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Hola a todos,busco el mejor systema antirobo para disco,k modelo para k100
mejor abus or zena ?
gracias.
mejor abus or zena ?
gracias.
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BMW NIEBLA dijo:Xena XN 18.- vssss
z3t4 dijo:A mi personalmente los antirrobos de disco no me gustan nada, ya he doblado un disco por olvidarmelo puesto, y no impiden que se lleven la moto cargandola a una furgoneta. Prefiero una buena piton con la que atar la moto a un elemento fijo de la acera o de la plaza de garaje, o incluso una buena cadena cementada, pero son mas pesadas e incomodas para llevar, las U tampoco son mala solucion si encuentras una que pase bien entre las barras de la horquilla cogiendo los radios de la rueda, no moveran la moto a no ser que la levanten entre 4.
"To recommend a motorcycle disc-lock that has not yet been approved in the Swedish market may seem strange, but in our view the lock function alone is not the essence of this test.
We judge these alarm disc-locks on the merits of their alarm function as well as the locking mechanism. We reasoned that for the alarm to serve as good protection against theft, the alarm must have a high sensitivity level and be loud enough to warn you it's there if you forget to remove your lock before riding off.
While the Oxford does have SSF approval, the alarm is insensitive and frankly it's not playing in the same league.
The battle then is between the ABUS Detecto 8000 and the XENA XN18; both have sensitive alarms and a solid lock mechanism and body. If either one of these had been approved the choice would have been easy. But today our choice is the XENA XN18 mostly because of it sensitive and loud alarm. If ABUS gets the approval they promised soon we would consider re thinking that decision.
An SSF approved lock with a good alarm would be the ultimate protection against theft.
For the rider who demands the ultimate disc-lock, consider the XN18 "Nightmare". Weighing in at over three pounds, the XN18 features a high-security, four-pin lock mechanism with a carbide-reinforced and ice-spray proof key barrel and body, as well as a 110-decibel auto-alarming siren with dual shock and movement sensors to let out a warrior's scream if anyone tries to roll away with your ride.
The XENA security chain and "Claw" is particularly good for off-road bikes because of the alarm; tamper with it and a piercing siren is triggered, which should wake you up from the deepest sleep and scare off all but the deafest thief.
ART Testing in Holland: The ART Foundation is the Dutch body responsible for the independent testing and certification of mechanical anti-theft devices for two-wheeled vehicles.
To assess and promote technical excellence, Holland has set up a technical commission in which ART, ANWB (the riders’ body), RAI (the motorcycle industry body), police and insurance companies are all represented. Riders seeking to insure their bikes against theft find that in most cases insurance companies will demand the use of an ART approved mechanical anti-theft device.
Companies like XENA submit their mechanical anti-theft devices for two-wheeled vehicles (bicycles, mopeds and motorcycles) to be tested by ART on a voluntary basis. The Homologation Department of TNO Science and Industry, performs the initial approval process and the annual production-control tests. The attack tests themselves are performed by machines (tensile strength-, torsion strength-, cutting-, corrosion-, dust and freeze tests) or test engineers (brute and intelligence-based attack tests).
XENA is a disc lock of steel monoblock construction with a sophisticated sensor lurking inside. Any aggressive movement or tampering sets off a piercing electronic siren that sounds immediately and continues until the bike is left alone or the owner disarms it.
This function is aimed directly at thieves, but also serves as a handy reminder to the bike’s owner that the disc lock is there, before they take a costly, embarassing and potentially dangerous fall.
The PIR alarm offers a higher level of security. This wall-mounted unit has a 90-degree infrared movement sensor with a six metre range. It's powered by 4x AA batteries and can be armed/disarmed with a remote control key fob. Once the alarm is set the operator has 30 seconds to leave the room and 10 seconds to deactivate it on return. If triggered, the siren will sound for 30 seconds then re-set. Never will 30 seconds have seemed so long-lasting.
Administrador dijo:Según los tests de algunas revistas de motos el Xena se ha "merendado" al ABUS:
Revista MC (Sueca) de 29 marzo del 2006:
"To recommend a motorcycle disc-lock that has not yet been approved in the Swedish market may seem strange, but in our view the lock function alone is not the essence of this test.
We judge these alarm disc-locks on the merits of their alarm function as well as the locking mechanism. We reasoned that for the alarm to serve as good protection against theft, the alarm must have a high sensitivity level and be loud enough to warn you it's there if you forget to remove your lock before riding off.
While the Oxford does have SSF approval, the alarm is insensitive and frankly it's not playing in the same league.
The battle then is between the ABUS Detecto 8000 and the XENA XN18; both have sensitive alarms and a solid lock mechanism and body. If either one of these had been approved the choice would have been easy. But today our choice is the XENA XN18 mostly because of it sensitive and loud alarm. If ABUS gets the approval they promised soon we would consider re thinking that decision.
An SSF approved lock with a good alarm would be the ultimate protection against theft.
Más o menos lo que dice es que los antirrobos son parecidos pero que la alarma del Xena es mejor.
La revista americana Superstreet Bike también la ha elegido como ganadora en su número de octubre de este año:
For the rider who demands the ultimate disc-lock, consider the XN18 "Nightmare". Weighing in at over three pounds, the XN18 features a high-security, four-pin lock mechanism with a carbide-reinforced and ice-spray proof key barrel and body, as well as a 110-decibel auto-alarming siren with dual shock and movement sensors to let out a warrior's scream if anyone tries to roll away with your ride.
La revista MOTOX (motocross) inglesa también la ha elegido como ganadora en su número de abril del 2006:
The XENA security chain and "Claw" is particularly good for off-road bikes because of the alarm; tamper with it and a piercing siren is triggered, which should wake you up from the deepest sleep and scare off all but the deafest thief.
En octubre de este año pasaron el riguroso test antirrobo ART:
ART Testing in Holland: The ART Foundation is the Dutch body responsible for the independent testing and certification of mechanical anti-theft devices for two-wheeled vehicles.
To assess and promote technical excellence, Holland has set up a technical commission in which ART, ANWB (the riders’ body), RAI (the motorcycle industry body), police and insurance companies are all represented. Riders seeking to insure their bikes against theft find that in most cases insurance companies will demand the use of an ART approved mechanical anti-theft device.
Companies like XENA submit their mechanical anti-theft devices for two-wheeled vehicles (bicycles, mopeds and motorcycles) to be tested by ART on a voluntary basis. The Homologation Department of TNO Science and Industry, performs the initial approval process and the annual production-control tests. The attack tests themselves are performed by machines (tensile strength-, torsion strength-, cutting-, corrosion-, dust and freeze tests) or test engineers (brute and intelligence-based attack tests).
Y más. La revista MOTOCICLISMO italiana de enero del 2005 también lo elige como ganador:
XENA is a disc lock of steel monoblock construction with a sophisticated sensor lurking inside. Any aggressive movement or tampering sets off a piercing electronic siren that sounds immediately and continues until the bike is left alone or the owner disarms it.
This function is aimed directly at thieves, but also serves as a handy reminder to the bike’s owner that the disc lock is there, before they take a costly, embarassing and potentially dangerous fall.
Y la Superbike inglesa en su número de junio, también lo ha elegido como ganador:
The PIR alarm offers a higher level of security. This wall-mounted unit has a 90-degree infrared movement sensor with a six metre range. It's powered by 4x AA batteries and can be armed/disarmed with a remote control key fob. Once the alarm is set the operator has 30 seconds to leave the room and 10 seconds to deactivate it on return. If triggered, the siren will sound for 30 seconds then re-set. Never will 30 seconds have seemed so long-lasting.
Así que lo de escasa calidad constructiva lo dudo, después de lo que dicen las revistas especializadas y los tests de seguridad independientes europeos.
Carlos.