i just had to change out a broken ignition switch on my 96 and boy that's a secure design, i am use to the euro cars i work on daily where it's sometimes a act of god to remove the key switch, 3 #20 torx to get the cover off and 3 tamper proof #20 torx to remove the whole thing, (tamper proof?! like you can't buy those anywhere
) in and out i think it took 5 minutes, so if i wanted to steal it i can show up with my own switch to plug in and in maybe a minute i am off if i am not worried about the cover or letting the switch hang, or even less if i case the joint the day before and get the last 8 of the vin # and get a key cut by the dealer, which is a interesting point, bmw requires proof of ownership before they will order you a key for another day (pita for shops and salvage yards like us when we get in a car with no key), i called dodge and had a new switch and a spare key coded and a picked it up a couple hours later
