$169 for MESA 4415M Remote Car Starter with Bypass Moduled and Installation at Car Stereo Max ($249 Value)
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Clients can start their cars with a single press of a button to warm up vehicles ahead of time during the cold winter months
The Deal
- $169 for MESA 4415M remote car starter with bypass moduled and installation ($249 value)
The offer comes with one remote. Additional remotes can be purchased. Keyless entry is also available for an additional fee. Some cars require Advanced or Complex Bypass Module at an $80 up-charge, including VW, Infiniti, Lexus, and Acura. Customers should plan to “lose” one key in order to interface the unit to the car. Using advanced bypass may eliminate the need to “lose” one key for many cars.
Remote Car Starters: The Key to Keyless Ignition
Remote car starters are as easy to use as TV remotes, but the technology that turns over your engine without turning any keys isn’t quite as simple. Read on to learn what’s behind this automotive wizardry.
From a technological standpoint, remote car starters function much like another popular, if criminal, mode of keyless ignition: hot-wiring. By now, the image is familiar from action films. A thief busts open the panel under the steering wheel, examines a tangle of multicolored wires, and rubs the correct ends together to bring the engine to life. This sequence sends a current through the ignition wire, initiating the engine’s activation process, which would otherwise be triggered by the act of turning the key.
Remote car starters circumvent the need for keys by activating the same electronic cycle, but rather than joining frayed wires, they use a module that conjoins the wires beneath the panel. The module communicates with a radio-equipped remote control that, when pressed, tells it to send an electric current through the ignition wire, thus starting the car. Most standard car starters only communicate with the engine, though some advanced models can connect to other systems to unlock the doors or adjust the heat and air conditioning inside your car.
To prevent hot-wiring, most modern vehicles have built-in immobilizers, electronic security devices that prevent the car from starting if they do not detect the radiofrequency identification code broadcast by a microcircuit inside the key. To overcome this hurdle, most remote car starters include a bypass module, a computer chip that is uniquely programmed to communicate with the vehicle in which the starter is installed. Bypass modules make car starters feasible to install in just about any car, so owners can warm their engine up before entering the car on an icy morning or give the air conditioning a head start if it’s been parked for a long time in a volcano.