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Is there anything more daft and pointless than a secure wheel nut?

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    #21
    I think they hark back to the days when alloy wheels were new and the 'in thing', and people would wake up to find their car propped up on bricks minus the alloys.

    I think that MO of theft has fallen out of favour of late, but with some wheel and tyre combinations now costing a few £'000's I wouldn't be surprised if it makes a comeback, possibly perpetuated by the metal collecting elements of society that travel once every few years between patches of hard standing wasteground.
    Originally posted by Nigel Farage MEP - 2016-06-24 04:00:00
    "I hope this victory brings down this failed project and leads us to a Europe of sovereign nation states, trading together, being friends together, cooperating together, and let's get rid of the flag, the anthem, Brussels, and all that has gone wrong."

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      #22
      the in thing now is these posh dashboards

      a friend from Dusseldorf bought a new X5 in the summer and four weeks later thieves stole the dashboard

      had a new one installed on the insurance, it cost 20,000 euros

      a lot of cables in there to figure out

      and he had to wait four weeks !

      Milan.

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        #23
        Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
        Jag had a puncture a year or so ago, and the RAC guy replaced the wheel.

        One way or another, I later lost the spanner or thingummy jig that allows the locking nut to be removed, not realising its significance, or even that there was such a thing as a locking nut!

        Had second puncture more recently, at which the RAC guy, on enquiring where the thingummy was and being told it had been lost, said not to worry, and used a chisel to whip off the supposedly secure locking nut in a matter of seconds.

        Now the garage doing the car's service and MOT are saying they are having big problems getting the wheels off, on account of not having this blasted wing nut thing!

        So in short, it is trivial to get off with a chisel, if you know what you are doing (which any serious carjacker or wheeljacker presumably does). But for any other purpose it is nothing but a liability!

        And what's the betting if I phone Jaguar and ask for a replacement, they will say I need four brand new wheels, or even a new car?!
        To be brutally honest if you are too thick to understand how locking wheel nuts work, and take care of your key, then you are too thick to be driving. Nothing will stop a determined thief, but they add enough hassle and a little bit extra time of messing around to make them pass onto the next car in many situations where they may get disturbed.

        WTF do you do for a living if you cannot work this simple common sense out.

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          #24
          Originally posted by CoolCat View Post
          To be brutally honest if you are too thick to understand how locking wheel nuts work, and take care of your key, then you are too thick to be driving.
          I'm not too thick to understand how they work - It's easy to understand how they work. I just didn't know they existed!
          Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ here

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            #25
            Originally posted by milanbenes View Post
            the in thing now is these posh dashboards

            a friend from Dusseldorf bought a new X5 in the summer and four weeks later thieves stole the dashboard

            had a new one installed on the insurance, it cost 20,000 euros

            a lot of cables in there to figure out

            and he had to wait four weeks !

            Milan.
            All that proves is that stuff is stolen to order. I suppose they were fortunate the thieves didnt steal the whole car and strip it later.
            I couldn't give two fornicators! Yes, really!

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              #26
              Originally posted by BolshieBastard View Post
              All that proves is that stuff is stolen to order. I suppose they were fortunate the thieves didnt steal the whole car and strip it later.
              Looks like the Poles have come up with a new method


              The black car was stolen in Stockport, Greater Manchester, and found in the back of the van 300 miles away in Dover, Kent.

              Customs officials at the Port of Dover discovered the van on Monday.

              Inspector Neil Cook from Greater Manchester Police said: 'It was picked up as it was going through Dover as it seemed overweight.

              'When they checked they found the car in there cut in two.'

              Detectives discovered it had been stolen from the Stockport home in a burglary seven days earlier.




              How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

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