

He pulled over into a parking lot, and as I walked towards the passenger side of the vehicle, I noticed that as I approached, he keyed his lock a few times and very aggressively jiggled the DOOR lock knob (which moved the door latch on and off several times). I’m calling this answer “yes” for “Serial Number” (which is what the help text appears to Ĭrucc 2.4 Car Radio Universal Code Calculator () software is the world’s simplest to use car radio universal code calculator designed to make it much easier to program your car’s radio receiver.īuy Crucc 2.4 Car Radio Universal Code Calculator for $9.95. It seems to me that “car registration number” is a standard license plate number, and “serial number” is something like the “vehicle’s VIN”. UPDATE: I’ve worked out the differences between “serial number” and “vehicle registration number”. I don’t really see any functionality to decrypt your car radio’s signals, but I’ve not had a ton of experience with this sort of thing, so I might be missing something. The ability to update the code seems to imply the updater is accessible via the internet, or at least by someone that has access to the internet, or by a cable connected to the vehicle. The ability to calculate the code seems to imply it is able to read back from the stereo into a standard PC without requiring an “online” connection. If “car registration number” is something else, then this is probably worthless. If “car registration number” is similar to the vehicle’s VIN, then this is useful. I think it’s useful for retrieving the stereo’s coding, or its VIN so that it can be put back into the vehicle, but that may be wrong. Is “car registration number” like a vehicle’s license plate number? If that’s the case, then I think this could be useful, but I’ll need to read up on what a license plate number is. If “serial number” is similar to the vehicle’s model serial number (and not the vehicle’s VIN) then this is likely to help, but if you already know the serial number you’re after, you don’t need this. The help text actually doesn’t make it clear what “serial number” is, and it isn’t clear what a “car registration number” is. Here is a smaller version of the help text: It supports radio code retrieval with radio models a.k.a.: Here’s the 2.4 help:ĬRUCC 2.4 – Car Radio Universal Code Calculator, supports . While I don’t doubt the completeness of the tool, I’d have to ask what exactly it’s supposed to do. Crucc 2.4 Car Radio Universal Code Calculator 2.4 17
