On rightmove.co right now, a Nap 500 and associated equiptment. Potential Burglar alert!

Posted by: redalphabet on 13 May 2018

If you are the person selling your home, The estate agent has snapped your hifi gear in full! 

included, is a picture of the house, a layout of the house, all of the equipment you own, and your address.

Posted on: 13 May 2018 by Clemenza

Been looking for one. Be right over 

Posted on: 13 May 2018 by Tony Lockhart

How often is top end hifi stolen in burglaries?

Posted on: 13 May 2018 by Richard Dane
Tony Lockhart posted:

How often is top end hifi stolen in burglaries?

I remember some years ago there was an attempted break-in at the Naim factory.  I think that the main target of the attempted theft was a 50" Fujitsu Plasma screen.  They had only got it so far before giving up.  The alarm was tripped and they were doubtless finding its sheer weight and size somewhat more than they had bargained for, so had scarpered to avoid getting nicked.  However, we noticed that rather closer to their point of entry and exit was a trolley full of NAC552s that had been checked over by Roy and were awaiting packaging. There must have been 60 or 70 grands worth on that trolley but it had been completely ignored by the burglars.

Posted on: 13 May 2018 by redalphabet

There is a greater amount in both rooms. He has to be a member here. Someone here must know someone selling a white home

The chap has 4 fraims of kit. In one room and more in another.

Posted on: 13 May 2018 by Happy Listener

IIRC a while back a house was advertised for sale with pictures of the living room omitted at the request of the vendor - an eminently sensible approach you might think....until the local media started speculation on why the case. In some quarters it seems you cannot win.

Posted on: 13 May 2018 by Innocent Bystander

Yes, the danger of the internet. I do think it is unwise to have pictures up on estate agents’ sites displaying expensive stuff - and as estate agents seem to have not a care about anything but making their commission as fast as possible (with apologies if there are any on here who are different from the vast majority based on my experience), the seller needs to guide them when they are taking pictures, and approve anything before publication. 

Mind you, it is rare to see any sort of serious hifi in houses for sale, and it seems to bemuse estate agents showing me around a house when I spent time in the lounge discussing with my wife where the speakers would be most likely to go - that, the kitchen and the garden being the only things we pay much attention to, not how many ensuites there are, whether the master bedroom is the biggest in the street, or how nice and neutral the colour scheme is...

Posted on: 13 May 2018 by dave marshall

Just to refresh a topic from some years ago, I hope that any forum members posting in the "System Pics" topic, for example, are aware that photos taken on many digital devices include GPS metadata within the file, and that this information is easily recoverable by a third party.

The answer is to disable this GPS function in one's camera or phone. 

Posted on: 13 May 2018 by ChrisSU
dave marshall posted:

Just to refresh a topic from some years ago, I hope that any forum members posting in the "System Pics" topic, for example, are aware that photos taken on many digital devices include GPS metadata within the file, and that this information is easily recoverable by a third party.

The answer is to disable this GPS function in one's camera or phone. 

The forum disables location info by default on posted photos - unless you configure it otherwise in your profile. 

Posted on: 13 May 2018 by Eloise
Richard Dane posted:

I remember some years ago there was an attempted break-in at the Naim factory.  I think that the main target of the attempted theft was a 50" Fujitsu Plasma screen.  [...] However, we noticed that rather closer to their point of entry and exit was a trolley full of NAC552s that had been checked over by Roy and were awaiting packaging. There must have been 60 or 70 grands worth on that trolley but it had been completely ignored by the burglars.

I remember reading (maybe apocryphal) about a Hi-Fi enthusiast who was burgled... gone was the Sony DVD player and Panasonic TV, while the Naim stack was left untouched.  Some burglars have no taste :-)

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by Kiwi cat

Reminds me of my wine merchant who was burgled. Thrives neatly placed aside many bottles of Chateau Lafite to get at the flat screen TV.

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by Innocent Bystander

So the moral would appear to be: if you have expensive hifi (or other stuff), have some populist easily shiftable items clearly visible fo burglars to spot and take. 

However, better for online pictures traceable to your home not to show specialist things that could be targeted by people in the know  ...and not other things of interest to burglars so they don’t think your home is worth bothering with at all.

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by feeling_zen

Most would-be theives are too thick to notice. In my estiamtion if you told them there are amplifiers that cost $1,000 they'd think you were lying. I'd not worry about it to be honest.

At a shop I worked at once, some theives tried to ramraid us in the middle of the night. Except the shop was in a padenstrianised streat with concrete bolards at the end. They mowed over a bolard which must have nearly written off their vehicle. Broke the front glass of the shop. There were Linn and Naim active systems galore to be had but what did they take? A single Quad ESL 63. Not the pair. A single one. Nor did they touch the Quad 6 system that was connected to it.

Numbnuts.

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by Innocent Bystander
feeling_zen posted:

Most would-be theives are too thick to notice. In my estiamtion if you told them there are amplifiers that cost $1,000 they'd think you were lying. I'd not worry about it to be honest.

At a shop I worked at once, some theives tried to ramraid us in the middle of the night. Except the shop was in a padenstrianised streat with concrete bolards at the end. They mowed over a bolard which must have nearly written off their vehicle. Broke the front glass of the shop. There were Linn and Naim active systems galore to be had but what did they take? A single Quad ESL 63. Not the pair. A single one. Nor did they touch the Quad 6 system that was connected to it.

Numbnuts.

Sounds more like the ESL was stolen to order and so picked up first - and that they were disturbed and so made a quick getaway

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by Ardbeg10y

All the mono cartridges were still there?

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by Ardbeg10y

I challenge the thieves to steal my Ovator s-600's. 64 kg each ...

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by Beachcomber

Yes, they are weighty beasts.  It took three of us to get mine up some stairs to the music room.

I was once loaned a pair of S800s - even Jason struggled a bit!  They were lovely speakers, though.

 

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by Pcd
feeling_zen posted:

Most would-be theives are too thick to notice. In my estiamtion if you told them there are amplifiers that cost $1,000 they'd think you were lying. I'd not worry about it to be honest.

At a shop I worked at once, some theives tried to ramraid us in the middle of the night. Except the shop was in a padenstrianised streat with concrete bolards at the end. They mowed over a bolard which must have nearly written off their vehicle. Broke the front glass of the shop. There were Linn and Naim active systems galore to be had but what did they take? A single Quad ESL 63. Not the pair. A single one. Nor did they touch the Quad 6 system that was connected to it.

Numbnuts.

Very true, back in 1992 I had my MG Montego stolen from the drive at the back of the house the car was found a couple of days later minus the stereo and a small tool box from the boot.

The  boxed Naim Hi Cap that I had put in the boot the previous evening to take to the dealer the following day in P/X for a new Supercap was still in the boot, worth considerably more than the value of the stolen stereo

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by Karl

Last year whilst looking on Right move I spotted a house in South Wales with DBLs,52, olive six pack and Lp12, that was the only nice part of the property.

Karl

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by Beachcomber

But that is surely sufficient?  If lack of funds mean either a nice house or a system like that, surely there is only one possible choice...

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by feeling_zen
Innocent Bystander posted:
feeling_zen posted:

Most would-be theives are too thick to notice. In my estiamtion if you told them there are amplifiers that cost $1,000 they'd think you were lying. I'd not worry about it to be honest.

At a shop I worked at once, some theives tried to ramraid us in the middle of the night. Except the shop was in a padenstrianised streat with concrete bolards at the end. They mowed over a bolard which must have nearly written off their vehicle. Broke the front glass of the shop. There were Linn and Naim active systems galore to be had but what did they take? A single Quad ESL 63. Not the pair. A single one. Nor did they touch the Quad 6 system that was connected to it.

Numbnuts.

Sounds more like the ESL was stolen to order and so picked up first - and that they were disturbed and so made a quick getaway

Nah. Blatently the closest item to where the car came through the glass.

I bet even to this day, some git is sitting in his dank lounge thinking "this bleedin radiator is naff. It can't even dry my socks after be switched on for hours".

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by TOBYJUG
Innocent Bystander posted:

So the moral would appear to be: if you have expensive hifi (or other stuff), have some populist easily shiftable items clearly visible fo burglars to spot and take. 

Must be why many use that Hugo Dave thingy.

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by joerand
Ardbeg10y posted:

I challenge the thieves to steal my Ovator s-600's. 64 kg each ...

You assume they'd have interest. Even at 1 kg each ...

I'd be snatching up Super Lumina cables. Easy to carry and high value per kg.

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by ChrisSU
feeling_zen posted:

Most would-be theives are too thick to notice. In my estiamtion if you told them there are amplifiers that cost $1,000 they'd think you were lying. I'd not worry about it to be honest.

At a shop I worked at once, some theives tried to ramraid us in the middle of the night. Except the shop was in a padenstrianised streat with concrete bolards at the end. They mowed over a bolard which must have nearly written off their vehicle. Broke the front glass of the shop. There were Linn and Naim active systems galore to be had but what did they take? A single Quad ESL 63. Not the pair. A single one. Nor did they touch the Quad 6 system that was connected to it.

Numbnuts.

Thieves take stuff they can remove and sell on quickly and easily, for obvious reasons. Leave your iPhone and a 555 on display, and chances are the 555 will be left behind. 

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by docmark

I had a leather bag containing a lot of very expensive items stolen from the desk at my office, in the middle of the day.  Somebody just waltzed right in, grabbed it & ran.  The bag contained an Astell & Kern AK380, Edition 8 headphones, a portable headphone amp, a couple of nice Mont Blanc pens, cheque books, banking information, and an iPad.  After swearing a blue streak for a few minutes, I almost cried.  I think that I was most upset by the loss of my portable sound system & all of the music that had taken hours to load.  Of course, I was most inconvenienced by the loss of the cheques & other banking info. The police were useless - I actually tracked down the bag thru the Find function on the iPad, located it in a run-down trailer park 3 km from the office, right down to the unit in the trailer park.  The police said they knew who lived there, having had run-ins with them in the past.  However I was told that there was nothing  they could do to retrieve my stolen items.  Since then, things get locked up in my office.  Also, thank God for insurance.

Posted on: 14 May 2018 by Bert Schurink
docmark posted:

I had a leather bag containing a lot of very expensive items stolen from the desk at my office, in the middle of the day.  Somebody just waltzed right in, grabbed it & ran.  The bag contained an Astell & Kern AK380, Edition 8 headphones, a portable headphone amp, a couple of nice Mont Blanc pens, cheque books, banking information, and an iPad.  After swearing a blue streak for a few minutes, I almost cried.  I think that I was most upset by the loss of my portable sound system & all of the music that had taken hours to load.  Of course, I was most inconvenienced by the loss of the cheques & other banking info. The police were useless - I actually tracked down the bag thru the Find function on the iPad, located it in a run-down trailer park 3 km from the office, right down to the unit in the trailer park.  The police said they knew who lived there, having had run-ins with them in the past.  However I was told that there was nothing  they could do to retrieve my stolen items.  Since then, things get locked up in my office.  Also, thank God for insurance.

Oh that’s very distressing. I am feeling sorry for you. My girlfriend was robbed as well yesterday, and it really hurts.