In news:dma1ji$448$1@nwrdmz02.dmz.ncs.ea.ibs-infra.bt.com,
TonyB <Norfolk@soxclara.co.uk> decided to enlighten our sheltered souls with
a rant as follows
>> A tale of woe...remote fob No 1 showed as low battery on dash
>> display so I used No 2 fob. No2 fob failed yesterday ;leaving me
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
> That's it. The world has finally gone completely mad. £252 to get
> into your motor? ( Plus vat I expect?)
That's cheap that is... well, sort of.
To fix the remote central locking on my old Alfa 155 costs £800 because of
Fiats insane security system.
One of the previous keepers managed to lose the all important "brown" key,
which reprogrammes everything, they also lost a little key which happens to
operate the alarm master switch. The "brown" key isn't an issue because most
locksmiths can clone the key I've got, and the Alfa doesn't know it's been
cloned. However, to make the little alarm plipper in the key work you need a
special code, and the little key for the alarm master switch. Alfa refuse to
give you the code, and won't sell the master switch separately - which means
buying an alarm unit, engine ecu, lockset, alarm receiver unit and a couple
of other bits.
I think I'll suffer with turning the key in the door lock.

Signature
Pete M
Alfa 155
Ford Capri (still broked)
Porsche 911 3.2 (For Sale - ebay soon)
COSOC #5, OMF#9
Scouse Git extraordinaire. Liverpool, Great Britain
Tim Hobbs - 28 Nov 2005 00:37 GMT
>Alfa refuse to
>give you the code, and won't sell the master switch separately - which means
>buying an alarm unit, engine ecu, lockset, alarm receiver unit and a couple
>of other bits.
>
>I think I'll suffer with turning the key in the door lock.
Based on my experience with Alfas the key battery would outlast most
of the items you list above anyway... :(

Signature
Tim Hobbs