Locked keys in car
#16
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Locked keys in car
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence - Carl Sagan.
On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 12:29:06 -0500, "Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net>
wrote:
>Gosh fellas, thanks for setting me straight on that "TOTAL BS". Apparently,
>I am a "ing idiot" and have no idea what I'm doing. It must have been
>the wind that unlocked and opened the doors on my 2000 Honda Odyssey, not my
>wife on a cell phone 12 miles away holding the other remote in her hands.
>
>I saw that it worked, thought I'd be nice enough to offer the information to
>anyone interested in it and I get lambasted by some of you with no regard
>for the intent to which it was offered.
>
>Thank you, Randolph, for your kind and educated reply. I too, take most of
>the things like this with a grain of salt and usually check them out on
>www.snopes.com to see if they're just another urban legend. However,
>curiosity got the better of me and since it didn't take me any time or extra
>effort, I tried it out for myself. What do you know? It actually worked!
>
>Oh, by the way ComputerNewby, I would suggest learning a little English as
>the word "your" in the context to which you attempted to apply it is a
>contraction and should be spelled "YOU'RE" as in, "You're a ing moron,
>Newby!"
>
>M
>
>
>"Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net> wrote in message
>news:0tufd.17065$lp6.663@okepread01...
>> This sounds impossible, but.... it actually works! I tried it out and it
>> DID work.
>>
>> For those of you who have a car or truck that can be unlocked by a remote
>> key fob on your key ring, this may save you time and trouble. If you lock
>> your keys in the car and the spare keys (with your other remote key fob on
>> them) are at home, and you don't have "OnStar," here's your answer to the
>> problem.
>>
>> If someone has access to the spare remote at your home, call them on your
>> cell phone (or borrow one from someone if the cell phone is locked in the
>> car too). Hold your cell phone about a foot from your car door and have
>> the other person (that you called) at your home press the unlock button,
>> holding it near the phone on their end.
>> Your car will unlock. Saves someone from having to drive your keys to you.
>> Distance is no object. You could be hundreds of miles away and, if you can
>> reach someone who has the other "remote" for your car, you can unlock the
>> doors (or the trunk, or have the "horn" signal go off, or whatever!)
>>
>> Apparently, the radio wave sent out by the remote transmitter on your key
>> fob remote will piggy-back on the cellular wave signal generated by your
>> cell phone. I don't know how it works or why but it did work for me and my
>> wife so I thought I'd pass this on to the group just as an FYI.
>>
>> M
>>
>>
>
On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 12:29:06 -0500, "Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net>
wrote:
>Gosh fellas, thanks for setting me straight on that "TOTAL BS". Apparently,
>I am a "ing idiot" and have no idea what I'm doing. It must have been
>the wind that unlocked and opened the doors on my 2000 Honda Odyssey, not my
>wife on a cell phone 12 miles away holding the other remote in her hands.
>
>I saw that it worked, thought I'd be nice enough to offer the information to
>anyone interested in it and I get lambasted by some of you with no regard
>for the intent to which it was offered.
>
>Thank you, Randolph, for your kind and educated reply. I too, take most of
>the things like this with a grain of salt and usually check them out on
>www.snopes.com to see if they're just another urban legend. However,
>curiosity got the better of me and since it didn't take me any time or extra
>effort, I tried it out for myself. What do you know? It actually worked!
>
>Oh, by the way ComputerNewby, I would suggest learning a little English as
>the word "your" in the context to which you attempted to apply it is a
>contraction and should be spelled "YOU'RE" as in, "You're a ing moron,
>Newby!"
>
>M
>
>
>"Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net> wrote in message
>news:0tufd.17065$lp6.663@okepread01...
>> This sounds impossible, but.... it actually works! I tried it out and it
>> DID work.
>>
>> For those of you who have a car or truck that can be unlocked by a remote
>> key fob on your key ring, this may save you time and trouble. If you lock
>> your keys in the car and the spare keys (with your other remote key fob on
>> them) are at home, and you don't have "OnStar," here's your answer to the
>> problem.
>>
>> If someone has access to the spare remote at your home, call them on your
>> cell phone (or borrow one from someone if the cell phone is locked in the
>> car too). Hold your cell phone about a foot from your car door and have
>> the other person (that you called) at your home press the unlock button,
>> holding it near the phone on their end.
>> Your car will unlock. Saves someone from having to drive your keys to you.
>> Distance is no object. You could be hundreds of miles away and, if you can
>> reach someone who has the other "remote" for your car, you can unlock the
>> doors (or the trunk, or have the "horn" signal go off, or whatever!)
>>
>> Apparently, the radio wave sent out by the remote transmitter on your key
>> fob remote will piggy-back on the cellular wave signal generated by your
>> cell phone. I don't know how it works or why but it did work for me and my
>> wife so I thought I'd pass this on to the group just as an FYI.
>>
>> M
>>
>>
>
#17
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Locked keys in car
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence - Carl Sagan.
On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 12:29:06 -0500, "Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net>
wrote:
>Gosh fellas, thanks for setting me straight on that "TOTAL BS". Apparently,
>I am a "ing idiot" and have no idea what I'm doing. It must have been
>the wind that unlocked and opened the doors on my 2000 Honda Odyssey, not my
>wife on a cell phone 12 miles away holding the other remote in her hands.
>
>I saw that it worked, thought I'd be nice enough to offer the information to
>anyone interested in it and I get lambasted by some of you with no regard
>for the intent to which it was offered.
>
>Thank you, Randolph, for your kind and educated reply. I too, take most of
>the things like this with a grain of salt and usually check them out on
>www.snopes.com to see if they're just another urban legend. However,
>curiosity got the better of me and since it didn't take me any time or extra
>effort, I tried it out for myself. What do you know? It actually worked!
>
>Oh, by the way ComputerNewby, I would suggest learning a little English as
>the word "your" in the context to which you attempted to apply it is a
>contraction and should be spelled "YOU'RE" as in, "You're a ing moron,
>Newby!"
>
>M
>
>
>"Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net> wrote in message
>news:0tufd.17065$lp6.663@okepread01...
>> This sounds impossible, but.... it actually works! I tried it out and it
>> DID work.
>>
>> For those of you who have a car or truck that can be unlocked by a remote
>> key fob on your key ring, this may save you time and trouble. If you lock
>> your keys in the car and the spare keys (with your other remote key fob on
>> them) are at home, and you don't have "OnStar," here's your answer to the
>> problem.
>>
>> If someone has access to the spare remote at your home, call them on your
>> cell phone (or borrow one from someone if the cell phone is locked in the
>> car too). Hold your cell phone about a foot from your car door and have
>> the other person (that you called) at your home press the unlock button,
>> holding it near the phone on their end.
>> Your car will unlock. Saves someone from having to drive your keys to you.
>> Distance is no object. You could be hundreds of miles away and, if you can
>> reach someone who has the other "remote" for your car, you can unlock the
>> doors (or the trunk, or have the "horn" signal go off, or whatever!)
>>
>> Apparently, the radio wave sent out by the remote transmitter on your key
>> fob remote will piggy-back on the cellular wave signal generated by your
>> cell phone. I don't know how it works or why but it did work for me and my
>> wife so I thought I'd pass this on to the group just as an FYI.
>>
>> M
>>
>>
>
On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 12:29:06 -0500, "Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net>
wrote:
>Gosh fellas, thanks for setting me straight on that "TOTAL BS". Apparently,
>I am a "ing idiot" and have no idea what I'm doing. It must have been
>the wind that unlocked and opened the doors on my 2000 Honda Odyssey, not my
>wife on a cell phone 12 miles away holding the other remote in her hands.
>
>I saw that it worked, thought I'd be nice enough to offer the information to
>anyone interested in it and I get lambasted by some of you with no regard
>for the intent to which it was offered.
>
>Thank you, Randolph, for your kind and educated reply. I too, take most of
>the things like this with a grain of salt and usually check them out on
>www.snopes.com to see if they're just another urban legend. However,
>curiosity got the better of me and since it didn't take me any time or extra
>effort, I tried it out for myself. What do you know? It actually worked!
>
>Oh, by the way ComputerNewby, I would suggest learning a little English as
>the word "your" in the context to which you attempted to apply it is a
>contraction and should be spelled "YOU'RE" as in, "You're a ing moron,
>Newby!"
>
>M
>
>
>"Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net> wrote in message
>news:0tufd.17065$lp6.663@okepread01...
>> This sounds impossible, but.... it actually works! I tried it out and it
>> DID work.
>>
>> For those of you who have a car or truck that can be unlocked by a remote
>> key fob on your key ring, this may save you time and trouble. If you lock
>> your keys in the car and the spare keys (with your other remote key fob on
>> them) are at home, and you don't have "OnStar," here's your answer to the
>> problem.
>>
>> If someone has access to the spare remote at your home, call them on your
>> cell phone (or borrow one from someone if the cell phone is locked in the
>> car too). Hold your cell phone about a foot from your car door and have
>> the other person (that you called) at your home press the unlock button,
>> holding it near the phone on their end.
>> Your car will unlock. Saves someone from having to drive your keys to you.
>> Distance is no object. You could be hundreds of miles away and, if you can
>> reach someone who has the other "remote" for your car, you can unlock the
>> doors (or the trunk, or have the "horn" signal go off, or whatever!)
>>
>> Apparently, the radio wave sent out by the remote transmitter on your key
>> fob remote will piggy-back on the cellular wave signal generated by your
>> cell phone. I don't know how it works or why but it did work for me and my
>> wife so I thought I'd pass this on to the group just as an FYI.
>>
>> M
>>
>>
>
#18
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Locked keys in car
Folks, I'm eating crow and it tastes horrible. lol I posted this as a
simple, honest FYI. I was not lying about it and I am not a troll. It did
happen to work for me on that one occasion but it was most likely a fluke
and I'm not going to defend it or try to explain my way out of it. Nor will
I this information around to anyone else. I cannot argue with proven
science and I in no way intended to mislead anyone with this information.
If you will check out the Toyota newsgroup, alt.autos.toyota.trucks, you
will see postings by "Mac" and "Bruce L. Bergman" explaining how these
things work and how my random example cannot possibly be repeated in a
scientific manner. I am thankful for their enlightenment and their
respectful way of educating me.
I stand humbly corrected.
M
"Harry ***" <***@SomeDomain.com> wrote in message
news:fnd0o0h63jp1o1dlo97j0vvji5b0vcvq0h@4ax.com...
> Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence - Carl Sagan.
>
> On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 12:29:06 -0500, "Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net>
> wrote:
>
>>Gosh fellas, thanks for setting me straight on that "TOTAL BS".
>>Apparently,
>>I am a "ing idiot" and have no idea what I'm doing. It must have been
>>the wind that unlocked and opened the doors on my 2000 Honda Odyssey, not
>>my
>>wife on a cell phone 12 miles away holding the other remote in her hands.
>>
>>I saw that it worked, thought I'd be nice enough to offer the information
>>to
>>anyone interested in it and I get lambasted by some of you with no regard
>>for the intent to which it was offered.
>>
>>Thank you, Randolph, for your kind and educated reply. I too, take most of
>>the things like this with a grain of salt and usually check them out on
>>www.snopes.com to see if they're just another urban legend. However,
>>curiosity got the better of me and since it didn't take me any time or
>>extra
>>effort, I tried it out for myself. What do you know? It actually worked!
>>
>>Oh, by the way ComputerNewby, I would suggest learning a little English as
>>the word "your" in the context to which you attempted to apply it is a
>>contraction and should be spelled "YOU'RE" as in, "You're a ing moron,
>>Newby!"
>>
>>M
>>
>>
>>"Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net> wrote in message
>>news:0tufd.17065$lp6.663@okepread01...
>>> This sounds impossible, but.... it actually works! I tried it out and it
>>> DID work.
>>>
>>> For those of you who have a car or truck that can be unlocked by a
>>> remote
>>> key fob on your key ring, this may save you time and trouble. If you
>>> lock
>>> your keys in the car and the spare keys (with your other remote key fob
>>> on
>>> them) are at home, and you don't have "OnStar," here's your answer to
>>> the
>>> problem.
>>>
>>> If someone has access to the spare remote at your home, call them on
>>> your
>>> cell phone (or borrow one from someone if the cell phone is locked in
>>> the
>>> car too). Hold your cell phone about a foot from your car door and have
>>> the other person (that you called) at your home press the unlock button,
>>> holding it near the phone on their end.
>>> Your car will unlock. Saves someone from having to drive your keys to
>>> you.
>>> Distance is no object. You could be hundreds of miles away and, if you
>>> can
>>> reach someone who has the other "remote" for your car, you can unlock
>>> the
>>> doors (or the trunk, or have the "horn" signal go off, or whatever!)
>>>
>>> Apparently, the radio wave sent out by the remote transmitter on your
>>> key
>>> fob remote will piggy-back on the cellular wave signal generated by your
>>> cell phone. I don't know how it works or why but it did work for me and
>>> my
>>> wife so I thought I'd pass this on to the group just as an FYI.
>>>
>>> M
>>>
>>>
>>
>
simple, honest FYI. I was not lying about it and I am not a troll. It did
happen to work for me on that one occasion but it was most likely a fluke
and I'm not going to defend it or try to explain my way out of it. Nor will
I this information around to anyone else. I cannot argue with proven
science and I in no way intended to mislead anyone with this information.
If you will check out the Toyota newsgroup, alt.autos.toyota.trucks, you
will see postings by "Mac" and "Bruce L. Bergman" explaining how these
things work and how my random example cannot possibly be repeated in a
scientific manner. I am thankful for their enlightenment and their
respectful way of educating me.
I stand humbly corrected.
M
"Harry ***" <***@SomeDomain.com> wrote in message
news:fnd0o0h63jp1o1dlo97j0vvji5b0vcvq0h@4ax.com...
> Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence - Carl Sagan.
>
> On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 12:29:06 -0500, "Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net>
> wrote:
>
>>Gosh fellas, thanks for setting me straight on that "TOTAL BS".
>>Apparently,
>>I am a "ing idiot" and have no idea what I'm doing. It must have been
>>the wind that unlocked and opened the doors on my 2000 Honda Odyssey, not
>>my
>>wife on a cell phone 12 miles away holding the other remote in her hands.
>>
>>I saw that it worked, thought I'd be nice enough to offer the information
>>to
>>anyone interested in it and I get lambasted by some of you with no regard
>>for the intent to which it was offered.
>>
>>Thank you, Randolph, for your kind and educated reply. I too, take most of
>>the things like this with a grain of salt and usually check them out on
>>www.snopes.com to see if they're just another urban legend. However,
>>curiosity got the better of me and since it didn't take me any time or
>>extra
>>effort, I tried it out for myself. What do you know? It actually worked!
>>
>>Oh, by the way ComputerNewby, I would suggest learning a little English as
>>the word "your" in the context to which you attempted to apply it is a
>>contraction and should be spelled "YOU'RE" as in, "You're a ing moron,
>>Newby!"
>>
>>M
>>
>>
>>"Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net> wrote in message
>>news:0tufd.17065$lp6.663@okepread01...
>>> This sounds impossible, but.... it actually works! I tried it out and it
>>> DID work.
>>>
>>> For those of you who have a car or truck that can be unlocked by a
>>> remote
>>> key fob on your key ring, this may save you time and trouble. If you
>>> lock
>>> your keys in the car and the spare keys (with your other remote key fob
>>> on
>>> them) are at home, and you don't have "OnStar," here's your answer to
>>> the
>>> problem.
>>>
>>> If someone has access to the spare remote at your home, call them on
>>> your
>>> cell phone (or borrow one from someone if the cell phone is locked in
>>> the
>>> car too). Hold your cell phone about a foot from your car door and have
>>> the other person (that you called) at your home press the unlock button,
>>> holding it near the phone on their end.
>>> Your car will unlock. Saves someone from having to drive your keys to
>>> you.
>>> Distance is no object. You could be hundreds of miles away and, if you
>>> can
>>> reach someone who has the other "remote" for your car, you can unlock
>>> the
>>> doors (or the trunk, or have the "horn" signal go off, or whatever!)
>>>
>>> Apparently, the radio wave sent out by the remote transmitter on your
>>> key
>>> fob remote will piggy-back on the cellular wave signal generated by your
>>> cell phone. I don't know how it works or why but it did work for me and
>>> my
>>> wife so I thought I'd pass this on to the group just as an FYI.
>>>
>>> M
>>>
>>>
>>
>
#19
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Locked keys in car
Folks, I'm eating crow and it tastes horrible. lol I posted this as a
simple, honest FYI. I was not lying about it and I am not a troll. It did
happen to work for me on that one occasion but it was most likely a fluke
and I'm not going to defend it or try to explain my way out of it. Nor will
I this information around to anyone else. I cannot argue with proven
science and I in no way intended to mislead anyone with this information.
If you will check out the Toyota newsgroup, alt.autos.toyota.trucks, you
will see postings by "Mac" and "Bruce L. Bergman" explaining how these
things work and how my random example cannot possibly be repeated in a
scientific manner. I am thankful for their enlightenment and their
respectful way of educating me.
I stand humbly corrected.
M
"Harry ***" <***@SomeDomain.com> wrote in message
news:fnd0o0h63jp1o1dlo97j0vvji5b0vcvq0h@4ax.com...
> Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence - Carl Sagan.
>
> On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 12:29:06 -0500, "Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net>
> wrote:
>
>>Gosh fellas, thanks for setting me straight on that "TOTAL BS".
>>Apparently,
>>I am a "ing idiot" and have no idea what I'm doing. It must have been
>>the wind that unlocked and opened the doors on my 2000 Honda Odyssey, not
>>my
>>wife on a cell phone 12 miles away holding the other remote in her hands.
>>
>>I saw that it worked, thought I'd be nice enough to offer the information
>>to
>>anyone interested in it and I get lambasted by some of you with no regard
>>for the intent to which it was offered.
>>
>>Thank you, Randolph, for your kind and educated reply. I too, take most of
>>the things like this with a grain of salt and usually check them out on
>>www.snopes.com to see if they're just another urban legend. However,
>>curiosity got the better of me and since it didn't take me any time or
>>extra
>>effort, I tried it out for myself. What do you know? It actually worked!
>>
>>Oh, by the way ComputerNewby, I would suggest learning a little English as
>>the word "your" in the context to which you attempted to apply it is a
>>contraction and should be spelled "YOU'RE" as in, "You're a ing moron,
>>Newby!"
>>
>>M
>>
>>
>>"Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net> wrote in message
>>news:0tufd.17065$lp6.663@okepread01...
>>> This sounds impossible, but.... it actually works! I tried it out and it
>>> DID work.
>>>
>>> For those of you who have a car or truck that can be unlocked by a
>>> remote
>>> key fob on your key ring, this may save you time and trouble. If you
>>> lock
>>> your keys in the car and the spare keys (with your other remote key fob
>>> on
>>> them) are at home, and you don't have "OnStar," here's your answer to
>>> the
>>> problem.
>>>
>>> If someone has access to the spare remote at your home, call them on
>>> your
>>> cell phone (or borrow one from someone if the cell phone is locked in
>>> the
>>> car too). Hold your cell phone about a foot from your car door and have
>>> the other person (that you called) at your home press the unlock button,
>>> holding it near the phone on their end.
>>> Your car will unlock. Saves someone from having to drive your keys to
>>> you.
>>> Distance is no object. You could be hundreds of miles away and, if you
>>> can
>>> reach someone who has the other "remote" for your car, you can unlock
>>> the
>>> doors (or the trunk, or have the "horn" signal go off, or whatever!)
>>>
>>> Apparently, the radio wave sent out by the remote transmitter on your
>>> key
>>> fob remote will piggy-back on the cellular wave signal generated by your
>>> cell phone. I don't know how it works or why but it did work for me and
>>> my
>>> wife so I thought I'd pass this on to the group just as an FYI.
>>>
>>> M
>>>
>>>
>>
>
simple, honest FYI. I was not lying about it and I am not a troll. It did
happen to work for me on that one occasion but it was most likely a fluke
and I'm not going to defend it or try to explain my way out of it. Nor will
I this information around to anyone else. I cannot argue with proven
science and I in no way intended to mislead anyone with this information.
If you will check out the Toyota newsgroup, alt.autos.toyota.trucks, you
will see postings by "Mac" and "Bruce L. Bergman" explaining how these
things work and how my random example cannot possibly be repeated in a
scientific manner. I am thankful for their enlightenment and their
respectful way of educating me.
I stand humbly corrected.
M
"Harry ***" <***@SomeDomain.com> wrote in message
news:fnd0o0h63jp1o1dlo97j0vvji5b0vcvq0h@4ax.com...
> Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence - Carl Sagan.
>
> On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 12:29:06 -0500, "Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net>
> wrote:
>
>>Gosh fellas, thanks for setting me straight on that "TOTAL BS".
>>Apparently,
>>I am a "ing idiot" and have no idea what I'm doing. It must have been
>>the wind that unlocked and opened the doors on my 2000 Honda Odyssey, not
>>my
>>wife on a cell phone 12 miles away holding the other remote in her hands.
>>
>>I saw that it worked, thought I'd be nice enough to offer the information
>>to
>>anyone interested in it and I get lambasted by some of you with no regard
>>for the intent to which it was offered.
>>
>>Thank you, Randolph, for your kind and educated reply. I too, take most of
>>the things like this with a grain of salt and usually check them out on
>>www.snopes.com to see if they're just another urban legend. However,
>>curiosity got the better of me and since it didn't take me any time or
>>extra
>>effort, I tried it out for myself. What do you know? It actually worked!
>>
>>Oh, by the way ComputerNewby, I would suggest learning a little English as
>>the word "your" in the context to which you attempted to apply it is a
>>contraction and should be spelled "YOU'RE" as in, "You're a ing moron,
>>Newby!"
>>
>>M
>>
>>
>>"Toy_Man67" <m.goodwyn@***.net> wrote in message
>>news:0tufd.17065$lp6.663@okepread01...
>>> This sounds impossible, but.... it actually works! I tried it out and it
>>> DID work.
>>>
>>> For those of you who have a car or truck that can be unlocked by a
>>> remote
>>> key fob on your key ring, this may save you time and trouble. If you
>>> lock
>>> your keys in the car and the spare keys (with your other remote key fob
>>> on
>>> them) are at home, and you don't have "OnStar," here's your answer to
>>> the
>>> problem.
>>>
>>> If someone has access to the spare remote at your home, call them on
>>> your
>>> cell phone (or borrow one from someone if the cell phone is locked in
>>> the
>>> car too). Hold your cell phone about a foot from your car door and have
>>> the other person (that you called) at your home press the unlock button,
>>> holding it near the phone on their end.
>>> Your car will unlock. Saves someone from having to drive your keys to
>>> you.
>>> Distance is no object. You could be hundreds of miles away and, if you
>>> can
>>> reach someone who has the other "remote" for your car, you can unlock
>>> the
>>> doors (or the trunk, or have the "horn" signal go off, or whatever!)
>>>
>>> Apparently, the radio wave sent out by the remote transmitter on your
>>> key
>>> fob remote will piggy-back on the cellular wave signal generated by your
>>> cell phone. I don't know how it works or why but it did work for me and
>>> my
>>> wife so I thought I'd pass this on to the group just as an FYI.
>>>
>>> M
>>>
>>>
>>
>
#22
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: did any of you try it?
Factory alarm and digital phone through Cingular. Hasn't worked in repeated
attempts so it was just a fluke. Ignore the FYI.
M
"lamont1" <lamont@lamont.com> wrote in message
news:QjAhd.1415$Ak2.1236@trndny02...
> also, i want to know what kind of alarm do you have and do you have an
> analog phone? or is it digital?
>
>
attempts so it was just a fluke. Ignore the FYI.
M
"lamont1" <lamont@lamont.com> wrote in message
news:QjAhd.1415$Ak2.1236@trndny02...
> also, i want to know what kind of alarm do you have and do you have an
> analog phone? or is it digital?
>
>
#23
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: did any of you try it?
Factory alarm and digital phone through Cingular. Hasn't worked in repeated
attempts so it was just a fluke. Ignore the FYI.
M
"lamont1" <lamont@lamont.com> wrote in message
news:QjAhd.1415$Ak2.1236@trndny02...
> also, i want to know what kind of alarm do you have and do you have an
> analog phone? or is it digital?
>
>
attempts so it was just a fluke. Ignore the FYI.
M
"lamont1" <lamont@lamont.com> wrote in message
news:QjAhd.1415$Ak2.1236@trndny02...
> also, i want to know what kind of alarm do you have and do you have an
> analog phone? or is it digital?
>
>
#24
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: did any of you try it?
I tried it for S&G's and it worked. Alltell digital line, GM car.
"lamont1" <lamont@lamont.com> wrote in message
news:QjAhd.1415$Ak2.1236@trndny02...
> also, i want to know what kind of alarm do you have and do you have an
> analog phone? or is it digital?
>
>
"lamont1" <lamont@lamont.com> wrote in message
news:QjAhd.1415$Ak2.1236@trndny02...
> also, i want to know what kind of alarm do you have and do you have an
> analog phone? or is it digital?
>
>
#25
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: did any of you try it?
I tried it for S&G's and it worked. Alltell digital line, GM car.
"lamont1" <lamont@lamont.com> wrote in message
news:QjAhd.1415$Ak2.1236@trndny02...
> also, i want to know what kind of alarm do you have and do you have an
> analog phone? or is it digital?
>
>
"lamont1" <lamont@lamont.com> wrote in message
news:QjAhd.1415$Ak2.1236@trndny02...
> also, i want to know what kind of alarm do you have and do you have an
> analog phone? or is it digital?
>
>
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