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 How to test alarm without horn blaring?Printed From: the12volt.comForum Name:  Car Security and Convenience
 Forum Discription:  Car Alarms, Keyless Entries, Remote Starters, Immobilizer Bypasses, Sensors, Door Locks, Window Modules, Heated Mirrors, Heated Seats, etc.
 URL: https://www.the12volt.com/installbay/forum_posts.asp?tid=142033
 Printed Date: October 31, 2025 at 6:33 AM
 
 
 Topic: How to test alarm without horn blaring?
 
 Posted By: btrotter
 Subject: How to test alarm without horn blaring?
 Date Posted: November 16, 2016 at 1:16 PM
 
 
 This is probably a silly question, and I do apologize. :)
I live in an apartment complex and am installing a remote starter on my car. I have a tendency to stay up until 1-2am working on the car, which isn't a problem. The problem is that while doing the installing and testing everything, I keep accidentally setting the factory alarm off, which blares the horn and is quickly putting me atop the Most Hated resident list.
 While doing my install and initial troubleshooting, I am trying to think of an easy way to know when the alarm has been tripped without the sleep-disrupting horn blaring.  Do car horns sound by getting a 12v pulses? If so, could I just disconnect the wires going to the horn and attach them to a strobelight or something like that instead?
 
 
 
 Replies:
 
 Posted By: i am an idiot
 Date Posted: November 16, 2016 at 7:51 PM
 
 Your horn has only 1 wire attached to it.  It is a positive voltage.  Yes you can disconnect that wire and attach it to a lamp. 
 
 
 Posted By: davep.
 Date Posted: November 17, 2016 at 12:58 AM
 
 You didn't say what type of car you have. 
 My Ford truck has a relay for the horn in the dash board fuse center. When I'm programing or working on the system and don't want to annoy the neighbors, I put a relay with #30 bent over sideways in the horn position. I can hear the relay clicking to indicate horn activation, but there's no power sent to the horn because the pin is not making contact.
 
 
 
 Posted By: btrotter
 Date Posted: November 17, 2016 at 9:38 AM
 
 The car is a Honda Pilot. It has two horns. 
In the end, I disconnected one of the horns and shoved a sock in the other one. It quietened it down quite nicely.
 I will put everything back the way it was once the install is complete.
 
 
 
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