I have a teenage daughter who loses things. A couple of months ago, she lost my car keys while driving it to visit with friends. I had to go to the Toyota dealer and wait an hour while they made a new key for my car. My daughter also has mishaps with her car and it was scheduled to be dropped off at a body shop for significant body work today. However, my daughter flew to Tucson last weekend, where we have another house and where she recently finished her first year of college. She took the only key to her car with her. Now, her car sits in the driveway useless. I used to have an extra key for her car and kept it in my car for emergencies. She found it about six months ago and it hasn’t been seen since.
I called the VW dealer and asked if a key could be made from the VIN number since we (I) bought the car there. No, I was told. I would have to have the car towed to the dealer for a key to be made. I called Volkswagen of America and was told the same thing. It seems that a key has to be “matched” to the car and that can only be done at the dealer. Supposedly, this is for greater security but I cannot for the life of me understand why this is. A car is a car. I own it. I can prove that. Why, in an emergency, cannot a key be made for the car ? I don’t care if it is a temporary key.
What I need is the name of a good car thief. I suspect it would take him (or her) about 20 seconds to get the car started and ready to drive. There are other reasons why I will not buy another Volkswagen (I have bought four for kids) but this one caps the story.
Some valid comments were inadvertently deleted during a spam cleanup. My apologies to those whose comments were lost.
I wondered what happened, Bradley. I thought, oh dear, was there a test I didn’t pass? 🙂
No test, my dear. I try to be careful, but error is possible with the dozens, nay, scores of spam comments that pour in every day.
We may need to put a captcha in place. Some of the spam is truly vile.
Sorry to hear about your volkswagen key problem, although I can understand the security issue. If keys are made from VIN numbers they can be ordered by anyone who has the VIN number.
The reverse of that is that all John Deere farm tractors of the same model have the same key, so hey replacement is a cinch even if somewhat distressing to learn; although I guess tractor theft is not common.
The key won’t do anybody any good unless they have the car. I expect that requiring ID, such as the fact that I own the car, would be easy enough for the dealer to prove. Car thieves manage to steal Jettas in 20 seconds every day. It’s only the owners who are stuck with the keyless car in the driveway.
I don’t know what model or year you have but it sounds like you aren’t alone.