Petervs
02-03-2008, 11:42 PM
I have a question about the main door lock(s). Some of this has been covered before, but I think this is a detail that has not yet been covered.
Here is the situation:
I have a 94 Marathon XLV which has essentially 3 separate door locking devices on the main people door. One is the automotive style lock operated by the handles on the outside and inside. It latches closed but does not have a lock.
The second is the solenoid or air operated latch activated by the switch on the dash, the switch by the door, or the key fob which also turns on the alarm system. You have to unlatch it with the same switch that latches it.
The third is a deadbolt that looks like the one on your house front door, and is operated by its own key on the outside and a knob on the inside.
When we drive, we use the solenoid/air lock, it pulls the door in a little tighter and reduces air noise. We also use it when we are in the bus overnight.
When we park and go out of the bus, we use the key fob to latch the door tight and activate the alarm.
So the question is this, Suppose you get back to the bus and the key fob is missing, broken, or whatever, how do you get in? The alarm company instruction book says you can deactivate the alarm that begins to go off when you enter the vehicle using a key by following several steps, but the Prevost has no car like keylock in the door that you can use that way.Yes, this has been brought up before, and the answer was to turn off the chassis batteries, then the lock fails open. But when I use the key fob to lock it, and turn off the batteries the lock stays locked and the alarm stays activated. I need to try turning off the chassis batteries when it is locked from the inside switches to see if those are powered by the chassis batteries as Prevost apparently originally intended.
Could the alarm (Trek Mate) be powered by the house batteries maybe, and that then activates the solenoid/air lock? This would be an easy experiment, but I did not want to do it on a very rainy day today. If this is not the answer, it seems that a disconnect switch located maybe in the drivers side electrical space would be a nice feature, just in case.
Just trying to consider the what ifs. Yesterday I reprogrammed a defective key fob, and while researching found the alarm company is long out of business, and if the remaining key fob dies, it might entail a great deal of effort to rewire/replace it.
Maybe someone else has dealt with this situation already?
Here is the situation:
I have a 94 Marathon XLV which has essentially 3 separate door locking devices on the main people door. One is the automotive style lock operated by the handles on the outside and inside. It latches closed but does not have a lock.
The second is the solenoid or air operated latch activated by the switch on the dash, the switch by the door, or the key fob which also turns on the alarm system. You have to unlatch it with the same switch that latches it.
The third is a deadbolt that looks like the one on your house front door, and is operated by its own key on the outside and a knob on the inside.
When we drive, we use the solenoid/air lock, it pulls the door in a little tighter and reduces air noise. We also use it when we are in the bus overnight.
When we park and go out of the bus, we use the key fob to latch the door tight and activate the alarm.
So the question is this, Suppose you get back to the bus and the key fob is missing, broken, or whatever, how do you get in? The alarm company instruction book says you can deactivate the alarm that begins to go off when you enter the vehicle using a key by following several steps, but the Prevost has no car like keylock in the door that you can use that way.Yes, this has been brought up before, and the answer was to turn off the chassis batteries, then the lock fails open. But when I use the key fob to lock it, and turn off the batteries the lock stays locked and the alarm stays activated. I need to try turning off the chassis batteries when it is locked from the inside switches to see if those are powered by the chassis batteries as Prevost apparently originally intended.
Could the alarm (Trek Mate) be powered by the house batteries maybe, and that then activates the solenoid/air lock? This would be an easy experiment, but I did not want to do it on a very rainy day today. If this is not the answer, it seems that a disconnect switch located maybe in the drivers side electrical space would be a nice feature, just in case.
Just trying to consider the what ifs. Yesterday I reprogrammed a defective key fob, and while researching found the alarm company is long out of business, and if the remaining key fob dies, it might entail a great deal of effort to rewire/replace it.
Maybe someone else has dealt with this situation already?