
2008 Saab 9-3 all keys lost — dealer dead, two indie shops refused
Saab owner found an orphan-brand path that worked
The problem
A Boston-area Saab 9-3 owner lost both keys to her 2008 Aero. With Saab dead and the local Saab dealer long closed, she called every European-specialty shop in the metro. Two refused outright ("we don't do Saab anymore"), one quoted a 6-week wait while they "tried to find a tool".
What other shops said
The Saab orphan-brand reality: no dealer service, no tool support from the brand, very few independent shops still equipped. The customer's options were essentially walk away from the car or find a specialty mail-in path.
What we did
Customer pulled the CIM (column integration module) from her car following our removal guide. Shipped to Arlington via USPS Priority. We bench-programmed two fresh keys to the existing CIM. Cut the blanks she'd sourced from a Saab parts supplier. Shipped back the keys + CIM with re-install instructions.
Outcome
Customer reinstalled the CIM in 25 minutes, inserted the new key, car started on first crank. She sent a second one to add a spare key 6 weeks later (we did it for $125 add-on cost).
“Honestly, I thought I was going to have to scrap the car. AML was the only place that even said yes — and the price was fair.”— Owner, Greater Boston MA (verified)
Service used
Saab CIM Module Key Programming (Mail-In)
$250 flat · 24-hour turnaround · return shipping included
Other case studies
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2010 Mercedes C300 ELV failure — $2,400 dealer quote vs $350 emulator
2014 Range Rover all keys lost — locksmith subcontracted to AML
2012 VW Jetta TDI with damaged cluster + IMMO chain after DIY key attempt
Got a similar problem?
Text us a description + photo of your module — we'll tell you honestly whether bench programming is the right path.