Clifford SuperNova II Automobile Alarm User Manual


 
T
O ACTIVATE
THE PANIC
FEATURE . . . . . . . . . .
Press button 1 for 3 seconds. The parking lights will flash
repeatedly and the siren will blare for 30 or 60 seconds
(user-selectable), or until you press button 1 again to turn it
off. If the ignition is on (indicating you are in the car), the
doors will automatically lock to prevent an assailant from
entering. If the ignition is off, the doors will unlock, allowing
you to enter immediately without fumbling with your keys.
TO REMOTELY
OPEN THE TRUNK . . .
Button 2 can control an optional remote trunk release.
Pressing button 2 while the alarm is
disarmed
will remotely
open the trunk.
TO REMOTELY
TURN ON THE
HEADLIGHTS OR
TO ACTIVATE A
DIFFERENT OPTION .
A press of button 4 on the optional 4-button/12-channel ACG
remote control can optionally turn on the headlights for any
duration of your choice between one second and two minutes
(the factory setting is 30 seconds; see User-selectable features
on pages 17-18). Or this output may be set to automatically
close the power windows and sunroof on certain vehicles. Or
the system’s channel 4 output may control a different optional
accessory, such as the IntelliStart™ remote engine starter.
Anti-CodeGrabbing™ (ACG) with Random Code Encryption
A Clifford exclusive that protects you and your automobile from the most effective
and onerous car stealing device ever used by car thieves — a code-grabber.
Code-grabbers are far more effective and efficient than scanning. Unlike scanners
that sequentially transmit one digital code after another until they hit the correct
code to disarm the alarm (a process that may take minutes to years depending on the
system’s total number of codes), code-grabbers literally record, from hundreds of
feet away, the code sent by your car alarm remote control. Then the thief simply
plays back the code when you’re gone, instantly disarming the alarm and unlocking
the doors. It’s like giving the thief your car keys. Non-Clifford alarms can be
defeated that easily. In contrast, Clifford systems use complex digital signal
processing and unbreachable encryption to randomly change the digital code every
time you use the remote control. Your remote will never transmit the same code
twice, and the control unit will never accept the same code twice. Thus the code
recorded and played back by the thief’s code-grabber will never be accepted by your
SuperNova II.
Only ACG can make a car alarm impervious to code-grabbing, and
only Clifford systems have ACG with Random Code Encryption.
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