay on the fuel pump signal from the ECM. It runs the pump 2 seconds at key on, then drops off. A delay timer can get that 2 second signal and convert it to a 45 second signal. Then put the kill switch on the circuit that goes through the oil pressure switch, so that it never comes on to power the pump. Same thing as the fuel bowls running dry, it gets down the road a bit and stalls out.

I don't have this one nailed down yet, but I've often wondered about running a second starter wire that only feeds 6 volts to crank it over (and kill the fuel or ignition as well). It would only work on a crappier looking truck like mine. They hop in, crank it over, and just get the "rawrr rawrr raaaawwwwr rr gh" effect. If it cranks but doesn't fire because its an old truck, there's a good chance they will keep trying so it will eventually catch, but give up when it takes too long. Somebody with a plan to tow it wont be stopped, but it would eliminate all the joyriding kids.
 

Hunter79764

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I have no idea how many of them had that. I bought and sold the Camaro really quick and it was something that didn't get power so I had to fiddle with it. I think it's pretty safe to assume the third gen have that. Then again it's never safe to assume anymore.
We had a few 3rd gen firebirds that did that as well. My sister had a 4th gen convertible, I think it might have had it?
But I know for a FACT that Grandma's 78 Coupe DeVille had it, because we all got whoopins as a kid from Grandpa if he even thought we might slam the trunk...

Newer Suburban with a power liftgate might be adaptable too, but it might be too long of a stroke.
 

AuroraGirl

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My anti-theft was putting it in gear and removing the shift lever.

After the first time someone tried to steal it, I took an extra precaution every night by swapping a plug and coil wire on the distributor.

Then when someone tried to carjack me in it, I went out and bought a tazer/mace (I'm eventually going to get my concealed carry and maybe a glock 19 like my father has).
where the heck do you live to encounter so much auto theft issues?
 

AuroraGirl

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My 91 Camaro had the same kind of thing that would pull the back hatch down once you closed it. Just for another place to find this type of equipment if somebody wants to use it.

A buddy of mine hooked up his ignition switched so every time you turn the key it honks the horn. It won't start and makes a lot of noise when you try. Won't stop everybody but it helps. I also have a cheap driveway alarm that is very hidden
Soft close trunk pull down motor, it was common to both high end fords and GM at the time, it was used in the third gen cars as an option but because of the size of the rear hatch, it was a common option. to successfully retrofit the normal close mechanism, you need all the parts to swap it out, otherwise you will eventually break something. Some people broke the glass on the rear hatch of the third gens by not fixing the mechanism. The pull down motor switch has an adjustment and the switch (a plastic paddle) is the most common failure point.

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heres a 95 buick park avenues pull down motor wiring
 

DoubleDingo

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Just have a bunch of unlabeled switches and only the correct one being turned in the correct position fires the vehicle. On Crusty Biscuit I had a coil power interrupt switch in plain sight, it was one of many switches installed in the dash, and none had a label. Heck, it even fooled me a few times. It always fired quickly, and I would be cranking and cranking the engine and wondering why it wouldn't start. Oh yeah, flick the switch, knowing which switch was the correct one, and it would start right up. One of the other switches was for the Borg Warner Overdrive. Then there was cable pulls, and levers that I guarantee nobody could figure out unless you're an old cuss that drove this kind of setup at some point.
 

Bextreme04

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Nah. I can still drag it up into my car trailer even if the wheels don't roll.

Did it with my daughter's Cruze after it had been sitting a while and the park brake was stuck on.

K
There's a big difference between trying to drag a Chevy cruise with the parking brake on and a 5400lb truck on 12.5" wide all terrain tires. That being said, it wouldn't stop someone with a rollback from pulling up and dragging it up and on, but it would make it much more of a PITA. Of course you could just pull up with one of those wrecker trucks with a stinger and grab it regardless of whether the wheels are locked or not.
 

Jawzjeep

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Unfortunately I think it's for while you're driving it not stealing your car while vacant. There's another one where you pull on the door handle and a machete blade comes out and takes you out at your ankles but I can't find it yet
 

Bloodhound1981

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So trying to figure that out and came up,what about a small electric winch,hooked to the ebrake cables?Mounted somewhere on the frame and a window switch or similiar for in/out which would be brakes locked or not. So now I'll leave that to other crazies to kick it around,where would you get a small enough winch? How would you limit the pull distance on the winch. There's details to work out but it seems like it could be slick. I'm not worried about mine ,but just thought I'd share what the hamster wheel in my head thought up today.
What you're describing is an aftermarket electric parking brake.


I have one on my truck because I wanted to eliminate the pedal and all the attached cable nonsense. Works great, I didn't install it for theft prevention but it certainly helps. I also have an electric fuel pump kill switch. With EFI, it ain't starting without the pump on.

But most importantly, I have a hidden commercial GPS tracker that are normally used on semi truck trailers. It is powered by 4 AA batteries that last 10 years and operates on 5G. If the worst happens and my truck gets dragged onto a flatbed, I want to know where to go find it!
 

Dleslie212

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An electric fuel pump with a hidden switch works well.
This is how mine is set up. Inhave a Pro Flo 4 system, so I have a kill switch on the line that triggers the fuel pump relay
 

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