Neighbour caught someone photographing car on my drive

Neighbour caught someone photographing car on my drive

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Discussion

T1berious

Original Poster:

2,383 posts

162 months

Wednesday 6th November
quotequote all
Sigh....

So I just got told by my neighbour that a hoodied individual was taking photos of my car while on the drive.

Considering its behind a security post, the house is clearly alarmed and there's a composite security door I can't imagine it's anything other than for cloning?

Just can't think why someone would be looking at cloning a Cayman?

Any thoughts?

Cheers T1b

mikef

5,244 posts

258 months

Wednesday 6th November
quotequote all
Coincidentally, I looked out of the window yesterday and saw someone in a hoodie get out of a white van and take a phone pic of my Cayman on the drive. As I have a personalised (very personalised) number plate, I can’t imagine it was to clone the plate

Edited by mikef on Wednesday 6th November 20:44

fourstardan

5,002 posts

151 months

Wednesday 6th November
quotequote all
How confident are you in a bollard/post?

Could it be axel grinded quick enough if the prize was high enough?

It's sad to ask this but it was the first thing crossing my mind.

T1berious

Original Poster:

2,383 posts

162 months

Wednesday 6th November
quotequote all
It's a pretty chunky post, pretty heavy so I don't imagine they'll get through it instantly. The car also has a disklok.

Just seems bizarre as I can imagine easier targets to go for. Home without a security post / alarm / security door etc.

blueg33

38,527 posts

231 months

Wednesday 6th November
quotequote all
Can you park the car somewhere else preferably in a garage ?

mikef

5,244 posts

258 months

Wednesday 6th November
quotequote all
In my case, it's locked in the garage every night except for the one in question

There a a couple of surveillance cameras on the drive

pigface1001

26 posts

47 months

Thursday 7th November
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I would go with a fake advert, you will see your car on facebook

T1berious

Original Poster:

2,383 posts

162 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
pigface1001 said:
I would go with a fake advert, you will see your car on facebook
Really? How does that work? Genuinely curious.

Cheers T1b

PRO5T

4,895 posts

32 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
Young car enthusiasts not allowed to wear hoodies?

My Porsche (a very old to kids 996), I'm often genuinely surprised at how many young folk want to "pap" it. I was genuinely surprised to be scrolling through TikTok on the bog one day and someone had made a short video of it!

Crudeoink

732 posts

66 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
T1berious said:
Really? How does that work? Genuinely curious.

Cheers T1b
Put it up for cheap, get loads of enquiries. Tell each enquirer it's very popular so they'll need to send you £100 deposit...

vikingaero

11,221 posts

176 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
A few times now I've gone to Tesco in Mrs V.'s Mitsubishi i-car and returned to find Japanese scene cars parked around it and people taking pictures of her car. Same thing in other car parks - random people taking pics of it.

Certain cars will attract other scene followers or just plain car nerds.

thejaywills

464 posts

114 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
Hard to tell. One of those could be something could be absolutely nothing senarios. Could be cloning, scoping to order, fake advertising. Or could just be a car person on a walk. Understandable to err on the side of caution.

Could be something could be nothing. I wear hoodies and will take photos of seemingly inconsequential cars if it triggers a memory (the last was an Astra gsi which reminded me of a relatives when younger.

Woke up the other morning to the local kids taking snaps


Gastons_Revenge

275 posts

11 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
Occam's razor- they're probably just admiring it and sending a pic to a mate rather than anything nefarious coffee

Fast and Spurious

1,559 posts

95 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
mikef said:
Coincidentally, I looked out of the window yesterday and saw someone in a hoodie get out of a white van and take a phone pic of my Cayman on the drive. As I have a personalised (very personalised) number plate, I can’t imagine it was to clone the plate

Edited by mikef on Wednesday 6th November 20:44
That was me, sorry, I took a photo for the awful plate thread, will post it up now.

DaveCWK

2,100 posts

181 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
I'd ordinarily say it's nothing to worry about, but you say you have a security post/disclock/alarm/security door already...so presumably this is a relatively high crime area?
Not really much more you can do either way aside from parking elsewhere or garaging it.

T1berious

Original Poster:

2,383 posts

162 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
DaveCWK said:
I'd ordinarily say it's nothing to worry about, but you say you have a security post/disclock/alarm/security door already...so presumably this is a relatively high crime area?
Not really much more you can do either way aside from parking elsewhere or garaging it.
Sadly yes, there's been a number of break ins / car thefts on the road over the pass few years (We were broken into and had two car stolen off the drive). From what the neighbour was saying the guy was deliberately avoiding our camera sight lines using a hedge as cover.

If he was just an enthusiast he'd have just taken the pic and walked by.

The Facebook scam sounds most likely rather than stealing to order (there will be way easier cars to target on the street), a quick Google found a Santander story about 100,000's of scam ads.

To be honest, there isn't much more I can do at this point anyway. Nervous about going for a 3rd party immobiliser (Ghost II) as the car is still in warranty etc.


bennno

12,722 posts

276 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
Fast and Spurious said:
mikef said:
Coincidentally, I looked out of the window yesterday and saw someone in a hoodie get out of a white van and take a phone pic of my Cayman on the drive. As I have a personalised (very personalised) number plate, I can’t imagine it was to clone the plate

Edited by mikef on Wednesday 6th November 20:44
That was me, sorry, I took a photo for the awful plate thread, will post it up now.
Think you might have nailed it, how bad is the plate?

Hol

8,722 posts

207 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
I’ve had my Cayman 718 for three years and not noticed anyone giving it the wrong attention on the driveway, but I live at the very end of a sequence of dead end closes.

I do occasionally get people ask about it and a couple of times I have let a few small kids blip the throttle in the car park whilst their parents look on.


As others have said, it could be nothing, but you should probably be cautious.

I have an adjustable throttle tuner on mine that connects between the pedal and the original wiring, so I don’t think it would be that hard for a half decent auto electrician to incorporate a hidden switch in that circuit. No throttle, no revs, no movement and a totally left field immobilisation that is easily reversible when you sell.

Wills2

24,382 posts

182 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
mikef said:
Coincidentally, I looked out of the window yesterday and saw someone in a hoodie get out of a white van and take a phone pic of my Cayman on the drive. As I have a personalised (very personalised) number plate, I can’t imagine it was to clone the plate
Could have been the taste police.



scorcher

4,013 posts

241 months

Thursday 7th November
quotequote all
Crudeoink said:
T1berious said:
Really? How does that work? Genuinely curious.

Cheers T1b
Put it up for cheap, get loads of enquiries. Tell each enquirer it's very popular so they'll need to send you £100 deposit...
Wouldn’t they just lift a photo off of the internet?