It's my understanding that most burglaries actually happen during the day (while the householders are out) rather than at night, so again the logic is puzzling.
Big flash cars are stolen to order and are often not recovered while the older cheaper models are usually dumped locally (often on fire) They also tend to be stolen at night so the thieves have longer before the theft is discovered.
While this thread has somewhat morphed away from its original purpose, I can speak with some authority on the subject of burglaries, as I am currently posted to one of the many Burglary Squads within the Met.
Many burglaries indeed do happen during the day, but a fair few still happen at night - unoccupied premises and businesses, mainly. There isn't much money in a residential burglary, unless the thief gets lucky - far more money to be made in stealing 20 Apple Macbooks from an office than just one from a house.
You'd be surprised at the range of vehicles stolen in burglaries. As you say, cheap vehicles tend to be used in further crime and then dumped (or crashed), but even quite modest vehicles get re-plated ("rung") and put in a shipping container bound for Eastern Europe or Africa - often within 24 hours. Very few cars are stolen from the street, but there are still plenty of people that leave car keys in the vehicle - even had one a few weeks ago where they'd not only left the keys to one vehicle in the glovebox, they even left the spare keys to their other car (parked right behind) in there as well. Both cars were stolen.
As for the rest of the thread, crack on. I have little to say about it - other than that I find a few members' open hostility and generalisations about officers quite upsetting. As those who know me on the forums have seen, I work damned hard at what I do (remember when I investigated Rolandtrade, anyone?), and usually try and contribute fairly and from my own direct experience as a "real" police officer. I note that even the excellent sticky thread about Terrorism & Photography has now turned into a debate over the death of Ian Tomlinson - an event that I find difficult to link to either terrorism or photography - with the resultant comments on officers, police state, etc. No matter what I say, I won't ever change the attitudes of many people here on TP, but I'll always try to engage in constructive debate - however, much of what I've read lately is just rude, ill-informed and reflects poorly on the intelligence of the poster.
PP Out.