Watch Your Trucks!! VERY CLOSELY!!

Stuart

Aye carumba!!!
Staff member
Most of you that know me know I drive a big ol' F-250 diesel to haul my boat around. Well, ownership of said vehicle nearly changed hands this weekend to the narcos.

Came into town Friday afternoon, got a room at Playa Inn, went and got the boat out of storage, cleaned and gassed it, then dropped it off at Safe Marine to head out in the morning. Went to La Curva for dinner with the wife, back at Playa Inn about 9:30. Stopped over to talk to Dave and have a drink at Capone's. Back in the room about 11:00 or so. We had a room at the front of the hotel, right along Sinaloa and the truck was parked in the hotel parking directly beneath our room.

Get up to go fishing and head down to the truck in the morning, get in, go to put the key in the ignition and... WTF? Why isn't the key working? At this point, I'm only half-awake, no coffee yet, mild hangover, and it takes a minute for it to click -- the key isn't working because the ignition has been completely punched out. I look at it, then look down and start picking up pieces of the ignition switch off the floor.

Right about then, you get that sort of sick to your stomach feeling. We check the rest of the truck. Absolutely nothing missing. Expensive fishing gear in the back? Still there. My Captain's bag with GPS and electronics for the boat? Still there. Passports and Mex papers in my document bag in the console? Untouched. They wanted the truck and didn't give a damn about anything that was in it.

So, went into the hotel, called a locksmith. Figured out that they punched out the door lock on the passenger side to get in. Literally smashed it to pieces. Then, smashed the ignition, but broke a key off in it and were screwed (or interrupted) at that point. The locksmith was excellent and had a new ignition switch installed in under an hour. The hotel reviewed security tapes (they do have working cameras and security patrol). The video showed nothing, other than me getting something out of the back of the truck before I went up to bed for the night at about 11:00.

My truck has an alarm, but apparently I forgot to reset it. I usually turn it off when we're loading and unloading stuff, or when I'm working with the boat because I constantly set the thing off as I'm in and out. Still, the truck was securely locked. In over 20 years of staying at Playa Inn, I've never had anything go missing - they generally have pretty good security.

Lessons learned: 1) Always remember to reset the alarm (duh). Complacency on my part almost cost me my truck. 2) The truck will be getting a secret kill switch. The locksmith told me that he could steal my truck in under a minute, even with the alarm on, so don't think you're safe with an alarm and a Club on the steering wheel. He also pointed out that my truck is the truck of choice for narcos - F-250, 4x4, BFG off-road tires and diesel. 3) I was damned lucky.

Just passing this along to make everyone aware - if it happened to me, it can certainly happen to you! :(
 
GOOD COMMENTS AND WARNING
My one ton 4 x 2 duly is sure not a truck of choice. You can get it stuck in the sand on the pavement. You were realy lucky that all the other stuff was still there.
 

InkaRoads

cronopiador
in my college years I used to install car alarms and I can tell you with certainty that as soon as a new system comes out within 2 days the thiefs know how to disable it, car alarms are the bigest waste of money there is, it takes longer and it is noisier to brake thru the club than anything and the cheapest thing to have and you can make it very easy yourself is a kill swicth to the starter, a little toogle switch under the dash where it is hard to find and nobody but you will be able to start that car,truck or any motorized vehicle for that matter, you will still need the keys if you do it right and be able to start the car. :eek3:
 

Kenny

Guest
More than once when I've been at a place that felt wrong, I've discreetly taken off the coil wire. Unless the thief's watched you do it, it's going to stop anyone from stealing your vehicle.
Like you Stuart, I've been staying at the Playa since it was 22 rooms and I've always felt my vehicle and property was safe. Maybe the street side was just the wrong side this time?
 
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Ladyjeeper

Sonoran Goddess
Staff member
My alarm system has a gas kill. I don't care about the stupid sounding alarm, I keep it for the gas kill. I kinda wish I could silence the alarm part but can't with the gas kill........
 

moore_rb

Stay Thirsty My Friends
Geez... and I just bought a new (to me) 2007 F150 4x4 to haul my own junk down there. Maybe I'll be installing an electrical cutoff switch before the next trip down...

Thanks for the heads up Stuart!

You would think that after an episode like that, Jesus would have been nice enough to let you out on the water to catch some fish.

Maybe next weekend you should plan to go to church instead of RP...:-D
 

Jim

Guest
There has been quite a bit of theft and vandalism in that neighborhood. I have heard of 2 stolen vehicles in front of Capones and a friend of mine had his custom grill stolen off of his Hummer directly in front. Another friend had bricks thrown at her car over the wall by her house. Broke the winshield and made some mean dents. Not saying that it is worse there than other parts. Maybe I have just heard more stories about that area. On the brighter side, 99% of the crime here is non-violent.
 

ernesto

Guest
Ignition kill switch is key. curious as to why the video showed nothing. I use surveillance video at my business and the tapes don't lie. That place is not that big and the views are unobstructed for the most part,I wonder what the security personnel were up to while the theif was hammering your locks.
 

Stuart

Aye carumba!!!
Staff member
Ignition kill switch is key. curious as to why the video showed nothing. I use surveillance video at my business and the tapes don't lie. That place is not that big and the views are unobstructed for the most part,I wonder what the security personnel were up to while the thief was hammering your locks.
Indeed, Ernesto. One of those things that make you say "Hmmmmm..." I could see why nothing showed up on the camera. The camera is on top left corner of the building, pointing down onto the parking lot from above. There is no camera on the right side of the building. The parking along the front of the building is very tight. It would be easy for someone to creep up from the right, go in between the cars, and break in through the passenger side, which is exactly what happened. The camera just doesn't have a good view from that angle.

As far as the Security Guard... totally unknown. I used to know all of the guards at Playa. There were usually three or four there every night - one on each corner of the building. Times have been tough; maybe they let most of them go and are relying on the cameras. I sure haven't seen any of the ones I knew of late. And, as much as I hate to say it, it would be easy enough to slip the guard a twenty to just happen to be on the opposite side of the building at a given time. Hard to know, but I have to imagine the hammering of the locks definitely makes some noise.

The truck will have a kill switch before I go back down. I'm also installing Jimmi Jacker plates in the doors. They can smash the door handles all they want and still won't be able to pop the lock rods. Which just means they'll have to smash a window to get in. I *hate* thieves!

Jim - I'll talk to Dave next time I see him. Maybe he should consider a security guard to keep an eye on vehicles out front. The place gets fairly busy and I can see where it would be easy pickings for a good car thief.
 
S

Submarine

Guest
Damn that sucks Stuart. I had my truck broken into once and I thought it was because I left it unlocked, then the cop pointed out the tiny hole where they jammed a screwdriver in to pop the lock. I had Jimmi Jammers installed the next day: http://www.jimmijammer.com/

I also use one of these: http://www.gunvault.com/mini-mini-deluxe.html mounted on the floor just to the right of the 4x4 shifter. Since it's bolted above the transmission, thieves can't get to the bolts easily. Besides gun storage, it's great for holding your passports and cash. I also keep my car registration and insurance there as we had some cars broken into at work and then they used that info to rob drivers houses.

I usually tip the guards if they have any wherever I'm at too. One place in Nogales actually had his son sit on my truck the whole time I was shopping.
 

JimMcG

Guest
More than once when I've been at a place that felt wrong, I've discreetly taken off the coil wire. Unless the thief's watched you do it, it's going to stop anyone from stealing your vehicle.
Like you Stuart, I've been staying at the Playa since it was 22 rooms and I've always felt my vehicle and property was safe. Maybe the street side was just the wrong side this time?
This works in a pinch. A more convenient way of accomplishing the same thing and without disabling your battery powered components, would be to install a coil kill switch on the coil battery fed wire, and mount it discreetly in the cab.
 

Stuart

Aye carumba!!!
Staff member
This works in a pinch. A more convenient way of accomplishing the same thing and without disabling your battery powered components, would be to install a coil kill switch on the coil battery fed wire, and mount it discreetly in the cab.
That's all well and good if your vehicle has a coil. Diesels don't. I'm looking at alternatives that disable the fuel pump relay and this system.
 

JimMcG

Guest
That's all well and good if your vehicle has a coil. Diesels don't. I'm looking at alternatives that disable the fuel pump relay and this system.
That looks like it would cover mostly all bases. Price? I wonder if someone with knowledge and access to a variety of 'cannon' plug caps could foil the system?

I also usually drive my old truck instead of my new one, hoping that it would be less of a target. My son drives a new Hummer which makes me nervous.
 

Stuart

Aye carumba!!!
Staff member
That looks like it would cover mostly all bases. Price? I wonder if someone with knowledge and access to a variety of 'cannon' plug caps could foil the system?
There are over 100,000 combinations to the cap, so it would take a boatload of plugs and a lot of luck to figure it out. It disables multiple systems and each one is wired differently at installation. Better yet, all of the wires coming out of the thing are the same color - black. They advertise that no thief has ever defeated it.

I haven't gotten a quote back on installation yet, but understand it's about $499 installed. If you're a real good do-it-yourself type, there's one on Ebay for $125. Doesn't come with any instructions, so you better know what wires you're chopping up and reconnecting. I like it because it's totally passive once installed; just pop the cap and put it on your key chain and rest assured your vehicle is gonna stay right where you put it. Even if they break into it, they won't be able to start it.

Kind of reminds me of when I was a kid, about 12 - I had gotten this super cool bike for my birthday - metal flake purple, banana seat, high rise handlebars, five speed shifter. And of course, I got a lock for it. Rode it down to school for an afternoon swim session and locked it up to a guard rail. Came out later after swim session and the bike was still there. But, because they couldn't steal it, they smashed it. Bent the frame, broke the wheels, totally destroyed it. Yeah, I was pretty damned heartbroken. People can be such azzholes.
 

Kenny

Guest
When Don and I were there a little over a month ago I noticed the same thing Stuart. I didn't see the guards that are usually at the entrances.
This works in a pinch. A more convenient way of accomplishing the same thing and without disabling your battery powered components, would be to install a coil kill switch on the coil battery fed wire, and mount it discreetly in the cab.
That would be easy to do, but I don't often get that feeling where "it felt wrong". No problem with "battery powered components", as far as I can tell nothing has to be reset. As we say in Mexico "no problem":cool:
 
M

maricopaTitan

Guest
either guards were asleep, or on the take of the guys who tried to steal your truck. I would look for a better place to stay.
 

jerry

Guest
Stewart you need to post this list on the Ford...that should keep a reasonable narco from stealing the old boy:
Forbes’ list of losers includes these vehicles:
Cadillac Escalade
Chevrolet Colorado
GMC Canyon
Dodge Nitro
Chevy Aveo
Ford F-250
Jeep Wrangler (above
 
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