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When I bought my car 7 years ago there was only one key: not wanting to take riskes I went and sourced a second one. Having bought a genuine GM key a couple of years before, I was unhappy at the memory of paying £ 150 for the key and £ 25 ( ?) for mating to the car, so went to a Timpson's shop as they had been mentioned on numerous posts generally. As I recall I was offered a key with remote functions for £ 100 and a standard key for £ 50 - both including mating to the car: since it was a back-up I thought the remote option superfluous and took the cheaper key. I obviously tried the key and it opened and started the car so I believed everything was in order.
Seven years later I mis-placed my key at home and since I had an early-morning dentist's appointment, decided to use the spare instead of searching further. Post appointment I went to get fuel and was surprised at the pump when I realised that the key didn't actuate the universal unlocking and therefore the fuel-flap and I was locked out. A quick Net search showed that whereas most cars allow you to unlock the flap by removing the internal boot-cladding to access a back-up pull-strap, this was not the case with my Vectra and it required wheel-and wheel-liner removal followed by some complicated reaching around the top of the arch - just too difficult where I was !
This was a real bugger as I was very low on fuel ( not something I usually do but had just returned late at night from holiday ), was 50 km away from home and with possibly 50 km of fuel left, based on experience. Risking it was too dangerous as I live up a mountain, and lots of the road is cliff-face, road and then barrier and drop-off. If I ran out there it would be damn dangerous and probably a very large tow-bill. Deciding to be sensible I drove and then hitched the 20 km home from the next valley town, searched and found my key after a couple of hours and then hitched back to my car.
Even though this was a waste of about 6 hours, in hind-sight I still counted myself very lucky that this had happened close to home, because if I had lost my key the previous week when I was 500 km away from home, I would either have had maybe a few hours dirty work in a hotel car-park, or waiting a few days and paying many hundred Euros for a new key with remote.
When I bought the key, I believed that I was getting full functionality just without the wireless option and the Timpson's guy didn't tell me any different ( if he knew ). I obviously didn't register that there was no loud clunking noise from multiple locks unlocking when I tried the key that first time. Now I need to decide whether to buy a new fully functional key at high price, or see if I can rig a cord/wire from the flap-actuator and hide it behind the wheel-liner. I will also write to Timpson and ask if it is always the case that their standard key doesn't actuate all locks.
Try out your spare key guys, if it's not a genuine part. Let us know if it is also limited in functionality.
Seven years later I mis-placed my key at home and since I had an early-morning dentist's appointment, decided to use the spare instead of searching further. Post appointment I went to get fuel and was surprised at the pump when I realised that the key didn't actuate the universal unlocking and therefore the fuel-flap and I was locked out. A quick Net search showed that whereas most cars allow you to unlock the flap by removing the internal boot-cladding to access a back-up pull-strap, this was not the case with my Vectra and it required wheel-and wheel-liner removal followed by some complicated reaching around the top of the arch - just too difficult where I was !
This was a real bugger as I was very low on fuel ( not something I usually do but had just returned late at night from holiday ), was 50 km away from home and with possibly 50 km of fuel left, based on experience. Risking it was too dangerous as I live up a mountain, and lots of the road is cliff-face, road and then barrier and drop-off. If I ran out there it would be damn dangerous and probably a very large tow-bill. Deciding to be sensible I drove and then hitched the 20 km home from the next valley town, searched and found my key after a couple of hours and then hitched back to my car.
Even though this was a waste of about 6 hours, in hind-sight I still counted myself very lucky that this had happened close to home, because if I had lost my key the previous week when I was 500 km away from home, I would either have had maybe a few hours dirty work in a hotel car-park, or waiting a few days and paying many hundred Euros for a new key with remote.
When I bought the key, I believed that I was getting full functionality just without the wireless option and the Timpson's guy didn't tell me any different ( if he knew ). I obviously didn't register that there was no loud clunking noise from multiple locks unlocking when I tried the key that first time. Now I need to decide whether to buy a new fully functional key at high price, or see if I can rig a cord/wire from the flap-actuator and hide it behind the wheel-liner. I will also write to Timpson and ask if it is always the case that their standard key doesn't actuate all locks.
Try out your spare key guys, if it's not a genuine part. Let us know if it is also limited in functionality.
