Posted on 02/27/2015 9:03:54 PM PST by fireman15
They don't work unless you have the hair.
Their watch is square. No dice
The watch might be square, but the app is circular ... :-) ...
Brings back memories of the Chevy cars I owned back in the 1960s, like my '57 coupe. A key for your Chevy would often work on several of your friend's cars. If you weren't carrying the key, cross a couple wires under the dash and start by briefly tapping a third wire. Or under the hood via the starter solenoid. Once when I was 17 parked at a drive-in restaurant, a pretty gal came up to me and asked if I could hot-wire her car. Her date had argued and taken her car keys. So I lay on the floor under the dash while she and three other pretty gals in the car watched me. Hard to concentrate with a gal in a mini-dress sitting in front! Got a safety pin from her, pierced two wires, tapped the third (perhaps purple), and she was happy as can be. So happy she thanked me later (another story).
Side note: you can rig an electronic gadget to start your '57 Chevy that operates via an Apple watch. Or other remote, been done for years with a few bucks in parts.
I have had an interest in key making for quite a while. I have one of the inexpensive key cutters that they used to include in locksmith correspondence courses. I bought it at an antique store; it didn't look like it had been used more than a couple of times.
There are a number of suppliers on the Internet that sell tens of thousands of different varieties of key blanks. The plain ones are usually around $.25. The blanks that look like keys but have programmable chips in them are usually only a couple of dollars.
Sometimes the suppliers charge enough for shipping that it is cheaper to get blanks through eBay or Amazon. The dealers will charge you up to a hundred bucks for the programmable ones; most of them can be programmed by placing them in your car's ignition and following a special procedure and don't actually need a special programmer.
The ones keys that are a total rip off are the ones that don't even look like keys... some of them can only be obtained through a car dealer and then you are stuck.
Lol! Actually, I was just having a little fun :) Chevys of that era, both cars and trucks had a lock position and a off position. If left in the off position the key could be removed and it would not be necessary to use the key thereafter until the key was reinserted. The last Chevy that I owned with this feature was a 63. I think, but not sure, it was the last year for this feature. I liked the feature as it was handy. But, alas, a different era. We never locked our house either. I’m not sure anyone even knew where the key was :)
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