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I tested this on a BMW and a SAAB, it worked 100%
Apparently Mercs are particularly popular for this tactic because they don't make a noise.
Hold the key to your chin and press button. This increases the range. Tried and tested...If you activate two remotes at the same time sharing the same frequency (in SA it is 433MHz) the signal from the one will overwhelm the signal from the other. 99% remotes today are rolling code devices and this includes the ET standard encryption and high encryption models. The receiver has to decode the digital word that is being transmitted and unlock (or relock) the car, or operate the gate motor or garage door.
You can
1) Extend your arm and press the button this way (your body acts as an aerial by induction)
2) Check that you receive confirmation by means of a siren chirp or flashing light that the signal you sent has been received and processed
Happened to my uncle with his 750i. I would have thought a high end car like that would have some features built in to avoid this type of incident
A friend of mine told me with one particular car (Peugot 206) the car seemed to be having an internal battle before deciding to surrender (French car)...
Actually, of the 9 cars we tested - it was the only car that didn't have a yes/no answer.
Ours worked ... then didn't ... then did ... then didn't
Hold the key to your chin and press button. This increases the range. Tried and tested...
In other news, car manufacturers have decided to bundle a free padlock with their cars.
I don't get why only some cars are affected?Shouldn't they all be using the same frequency? And I don't buy the signal strength argument either...if it were that then the cars would open from vastly different ranges.