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It's never happened to me, my truck is old enough that it uses a key so I have a key hidden just in case I lose mine on the hunt.Thinking through the list of potential disasters, my concern over losing a fob is pretty high. There are lots of ways this can happen. If it happened to you, how?
This is what I immediately thought of when I saw this one. I also think about it often when I’m getting back to the truck - in between the moment when I reach for my keys and the moment when I actually touch them.Around 2005 two friends and I climbed Granite Peak in MT, camped on FTD. The driver of the car lost his single key, not even on a keychain, in the boulders somewhere around camp on the plateau. Knowing him, you would not be surprised that this happened. Bearthooth talus is pretty conducive to losing small, tan colored items forever.
Truly miraculously the other friend, who surely cashed in all of his cumulative (and substantial) goodness, wholesomeness, and excellent luck, found it after searching for several hours. Among the luckiest re-findings that I've been a part of.
I always think about that as a possibility too. But I also irrationally fear locking my keys in my truck. On a hunt, I clip mine in my pack but I still check it regularly.Thinking through the list of potential disasters, my concern over losing a fob is pretty high. There are lots of ways this can happen. If it happened to you, how?
I have a buddy that intentially buys Fords because of the keypad. He does like you and the FOB never leaves the truck.I have a touch pad on the vehicles. No key needed.
Ford apps also let you lock/ unlock from your phone so there’s a second option for getting in.
So the keys get stashed and locked inside the cars.
I’m using my bino slingclip it inside your pack