I need something for my cab, but I don,t want nobody giving away too much info on their own motors.
Thanks.
Moderator: martauto


Stand well back and wait for every man and his dog to start bashing Clifford alarmsyellowmellow wrote:Which car alarms are to be avoided.?
I need something for my cab, but I don,t want nobody giving away too much info on their own motors.
Thanks.
x2ian332isport wrote:Stand well back and wait for every man and his dog to start bashing Clifford alarmsyellowmellow wrote:Which car alarms are to be avoided.?
I need something for my cab, but I don,t want nobody giving away too much info on their own motors.
Thanks.![]()
I've always had them and they're fine if fitted PROPERLY



+2magpie wrote:leave the alarmed indicator flasher mode out. these are the best way to fuse most alarms.
when my xr2 was recovered i found some silver foil behind



If you do go with a Clifford, make sure it's fitted by someone who knows what they're doing. Cliffords are good alarms, but won't tolerate poor fitting and setup. This is the main reason people slag them off.yellowmellow wrote:I,m leaning toward,s Clifford though



Oh yeahTopSod wrote:My last car had a clifford and at first it kept tripping the locks on its own. This was traced by the engineer who fitted it to a small trickle of electric in the central locking wiring. He was going to another BMW straight after mine with the same problem. Once this was fixed it was fine and I would highly recommend them.
They also do the sms thing you talk about as an add to the systems they sell
http://www.cliffordalarm.co.uk/productd ... tID=11&b=4





pacerpete wrote:If you want an honest opinion on which alarm is best and causes the least aggro . Ask people who deal with lots of different cars daily , I.E traders,car valeters, mechanics etc.
Don't waste your time asking forum geeks who love flashing lights , jizzing over wiring diagrams and get a semi every time they hear a clifford chirping !
PS Don't get a clifford !!!