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Cigaweedz

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  • Toyota Model
    Kluger Grande

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  1. I thought about that one too but since the car remote has limited range, it couldn't have been possible. Also, when the car boot opens by remote, the car boot alarm come on too. You'd have to be deaf if you can't hear it. I dunno. I'll have to figure something out..
  2. Hi guys. This incident happened to us today while the vehicle was parked in church. The boot door opened by itself and was left open for everyone to peer in while we were at mass. Thankfully we didn't have anything that was worth stealing today but my wife and myself are musicians so we normally pack her keyboard, amps, and my guitar. Imagine to our surprise when we came to our vehicle only to see the boot open while the car alarm was still switched ON. So I kept thinking to myself as to how could this happen to us; I switched the car alarm ON the moment we left the car. We didn't open the boot to get anything. I couldn't have accidentally opened it because we were chatting with church members in the parking lot and anyone would have noticed it. I had thought that maybe I could have pressed the boot door button on the car remote but currently it doesn't work and I'm going to fix it soon when I have time. How am I suppose to transport our equipment going forward when it's only time when my boot will be opened again like a free-for-all grab shop when the vehicle is parked? Please don't tell me it's some new-wave crime spree going on where they open car boots with a switch of a button.. Or someone uttering the magic words "Open Sesame". The question is, has this happen to anyone else before and can someone shed some light on this?
  3. Thanks for the advice, natedog. I just did my own thing. Haha. Yes spillige, I'm a bit of a champion. Coke's terrible to clean. It sticks to everything! The driver side was nearly flooded with coke. The Missus wasn't too happy about it as well but I got off light cos she knew I was ****** about the whole thing. Anyway, I managed to clean the vents using wet wipes and a chopstick. Lubricated the panes with WD-40. It's as good as new now! P/S: In order to remove the AC panes of a Kluger, I would have to head to Toyota and get the mechanics to remove the dashboard first, pay them something like $150 for 2 hours work, then head to the cleaners for detailing, not sure how much that would have cost, maybe another $50 and perhaps another 30 minutes to an hour of work. Ouch goes the wallet. On my own, It cost me $5 for the wet wipes, chopsticks were free, and some elbow grease. Time taken: 30 minutes. I've learned my lesson! No more coke in the car -Ciga, using his mobile phone to type.
  4. Nevermind. I'll use some old fashion elbow grease for this.
  5. Hi all, I've been an owner of a Kluger Grande since Oct 08 and I'm absolutely lovin' it. Went to Macker's for a bite yesterday night. Here is where the problem starts; I accidentally spilt coke and it went everywhere around my driver side. Some of it landed in the right duct of the air-conditioning. Now, the duct is all sticky and the panes are hard to move. I wanna clean the insides but there doesn't seem to be access anywhere at all. What should I do? Take it to Toyota for detailed cleaning? Surely they don't do insides of the ducting. Should I do the Cleaning by my own but what can I use to clean such a mess? The coke's probably crystalised by now and I've never dealt with something like this, so it's really bugging me. Some advice or help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance - Ciga
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