XPost: nyc.transit, nyc.politics, nyc.general
From: stevelackey@hotmail.com
"Alex Rodriguez" wrote in message
news:c9066t$p8h$7@newsmaster.cc.columbia.edu...
> In article ,
stevelackey@hotmail.com
> says...
>
> >Have to agree too. Or at least limit the duration of the alarm to a few
> >minutes at most,
>
> That is the current law.
>
> >not just running until the battery dies.
>
> This is the sign of a poorly adjusted alarm.
That's reassuring! But I think once the timer is reset, it doesn't keep
track of
how long since the last time it went off.
> >I had a car alarm go off across the street from me in JC pretty much
> >continuously from 5 am until at least 8:30 am this morning. Even worse
were
> >the 10-second gaps
> >between alarms. Had it been continuous, it might have been easier to
> >ignore. I doubt the owner even lived close enough to hear the alarm.
>
> Could be someone broke into the car and then left the door open. The
alarm
> will continue to go off until the door is closed or the batter runs out.
Or just an improperly aligned door that got jolted out of place.
> >Unfortunately there were no blinking lights even to see which car had the
> >alarm. Without that much, you wouldn't even know which block the car is
on.
>
> If you really wanted to find the car, it is pretty easy to follow the
sound.
True, but I wasn't interested in wandering around my neighborhood at 3 am
trying to figure out which car might have been broken into. Think dark
narrow
streets, brownstones, and echos. What I really wanted was for the owner
to find the car and shut off the alarm.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
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