chain
Well-Known Member
It's a Mustang. I'm pretty sure 50 years from now you'll still be able to get tons of stuff for these cars. Might not be able to legally drive them outside of a closed course but you'll get your parts....
Sponsored
I wouldn't doubt it if locksmiths or their industry hasn't been looking into this. This is old technology as far as tech goes. Capturing the frequency is easy. Creating an app is easy. Getting the list of digital codes associated with your car and the FOB might be the only hangup. The time and date may have a factor in code retrieval or it may reset or change codes every time you use it similar to chips in credit cards.When our key fobs are dead, assuming Ford won't make them any more, how do we get into our cars/start them?
No you wont 'cause the world will be toast. However in the zombie apocalypse that is also imminent the mustang will be awesome to drive down hundreds of themAre the electrical systems in these cars EMP proof? I doubt we'll be able to use any modern car after our impending nuclear war.
Daryl should be driving a Mustang, not a bike.No you wont 'cause the world will be toast. However in the zombie apocalypse that is also imminent the mustang will be awesome to drive down hundreds of them
Really? Modern cars are MUCH better built than cars of the past. Not sure how old you are but in my youth a car making 100,000 mi was almost unheard of, today 100k cars are dime a dozen. Cars of the 70's and 80's were POS compared to today.New battery in the FOB? Rewire the car for a key ignition? Get in our self driving hybrid because driving is illegal?
I would like to keep my car forever, but I don't know if modern cars will last that long, they aren't built that well.