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Only if you keep fiddling with it. Otherwise it ‘disarms’ itself after 5 minutes inactivity I am led to believe.Aren’t the FOB’s easier, much easier to hack than the phone or even cards?
ESP it yoy leave them near the car, say front door, while car is parked outside.
No, this is not the case with the Model 3 or Y, it was the case with some older Model S that used a different key mechanism.I thought with proper and cheap equipment you could virtually connect the fob inside and the car outside. This lets you open the car and drive it away; unless you have pin to drive active, which it seems most of us don’t. But I don’t use a fob and my car is always kept in a private garage and even still locked (but not armed - sentry) inside. But I do have numerious cameras, security lights, sensors, and alarms for the property and inside the garage.
Agreed, I don't carry a wallet, but do carry house keys, so phone + keyfob makes more sense than carrying the phone + keycard.I reckon it's a personal thing.
I don't have any house keys, so not having any car keys either is really good.
There is also another solution...Agreed, I don't carry a wallet, but do carry house keys, so phone + keyfob makes more sense than carrying the phone + keycard.
I'm not confident that my phone won't be lost/broken/stolen.
Hard pass on that, having to remember which part of your anatomy is implanted with which nfc to open each car is definitely beyond me.There is also another solution...
TeslaFlex "Key Card" Implant
The TeslaFlex was an exercise in converting Tesla Model 3 key cards into flex implants. Check below for more details...dangerousthings.com