PuddleJumper
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Cortlund
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2024
- Threads
- 68
- Messages
- 2,540
- Reaction score
- 3,373
- Location
- Alexandria, Virginia
- Vehicle(s)
- 23' JTM, 22' JTR, 22' F56S,
- Build Thread
- Link
- Occupation
- STACK Infrastructure Critical Operations Technician
- Vehicle Showcase
- 1
fair points sir. fair pointsFor a few, it does. I have never needed or wanted anything it does, though.
Everything I want or have done I've done with other means. (and much more cheaply - leaving me with tools that can do far more for other purposes)
I'd never recommend to anyone, especially a newbie, to make a tazer permanent. Bad idea. Sure, it's a great marketing thing, but in practice, not so much.
Even the folks who created and market the device say - unmarry and remove before dealer visits. It has been known to complicate things. Should it? Not necessarily. Can it? Yeah.
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I won't give any dealer an excuse to either not do work, charge extra, or deny warranty.
But I understand the "tazer is god" thing. It's almost cult-like.
No human would ever say "I bought this but there are some drawbacks". It pretty much makes it look to others like maybe they are imperfect or could have made a better choice.
It's a good device, has it's purposes - but this "everyone NEED tazer, it's the best thing since Jeep and I can't understand why others aren't loving what I have" thing..............
There are cheaper ways to secure a vehicle, ways most thieves won't be able to get around. Remember, they break things to steal vehicles........ and are very aware of the CANbus connectors and other technology in a Jeep vehicle.
It's one method. But I'd never suggest making it permanent. That's asking for trouble just in case it happens to fault on you while on the road........... I'd want a way to rip it out and move on.
It's an option, but certainly not the only and I'd suggest maybe not even the best, unless you feel you "need" what it does.
Makes a great joke, but you'd be surprised as to how many young people know all about manual transmissions and love driving them.
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51% of GenZ can drive a stick and more are wanting to learn.
Makes a great joke told by boomers on the internet, but holds little in real life.
So, you old folks - if you see the stick sticking around, maybe thank a GenZ person.
They are turning their backs on automation in some cases.
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