YES--- the weight and motion speeds up the deterioration of the inside of the lock cylinder. It is metal on metal (key and tumblers) inside the lock, and it will eventually destroy the ignition. I sell key blanks and lock cylinders to new car dealers and next to theft, this is what keeps us in business. Thanks for your support.
2006-11-11 00:51:27
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answer #1
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answered by leonard k 3
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sure, it is genuine. too much weight on the main ring WILL positioned severe tension on those very skinny brass wafers (Pins are very infrequently used anymore) and that they're going to omit the sidebar of the ignition and finally the ignition gets caught in the two the on or off place. The doorways are no longer an argument yet I replace and/or service approximately 10 ignitions each week for this very situation.
2016-12-14 05:09:48
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Having to many keys on your key chain can damage the ignition switch, because they are too heavy. When you turn the key, that's a lot of weight on the switch, pulling down and putting it out of alignment of something.
2006-11-10 17:44:37
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answer #3
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answered by saucylilbrat43 2
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weight bouncing around can cause it to break tumblers etc depends on what you drive!
2006-11-10 17:40:50
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answer #4
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answered by michael_stewart32 4
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It's not so much the wieght but the bulk of haveing too many keys on your ring might interfer with the steering wheel. This is a very real posibility. Chrysler had a recall because of bulky key rings. So use commom sence.
2006-11-10 18:10:49
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answer #5
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answered by ED 1
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yes
2006-11-10 17:44:11
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answer #6
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answered by Norton N 5
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if you really need 100 keys to drive,t then so be it.
2006-11-10 19:37:43
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answer #7
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answered by tim s 3
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