You need to go to the place where you brought your car and they should have a second set of keys for you.
but it dosent always work like that so you may need to pull out all your locks and ignition and find what your tumbler code is and have a key remade
Sure. There is no law saying that the salesman has to give you more than one set of keys. However, they are not allowed to keep a set of keys to a car they've sold you. That would be unethical and would be illegal in some places.
It depends on where you go!
If you have a spare set of keys.
Your only option is to contact the manufacturer or a locksmith to have a new set of keys made.
I'm a repo man, so, I'll tell you what I know. The dealer keeps a spare set of keys, that pair of keys they send people in the mail after they're done paying for the car is the 'repo set'. That is not always the case, there are actually several ways to repo a car, they can pop the linkage on the vehicle without keys and this basically puts the car in neutral or they can use tire dollies if the vehicle is all wheel drive or left in 4 wheel drive. If the repo agent wants the vehicle they will get the vehicle regardless... best just not to tote the note because they will find the car, believe me my husband has been in the industry for years. Also most reposession companies will cut their own keys with a code from the finance company, only mom and pop dealerships usually keep a spare set.
The renter.... Keys are very expensive, even more so now because they all have a chip inside and the key needs to be programmed to the car. If you let someone borrow your car and they lost the keys wouldn't you expect them to pay to get a new set?????
set :-set have only values,and it dont allows duplicate values.set allows original values.map:-map have keys and values.if we know keys,and autometically knows to values.
A glockenspiel does not have a set number of keys. It can have twenty or thirty keys, depending on the size and number of octaves represented.
The dealer should be able to make a set from the VIN. The dealer should be able to make a set from the VIN.
Insurance companies seem to ask the same questions: Were the keys in the car when it was stolen? Did you ever get a duplicate set made? Do you have the key or keys in your posession? I'm pretty sure they do not ask this unless there is a reason. Here's another question along the saem line... Will an insurance carrier cover a car that was stolen with the key's locked in the car?
go for it
Collective nouns are a bunch of keys, a ring of keys, a set of keys.