a4gee wrote:My car only locks automatically if the engine hasn`t been turned on as it would be silly if it locked all the time as owners would be locked out all the time.
If you press the fob button twice your deactivating the alarm and the deadlocks I believe.
My mate is in the police and hasn`t heard about cloning signals its usually been a oversight by the driver pressing the wrong button I`m afraid. But never say never.
Interesting.. I don't know about the first bit, and I'm not sure if pressing the lock button twice deactivates the alarm and the deadlocks. I'll have to test that, because I do press the button numerous times when walking back into the house!
The reason I'm sure the windows were locked is because I'd been out and had the windows down. I always get out the car with the windows still down and lock the doors and continue to hold the lock button down to close the windows. I know dead certain that I wouldn't hit the wrong button the key fob.
Regarding the 'cloning signals' system, It was a VW Dealership that told me about this. He actually said it was a trend that they'd seen... I searched on the internet very quickly and found a few. Strangely enough, one of the sites has taken it off now but it was here:
[links removed]
Strangely enough, I emailed Cobra yesterday as they specialise in Car security and are one of the companies that you can install things from base spec when ordering your car. The guy I spoke to said that it was unlikely to be a code scanner as he thought that the VW's had rolling car security on them. I'm not sure if me clicking the remote numerous times would get around this or not, but he thought it would be more likely that someone would try and clone the physical key using something called a 'tippie lock device'. I took the plastic cover off the door handle on my Scirocco today (which takes about 2 seconds once you know how!) and the actual key lock is quite scratched... I've never used that before and it is possible it got scratched in the dealership, but that adds another element of possibility.
Obviously this is all speculation, I'm positive I locked the car and there had been other cars in my area previously (Audi's and Skodas) that have been broken into without the need for a key. Not very often, but the police didn't really know how it had been done. When Forensics came down to check the car, they said that someone had broken into one of their colleagues cars without forced entry and they knew for a fact the door was locked as they were there. There was £2k's worth of Golf equipment in the boot that was stolen (which I'm guessing probably wouldn't have been paid out on insurance!).
Either way, I'm not too sure, but it's certainly opened my eyes a bit and made me think about extra security to protect my Rocco!
Cheers,
Lewis