by hal » Mon Feb 03, 2014 12:10 pm
Beckyfitz wrote:Our car (BMW X5) was stolen on Thursday evening right outside our house, no keys or breaking, the police think there is device which is bringing used to steal X5's, there have been a lot stolen around sw11 recently. It's gone, in a container on its way to china. So unfair but if you have a new X5 I strongly recommend a steering wheel lock, it's deters them due to speed of stealing the car.
I wonder if it has anything to do with the burglaries that happened the same evening.?
The same thing happened to our X5 just before Christmas. New BMWs and, I believe, Audis and VWs are at risk to "spoofing" of the electronic key fob: basically they have a device that imitates the key, and they can drive off in the car. Most of these cars have had their security systems upgraded to reduce the incidence of this, but BMW (at least) don't advertise this fact voluntarily -- you need to press them about it, and then they offer to upgrade it for free.
We were lucky to some extent in that we were able to track down and recover our car in the next 24 hours (the BMWs can be tracked remotely from your smartphone), and it had been parked up and locked by the thieves outside a home in East London! Cost us hundreds in minor damage to the interior (when they realised that it would be difficult to disable the GPS and tracker, they tore up the wiring a bit) and recovery, but we got BMW to upgrade the security system and also limit access to the main keys (ie much harder to fake new keys). Still, next car is unlikely to be a BMW for precisely this reason.
Police were perfectly pleasant but utterly hopeless for a number of reasons -- couldn't find the car, couldn't investigate, couldn't really care; they seemed truly clueless -- they blamed drug addicts at first....drug addicts with highly sophisticated electronic equipment for circumventing car security systems...
So I would advise anyone with a new BMW, Audi or VW to ensure that their security software is up to date. Not proof against theft, but reduces the possibility dramatically.
[quote="Beckyfitz"]Our car (BMW X5) was stolen on Thursday evening right outside our house, no keys or breaking, the police think there is device which is bringing used to steal X5's, there have been a lot stolen around sw11 recently. It's gone, in a container on its way to china. So unfair but if you have a new X5 I strongly recommend a steering wheel lock, it's deters them due to speed of stealing the car.
I wonder if it has anything to do with the burglaries that happened the same evening.?[/quote]
The same thing happened to our X5 just before Christmas. New BMWs and, I believe, Audis and VWs are at risk to "spoofing" of the electronic key fob: basically they have a device that imitates the key, and they can drive off in the car. Most of these cars have had their security systems upgraded to reduce the incidence of this, but BMW (at least) don't advertise this fact voluntarily -- you need to press them about it, and then they offer to upgrade it for free.
We were lucky to some extent in that we were able to track down and recover our car in the next 24 hours (the BMWs can be tracked remotely from your smartphone), and it had been parked up and locked by the thieves outside a home in East London! Cost us hundreds in minor damage to the interior (when they realised that it would be difficult to disable the GPS and tracker, they tore up the wiring a bit) and recovery, but we got BMW to upgrade the security system and also limit access to the main keys (ie much harder to fake new keys). Still, next car is unlikely to be a BMW for precisely this reason.
Police were perfectly pleasant but utterly hopeless for a number of reasons -- couldn't find the car, couldn't investigate, couldn't really care; they seemed truly clueless -- they blamed drug addicts at first....drug addicts with highly sophisticated electronic equipment for circumventing car security systems... ;)
So I would advise anyone with a new BMW, Audi or VW to ensure that their security software is up to date. Not proof against theft, but reduces the possibility dramatically.