Nissan Car Lounge - Almera, Juke, Latio, Qashqai, Sylphy, Teana Owners > Latio
Latio in built Steering lock
Silver:
since you go Malaysia often, you can see what the Malaysians use in their cars
those should be good
iagree:
--- Quote from: Ender on October 16, 2008, 12:10:31 PM ---Thanks for your suggestion, but I think Mr Bean's method of removing the steering wheel is much more convienent. No need to open bonnet, no need of tools such as spanner, and no need to get hands dirty.
--- End quote ---
Hi Ender & Clarence & guys,
Huh, these ideas are superb. I like it.
But, if we keep on removing & fixing back the steering, i think is more scary aso. What if one day we are blur king and din fix it back nicely and the whole steering drop out while we half way driving it... etc......
Regards.
LatioR:
--- Quote from: Silver on October 29, 2008, 11:56:50 PM ---since you go Malaysia often, you can see what the Malaysians use in their cars
those should be good
--- End quote ---
hi Silver, hv seen some real gd 1 but the price @~RM200 which i fd it too expensive. My previous 1 only cost me <RM$20 but very sad it's can't fit to Latio lei..
Ender:
--- Quote from: LatioR on October 29, 2008, 11:51:34 PM ---hi all, still waiting for gd recommendation for gd steering lock lei! Cheap & gd one!
--- End quote ---
I got mine for about $10 during an autobac sales. But with a mallet, you can actually know out my lock. I think all those steering lock all can be disable with brute force. I still use it in malaysia as a deterrent, since it birght red, easily seen from outside. The real lock is the Latio own inbuilt steering column. This without i-key cannot unlock, if they use brute force, they may damage the steering column.
clarence:
As a further deterent against vehicle theft, you can choose to park head in and turn your steering wheel to the extreme right or left when parked.
This makes it more difficult for the thief to tow your car away.
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