My pleasure. Got your reply. I seriously think you should consider the immobiliser I suggested. Peace of mind. Really nifty bit of equipment.
Next thing will be to invest in some dash cams, probably. Will wait for Matt (MH) to do his research and see what he comes up with as he is going fit these front and rear.
I won't be fitting dash cams. I really have no need for them and if I did fit them my other half will think I've finally lost the plot. As it is he stoically tolerates my car OCD but there's a limit 
Master or Mr? 
Honorary bloke or not, I am a woman so it's Miss to you 
I would heartily recommend a dashcam after the chew I went through when the idiot in the Citroen van rearended my GTD in November then maintained a wall of silence with his insurance company after they only heard about the incident via me and my insurance company. They finally settled on a "without prejudice" basis as their attempts to get their client's side of the story went unfulfilled. Really dragged the process out. Would have loved to have been able to provide footage, possibly seeing the look of horror unfold on his face when he realised that he wouldn't stop in time (I didn't see it myself as I was looking for a gap on the roundabout I was wanting to get onto).
So many dashcams, and each have their strengths and weaknesses, some very cheap, some very expensive, some not very reliable, some which are decent in daylight but take poor night time footage, some with amazing processing hardware, but a crap lens spoils it all, some huge and very conspicuous. Do you get a power box to maintain a parking mode that would (hopefully) capture a hit and run parking scrape, do you go front and back or just front only.....
The possibilities are endless.
As a front only "premium" camera, the Mio MiVue 658 looks excellent, but Mio haven't released a powerbox for it in this country, so parking mode is out of the window. It does have GPS enabled speed camera alerts and updates for life of the database.
As a front and rear combo goes, I whittled it down to a few options:-
Blackvue 650, Very good daylight footage, average night performance, but sometimes the rear feed is dodgy and distorts to green and orange (think Predator's viewpoint in the Arnie film of the same name). Quite discrete as both cameras are compact and tubular.
Blackvue 750, as above on the performance, rear camera is a bit better, no mention (that I have found) of the orange and green distortion, but front camera is not discrete, and will be very prominent unless you tuck it up behind the rearview mirror (rendering the big touchscreen display which can double up as a parking cam display unreadable).
Lukas 7950 Duo Pro. I was all set to buy a Blackvue 750 set today from TTW (blackvue.eu is their blackvue sales website) as the freebies their set comes with for a little more than the 650 more than make up the modest price hike). I rang the number up on the website and they recommended spending a little more on the Lukas, which has power management and GPS built on (no magic power box required for park mode), and the picture quality is better than the 750 according to him. I said i'd call back after checking out a few reviews. More than one said the 7950 struggles to focus as it has very good processing and sensors, but hampered by a crap lens. He said that the Mio was a great little camera, if not for the (current) lack of a magic power box for it. I do wonder if these boxes are specific to the camera, or if they are compatible if the power jack in is the same size and voltage.
If someone put a gun to my head right now to make my pick one, i'd probably go for the Blackvue 750 deal on at blackvue.eu that comes with a 64Gb SD card, hard case and magic power box for £30 more than the 650 that comes without the hard case and card. Still undecided. It would be the Mio if I could get around the lack of powerbox.