Installing a Vehicle Security System, Car Alarm

Whatever your car may have cost to buy, it is your property and you will naturally want to protect it with all reasonable means. Particularly if you are unable to put the car in a locked garage, and have to park in the street near your home (or anywhere you may visit), you will want to have protections in place to ensure that nobody can either steal the car or anything inside it. For this reason, most of us like to have a car alarm fitted. To save money, many of us will choose to install the alarm ourselves – but we need to get this right, because if you install it poorly then you might as well leave the car’s doors open and the keys in the ignition. Car thieves are opportunistic, and will take any chance they are presented with.

Installing a car alarm correctly requires at least a good deal of preparation and is better done if you have at least some grasp of electronics and wiring. You do not need to be a qualified electrician by any stretch of the imagination, but certainly need to have the right equipment and the right mental preparation. Getting it wrong will lead to a poor installation, potential for theft and even arguably a poorer running car. Before you do anything you need to gather together the correct materials and tools. The tools will include scissors, crimps, a test light, screwdriver, a soldering iron, a drill and a volt meter. The materials will include solder wire, screws, tie wrap and double-sided mounting tape.

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How to Install a Vehicle Security System & Car Alarm

They are the apples of our eye. Our pride and joy, the thing we have worked for for so long and now it is here you will want to ensure a safe home for your new arrival. Installing an alarm system is the first step to this, and some form of Immobiliser will come in useful as well. What do you mean, that is barbaric? No, I was talking about cars. Easy mistake to make, I suppose. Anyway, you do not want your car to get stolen even if you love your kids more than it or are still undecided, so if your new car is not a new car, and as a result comes without an alarm system, you will want to add as much security to it as possible.

The advantage of buying a car that does not have a pre-fitted alarm system – for yes, there is an advantage! – is that you can fit one of your choosing, one that is neither so sensitive that it goes off when a song thrush lands nearby, nor so numb that it only springs into action when the thieves are unscrewing the old licence plates and sealing it off for a respray. It may mean a bit of hard work, but who does not secretly love playing the mechanic on a Saturday afternoon? If you are planning to do it all on Saturday afternoon, though, make sure you start early on, because this is not a small job.

» Read more: How to Install a Vehicle Security System & Car Alarm

Car Alarm System – Basic Alarms to SMS Remote Controlled Tracker for the UK

Aftermarket alarm systems starts with a basic intruder detection and siren alarm to one which can send you a text message if your vehicle is stolen and allows you to track the exact location using GPS as well as an option to send commands via mobile phone to immobilise the vehicle, lock doors smoke screens or any other programmable actions.

A good quality basic car alarm system should include an immobiliser if you do not have one already fitted and an output to the central locking system so when you arm the alarm from the alarm remote all the doors will lock. Some car alarm systems can make use of you existing central locking remote control so that when you use your exiting remote to lock up a signal is sent to the alarm to arm it and disarm when the doors are unlocked.

» Read more: Car Alarm System – Basic Alarms to SMS Remote Controlled Tracker for the UK