ECharge729
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Car: Mach-E AWD Premium Extended Range (2023)
I had my car opened and searched for valuables twice within a single week without any damage done to it, living in an apartment complex with an underground parking.
The culprit definitely knows my factory code which I know I can't change or delete. It's also not possible to disable the keypad completely. Contacted Ford's customer support and was told something like: "if they guessed your factory code, the joke is on you - please contact the police because you won't hear anything else from our end".
This keypad only has 5 buttons, so there is only 3125 unique combinations which is insane given that you can make 7 attempts with just a fixed 1-minute lockdown interval - you only need about 8 hours to go through ALL the potential combinations with the car not notifying the owner about scanning attempts, having additional personal codes will greatly cut down the time needed to guess one of the codes.
That's why I was wondering if anyone tried physically disconnecting/removing the keypad at maybe a Ford's service center? Or would it be possible for Mach-E owners to get Ford to address the issues with the keypad?
UPDATE from 2024/08/05 for people who do not want to read the full thread:
I had my car opened and searched for valuables twice within a single week without any damage done to it, living in an apartment complex with an underground parking.
The culprit definitely knows my factory code which I know I can't change or delete. It's also not possible to disable the keypad completely. Contacted Ford's customer support and was told something like: "if they guessed your factory code, the joke is on you - please contact the police because you won't hear anything else from our end".
This keypad only has 5 buttons, so there is only 3125 unique combinations which is insane given that you can make 7 attempts with just a fixed 1-minute lockdown interval - you only need about 8 hours to go through ALL the potential combinations with the car not notifying the owner about scanning attempts, having additional personal codes will greatly cut down the time needed to guess one of the codes.
That's why I was wondering if anyone tried physically disconnecting/removing the keypad at maybe a Ford's service center? Or would it be possible for Mach-E owners to get Ford to address the issues with the keypad?
UPDATE from 2024/08/05 for people who do not want to read the full thread:
- The car is 10 floors of concrete and steel apart from the apartment with walls being so thick that just one completely kills off all BT connections. You can think that the car is in the nuclear war bunker, completely off the grid - no mobile network, no Wi-Fi, no anything.
- I have never used my car's keypad, so the chances of somebody seeing me do that are at ZERO.
- I didn't have my factory code card to begin with, it has been lost by the dealership when they were transferring this car from one location to another, it was roughly a year ago, on purchase. I have only learned my factory code after the burglaries by using the two key fob trick.
- I am that paranoid freak who double-verifies my "walk away" lock actually triggered before losing sight of my vehicle, so no, the car is definitely locked when those burglaries happen.
- Just in case, I am not saying it was a professional thief who punched codes for 8 hours in a row in my case, I am only saying that going through all the potential combinations would take just 8 hours which I am not comfortable with for a code that gives somebody access to my car for the lifetime.
- I am assuming that the culprit knows my factory code because I tried accessing my vehicle without my key fob and the keypad is the only thing that actually works, at least in theory.
- If the perpetuator had a technology that allows to copy, analyze and imitate key fob signals, then I doubt they would search the vehicle regularly, taking some shitty sunglasses and gum. In that case, they would probably take the vehicle instead.
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