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Thread: Insurance and declining coach value

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  1. #1
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    In the event of a substantial loss you can be sure they are all over the internet trying to determine prices before they commit to either repair or pay for a replacement.

    If you underinsure you can bet they will use a small claim as an opportunity to call it a total, pay you what you have understated as its value and sell it with the intent to recover most of their loss. If you over insure it be prepared to fight.

  2. #2
    Tully Guest

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    Yea, what John said.

    It's true.

    Im in the biz and that is 100% dead on.

    Tully

  3. #3
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    We checked last summer to change our "Agreed Value" from $500K to $350K. We decided not to do it since the savings amounted only to $185.00 annual reduction.
    Jim and Chris
    2001 Featherlite Vogue XLV 2 slide with Rivets-current coach, 1999 shell
    Previous 22 years,
    We have owned every kind of Prevost shell but an H3-40

  4. #4
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    If your agreed value exceeds the market value substantially, make sure the insurance company and you are in agreement with what you are doing. I would get their acknowledgement in writing. You are spending the extra premium to insure if it is totalled you are adequately compensated, and they accept that premium. But when push comes to shove without their acknowledgement that what you are doing is OK with them, you are either going to have to fight to get your money, or they will do $350,000 in repairs and return a junk coach to you.

    Insurance companies are all about money and you will both be fighting over the exact same dollars.

    They can easily take the position you over insured the coach and then drove it over a cliff to make money at their expense.

  5. #5
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    When I went through the recent insurance claim on my coach, even though I had an agreed upon policy, they went to great lengths to validate the value of my coach. Luckily the fire happened prior to the huge downturn, and I was able to get my insured value.

    I have no doubt that 3 months later, I would have been given substantially less, even though I was insured for a higher value.

    Ray

  6. #6
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    Ray,

    Would it be fair to say that several months later it also would have cost less to replace your bus?

    Or, do you feel that in the long run you made out better by finally getting the agreed value?

  7. #7
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    Valid point Paul, but insurance underwriters generally go on past history and don't predict the future such as economic downturns.

    They would likely have stiffed Ray if the downturn had begun in advance of his loss. The presumption that is incorrectly made is that the cash for a total loss is going to be used to buy another coach. Suppose a person who has just suffered a loss chooses to use the funds to which he is entitled for other purposes? Suppose the downturn leave a person who is still making payments upside down, even though the coach agreed upon value was sufficient to satisfy the debt?

    When we had our fire they paid the tab with no debate. I am glad I did not have to argue to collect a value I had been paying premiums for.

  8. #8
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    Jon,

    Did Carrier make good on this, if I may ask? Did they acknowledge any fault or misinformation?

  9. #9
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    Ken,

    I had National Interstate through Explorer ( a P-Stuff sponsor and POG supporter ) and they took care of everything. I documented what happened, including providing them with the invoice for the compressor replacement 400 miles prior to the fire.

    I suspect Carrier and National Interstate arm wrestled over liability, but in the end Carrier had to end up writing the check because they left off the valves despite my best efforts to insist they install them. The first thing Prevost commented on when they saw the coach was "where are the unloader valves."

    I do not know for sure about Carrier paying, but in this case the insurance company must have expected it because they agreed to every requirement I had including a complete new AC system including hoses due to my suspicion pressures may have damaged other parts of the system.

    I put out the fire with the help of my nephew and we both saw first hand the blow torch like flame coming from behind the AC compressor clutch and literally curling up and over and then down to the batteries and all the other severely damaged components.

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