Does your car insurance company recommend any particular alarms? Discounted premium if you have one of theirs fitted? Current standard is 3 point immobilisation.
I did a search but couldn't find anything (ok so I only went back 5 pages of results and gave up) but I'm wondering what to look for in a good alarm. I'm doing a rewire of my '89 ST162 soon, so I would much prefer to integrate the alarm into the wiring at the build stage than tack it on as an add on later.
My main requirements in an alarm are outputs for actuating central locking via remote and I'm after something with ultrasonic sensors as I'm not too confident in just sensing from door locks and bonnet pins alone. Currently looking at the Jaycar range of alarms as they are cheap and have all the features I'm looking for, but I have heard people bag them out before. The steelmate range sounds quite good, has anyone had experience with them?
Last edited by XR Pilot; 27-11-2007 at 11:59 PM.
Does your car insurance company recommend any particular alarms? Discounted premium if you have one of theirs fitted? Current standard is 3 point immobilisation.
RA23
1G-GZE
I'm only covered for third party injury and property, so an alarm won't really make any difference in that respect.
The most important thing is how good the install\installer is.
It is the key to any alarm these days, but often over looked.
The shadow immobiliser with the alarm upgrade pack is a great alarm with all the features you would need (see links below). 3 immobiliser circuits, triggers via bonnet pins, door switches, shock sensor, and ultrasonic sensor
I've used them a couple of times (albeit) without the alarm upgrade pack and can't fault them.
The thing more important than the alarm is how well the immobiliser circuits are wired in, and how hard they are to physically access, and then the placing of the brain and the rest of the wiring. A good place for the brain is in the rear door cards or under the carpet under the seat, not just placed somewhere easy to put it under the dash like it can be tempting to do
But yeah mostly be concerned about the install, having installed mine myself I'm never worried about parking the car even in quietest darkest city streets because I know how long it would take anyone to bypass the alarm, and then even once they do that the car isn't going start unless they pull most of the interior out
FWIW I have a relatively high model mongoose alarm in my car (I fitted it for piggy when he owned the car), but the shadow with the add on pack actually has more features
The steelmate ones are alright, but they don't have all black wiring which I don't particularly like, and some of the features on them become obsolete if it's installed right anyway, the car can look after itself
http://www.jaycar.com.au/productView...Max=&SUBCATID=
http://www.jaycar.com.au/productView...Max=&SUBCATID=
I am the sun
I'll be installing it, I'm doing a complete engine re-wire so now is the best time to do it. It will be well integrated and hiddenOriginally Posted by Youngy
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Dale - That was actually the alarm I was thinking of, not the steelmate ones. I couldn't get on the jaycar site at the time of posting to get the correct name. I'm leaning towards the alarm you posted at the moment.
Does anyone have experience with the 2-way paging alarms from Jaycar? They cost a little more but I'm undecided if its worth spending a bit more...
The alarm wiring should only be on the chassis side of the wiring loom, hope you're rewiring that too
I personally don't think they'd be worth the extra, but that's just me
I am the sun
BLACK WIRING is important!....pretty much all the alarms these days are all black wired (NO universal wire colours...)
BRANT alarms are the ones in the WRX's they are almost unstealable.
blake
make sure you get one that disarms properly when ya disarm it.
nothings worse than working on a car (eg most jeep wranglers) with an aftermarket alarm installed, that keeps rearming itself every few minutes. going off whenever you budge a bolt, or go up and down on the jack etc..
and keep records of the make and model of the alarm, so when a remote stuffs up you can order another one... so simple yet so many people over look these points!
Originally Posted by cuzzo
Originally Posted by Bananaman
Yeah, I'm going to tidy the chassis side up as well as rewiring the engine side. I'll make sure its well integrated. I'll probably fit the dash loom from the wreck during the auto to manual conversion.Originally Posted by Dale
It will either be black wiring or another solution I've discussed with Dale. I won't be using universal wiring thats for sure. Are the BRANT alarms OEM or aftermarket jobbies?Originally Posted by IN 05 NT
Yeah I've seen an alarm that behaves like that, very annoying, hence why I started this thread hoping to get some responses on what alarms to avoid.Originally Posted by MRMOPARMAN
Keeping records of what I fit is a good idea. I'll make sure the model no isn't kept in the glovebox though![]()
this sounds like the car may have a tilt sensor. as an addition to the other sensors, some people use tilt sensors incase someone takes a fancy to your wheels. for the car to re-arm itself constantly would be such a painOriginally Posted by MRMOPARMAN
Ness: now driving a Rukus
i'm right 98% of the time....
so who cares about the other 3%
I've installed Jaycar Shadow's on eight of my own cars over the last 6 years and never had a problem with any of them apart from the chinese batteries in the remotes going flat prematurely (easy fix with a $1.50 duracel which last for years).
brant do aftermarket too.
Update - I ended up purchasing a Jaycar Shadow with all the upgrades - backup alarm, microwave sensor, boot release etc. If I remember I'll update this thread once I've got it all installed and working.
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