There's an older gent 'round here that has an Honest to God Holman-Moody 427 in a Galaxy. He uses the chain and padlock method as well but lets it hang down low enough to be clearly visible. The size of this thing looks like it was used to anchor the Queen Mary and the padlock musta been supplied by the ghost of Davy Jones. Thing is so huge, unless the thief has a torch in tow it's a fairly effective deterrent. Ol' gent is never more than a few yards from the car so theft of the vehicle isn't really his concern...If asked, he'll state that he's afraid somebody is gonna yank the motor while he's asleep. I've yet to decide whether he's being straight with his answer or not. Yes I've seen the H-M 427, it IS in there so the chain ain't protecting no secrets.
One of the neatest security devices, (and eye-wideners), I ever ran across; came from a guy I knew that left the run position wiring on the keyed switch; but moved the start position to a small, thin, pressure-sensitve momentary switch mounted to the roof panel. Don't know what this thing was used for but it looked like a small vinyl pillow. He had it mounted ABOVE the headliner material more or less in line with his right sholder. Upon embarking toward a destination, he'd twist the key, and you're thinking dead,dead,dead battery. He'd start cussing up a blue streak, damning the car, the manufacturer, the POS battery he just bought, the Motherless folks that sold the battery, and ended the tirade by slamming his fist into the headliner at which point the car took notice and started as if outta fear of further punishment. He said he had also found it be quite helpful on evening excursions with young ladies that had early curfews. One female in particular had located the switch accidentally with her foot, (use your imagination here), and shall we say the mood changed somewhat drastically rather quickly. Car protected by this "whiz-bang" technology was a '73 brown/rusty, four-door Chevy Nova. For added giggles, it was always parked windows down, keys in ignition, with TheClub locked across the steering wheel.
John Hammond----- Original Message ----- From: "Tom Duross" <tduross1@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <1962to1965mopars@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2009 2:51 PM Subject: RE: Security
I posted here about this couple of years ago. I ended up with a chain in an inner tube and padlock like Steve says but I take it off before I drive ANDI have a simple alarm with ignition kill and a motion sensor and remote. These alarms are like $50 and you can install them yourself, just like modern cars have with the four-way horn, blink the lights, chirp, etc. I have them in both my cars and the chain setups because I don't have a driveway and when I have them for the summer I have to park them on Boston streets. One thing I did do was to put two blue flashing alarm lights onthe column cover rather than one, you can se the two flashing inside the carfrom a distance and I felt the blue to brighter than the red I have in mytruck. I only have about 14" of chain so one wrap through the core/radiator support and a long hasp padlock it tightly up inside. To cut it, you'd haveto cut the grille. Been working so far..
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