Lo Jack

1978 NYB

Warfighter
Legendary Member
Joined
Apr 16, 2011
Messages
72,165
Reaction score
50,273
Location
Classified
What is your opinion of the Lo Jack car recovery system?

As you guys know....it's not hard to steal a car including the new metric cars. I'm thinking about the LoJack system for the Redeye. Anyone have any Pro's or Con's about the LoJack system?
 
From what I read, not every place has the Lo Jack coverage or capability. Last I looked, I know it wouldn't work around here.
 
Most new cars can be found using the black box (telematics) especially those with the navigation system as it needs to know where you are. Some can even disabled if stolen.
Now how long it takes the police or if they are willing to work with the manufacturer is another story.
 
Now how long it takes the police or if they are willing to work with the manufacturer is another story.

And with nothing against the police in any way, I don't believe that it would be a high priority for them. I don't know as they have the resources to go after a stolen car that they know is going to be covered by insurance.
 
I don't know what the cost of a Lojack is. But I still think a hidden fuel shut off is the most effective theft deterrent. The car can be started and driven off but 9 times out of 10 it will be abandoned once it runs out of fuel.
 
I don't know what the cost of a Lojack is. But I still think a hidden fuel shut off is the most effective theft deterrent. The car can be started and driven off but 9 times out of 10 it will be abandoned once it runs out of fuel.

$695 for standard LoJack and $995 for the system that tells you your car moved.
 
That's what they make insurance for. If they want it, let them take take it. Chances are it'll be toast after they're done with it anyway.
My cars are never locked and the keys are usually left in the ignition. I use the .357 policy and everyone else in my neighborhood does the same.
 
That's what they make insurance for. If they want it, let them take take it. Chances are it'll be toast after they're done with it anyway.
My cars are never locked and the keys are usually left in the ignition. I use the .357 policy and everyone else in my neighborhood does the same.

Yep, that will give me an excuse to buy a Super Stock Challenger. Most Hellcats are destroyed in driving accidents when they get stolen. I refuse to have a repaired Hellcat that has been smashed up.
 
BTW, I'm totally happy with my Redeye and hope it never gets stolen. It's a pretty rare car. It has several different options that make it 1 of 1 and several options that make it 1 of 15, and so forth. I have never seen or heard about another exact duplicate Redeye.
 
FB_IMG_1616602048687.jpg
 
Our Red Light Cameras that they snuck in and morphed into ANPR's seem to work very well and finding stolen vehicles. Talk about big brother.
<ducks>
 
I agree with Will, a well designed simple system is best. If they steal it, cut it up and sell the parts, I don't want it back. I would not add a system that locates it after the fact.
I have defeat systems on all my old cars. Sure you can snatch them with a tow truck and be gone. If your going to steal it the old fashion way you will have to work at it, good luck.
 
I had a almost good inadvertent anti-theft device on my 1968 Fury III which got stolen twice, once right out of my driveway via the old dent puller on the ignition switch. Cops said they had been getting other cars jacked deeper into the neighborhood as they have had reports of a alarm on some Chevy going off deeper in the Cul-de-sac housing area. The car was found weeks later in a train/subway parking lot as that is where they probably went back into the inner city. Second time I was in the inner city in a legal parking space which was far from where I had to go as parking on the streets are very tight in that downtown area of the city, but they grabbed the car right quick after I parked it as it was winter time and my anti-theft device was a malfunctioning choke manifold heater coil. I was having problems with the choke and this being a DD beater I really didn't enjoy time spent wrenching on it so the lazy cheep bastard I am I just removed the spring clip to the rod that held to the choke shaft. When the engine warmed up I just pulled the rod out of the choke shaft lever to open the choke fully, likewise when the engine was cold I just popped the hood attached the choke rod and cold started it normally. This worked in getting the car back the next day as the cops found the car around 10am in the middle of a neighborhood street with the ignition punched out (again) as the kids probably used the car that morning and without the choke working they most likely didn't get more than several houses away as It was very cold out. I don't know how the cops in that city which was many cities north of where it was stolen got my number at work wanting to know why my car was sitting in the middle of this neighborhood street. When I came back to where I parked the car I walked up and down the street figuring I may have misjudged the exact location as it was a very long block. I did come across a walking beat cop by then and informed him that my car was stolen which he didn't seemed to be too concerned about with telling me to just call precinct (xx?) which I did after finding a pay phone, took the train and a cab home, may have called the precinct again and they said that is all I had to do, no computers then and I guess it takes awhile for it to get into the statewide teletype and the northern city cops were clueless that it was stolen. I just got into the my 77 PK41 Gran Fury the next day and went to work figuring... oh well. LOL
Tow lot guy was nice, don't remember him charging me anything as it was a stolen recovery and I guess they got paid by their city contract. Eventually I pulled the 318 intake manifold and replaced the intake manifold gaskets and dug out the carbon clog on the right side heat riser crossover and everything was back to normal operations as I had already replaced the RS heat riser valve on the exhaust manifold. For many many months at certain times and areas I would pull & pocket the coil wire to end this BS, I mean the car was a beater and I of the opinion of who would steal this POS. (but it did have dual exhaust and decent performance tires and cop-slot wheels)

.
 
I have given this some thought over the years.
When I looked into it 20 years ago they would only give location information to law enforcement. They don't give a **** about stolen cars. Especially in a city where many are stolen every day.

But why not just add another cell phone to your plan and put the kid tracker app on it and keep it powered up under the seat?

Then you know where your car is.
When you report it stolen and that you are in route to engage the thieves. That is something law enforcement will prioritize immediately.

Or maybe don't call it in...

I can see dumping an average car on the insurance but if you ordered a 1 of 1 it's going to be a none of none.
 
LoJack Will Wind Down its American Operations in June | Digital Trends

LoJack, a pioneer in the field of connected cars, will wind down its American sales operations in 2021. It will stop taking purchase orders in March, but it pledged to continue supporting stolen vehicle services indefinitely.

Founded in 1986, in an era when cars and computers were still largely mutually exclusive, LoJack rose to prominence by offering motorists a stolen vehicle recovery system that law enforcement officials could directly access. This was revolutionary in the 1980s, because even new luxury cars were relatively simple to steal with basic tools. LoJack’s technology was extremely innovative: GPS wasn’t commercially available yet, so its recovery system relied on a small radio transceiver that emits a signal every 15 seconds on a frequency set aside specifically for it.

If your, say, 1990 Ford Thunderbird got stolen, police officers could find it (hopefully in one piece) by tracking its LoJack device. The transceiver helped police officers recover thousands of cars. Commercial GPS systems became increasingly common in the 1990s, however, and trackers encroached on LoJack’s turf. Then, technology like General Motors-developed OnStar gave motorists an alternative to the system that was already built into their car.

LoJack fired back by expanding its roster of features to include boundary alerts and crash detecting, and by branching out into different segments. It notably released a system that tracked stolen laptops. But, much like Nokia, it missed a turn and fell behind. California-based CalAmp purchased the company in 2016 in a bid to turn it around, but the competition (from direct rivals, from start-ups like the freshly launched RecovR, and from carmakers) was already far ahead.

CalAmp explained in a statement that it will continue to support dealership orders for Classic SVR, Connect, and Connect+ products until June 18, 2021, though it’s asking customers to submit all final purchase orders no later than March 15. Suddenly pulling the plug on the project would have a negative effect on the law enforcement officials who use its products, so it will continue to honor its service commitments with police departments indefinitely.

Surprisingly, the announcement only applies to LoJack’s American division. Its international business will continue to operate in locations like Mexico, Italy, and England, among other countries. CalAmp pointed out that its international business operates with a subscription-based business model that’s well-aligned with its strategy.
 
Back
Top