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Have you ever locked your keys inside your car ?


Bugsy
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Try this, it really works.

If you have a push-button type key fob and you've locked it inside your car you can, providing you have a spare fob at home, use your mobile phone to unlock the car.

Ring home and ask whoever to get the spare key-fob for the car, ask them to press the 'open' button whilst holding the fob near to their phone, you have to hold your phone near to the activator on your car at the same time. you will be amazed at this but your car should open..

Try it, before you lock yourself out, of course.

 

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Oh yes.........Many years ago on the M62 heading over the pennines one Saturday afternoon.

I was a fairly new driver and trundling along in the inside lane and this lorry behind kept flashing me, Thinking there was maybe something wrong with my car , I pulled over onto the hard shoulder and automaticaly pulled or pushed the mechanism that made the door lock (ford escort MK 1)  **********, realising what I had done , thought I had better start looking for the emergency phone.  Realising my handbag was still in the car I was reluctant to move, panicked a bit and tried other door and boot which were locked. I stuck my hands in my coat pocket and my yale housekey was in there..........shoved it in the door lock  et voila!!!!

Its no wonder my car was always having its spare tyre and steri knicked!!!

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[quote user="Bugbear"]

Try this, it really works.

If you have a push-button type key fob and you've locked it inside your car you can, providing you have a spare fob at home, use your mobile phone to unlock the car.

Ring home and ask whoever to get the spare key-fob for the car, ask them to press the 'open' button whilst holding the fob near to their phone, you have to hold your phone near to the activator on your car at the same time. you will be amazed at this but your car should open..

Try it, before you lock yourself out, of course.

 

[/quote]

Sounds all a bit mad to me!!

Anyway Bugbear how do you know..........you can't lock youself out of a motorbike!![:D]

(ps, welcome to the forum!)

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I once locked keys in a rented car and i was next door to a police station who came with their bunch of keys but could not find one suitable.They looked around the carpark for a piece of coathanger wire and managed to pull the push down buttonsback up  which were very popular 30 years ago.

WE ALL HAD A GREAT LAUGH!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Always break the windscreen not the quarter lights because everybody stocks windscreens and nobody stocks quarter lights.

My dad once slammed the rear door of a Thames Trader dress van with his suit jacket hanging on a wooden coat hanger in the back of the van with the ignition keys in it. We spent till 11 pm that Sunday  installing a plywood door between the cab and back and then had to install three more because everybody decided it was a good idea

20 years ago very nice lady said her son had locked them out of their Ford Fiesta. Looked round Homebase car park, found a piece of strapping had door open in 8 seconds. To this day I am expecting Jeremy  Beagle, Surrey Constablary, or somebody remaking 'Gone in 90 Seconds' to invite me for questioning.

 

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[quote user="Anton Redman"]

Always break the windscreen not the quarter lights because everybody stocks windscreens and nobody stocks quarter lights.

[/quote]

That's interesting, Anton!

I managed not only to lock myself out of a hire car, back in the early 1970s, but also to leave the engine running!  I was working on a documentary in Ireland, and had driven self and members of the crew to a medieval banquet at Blarney Castle. Everybody scrambled out noisily, and last one must have pressed button down and slammed the door. Can't say I enjoyed the evening much, thinking of the engine ticking over in the car park.  Calls to the hire company in Dublin had failed to come up with any solution, so in the end one of the crew broke the quarter light to get in. I then had to spend the only day off hanging around in Limerick waiting to get it fixed. [:(]

But next time (hope there isn't one!) I shall remember the windscreen trick!

Angela

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Whilst working at a local children's centre this week I was called to a lady in the carpark who had locked her one year old son in her car.

Three of us messed around for ages trying all sorts of things to get it open, but eventually had to resort to breaking the front o/s window. The little boy slept through it all, while his mother wept.

 

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A guy I used to work with spent one Sunday morning installing stereo speakers into his classic car, which involved going into back shelf or whatever through the boot.  Suddenly there was a hideous creaking noise and, terrified, he jerked his legs up into the boot just in time to stop them being crushed by extremely solid boot lid..........   It was apparently 3 hours before his wife got cross enough with him to come out to garage to look for him.

Chrissie (81)

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