What happens when family drives your car
wow that sucks man. at least insurance will cover it... i say, if you have a deductible, he needs to find the money to pay it. just my thought. hardships on kids like that teach lessons better than anything.
Its interlagos fire, It's very similar to brickyard, however brickyard has a black flake in it i believe, while this one has a copper.
if insurance will have it fixed, the shop I have it at is going to eat the deductible. If it gets fixed, I'm going to have my brother purchase literally every chassis reinforcement part made for the car to try and compensate for what damage has been done.
I had to be dropped off somewhere earlier in the day. I allowed him to drive the car for that purpose, and he didn't get in the accident doing that. He got in the accident later in the day, when I didn't allow him to drive the car. Otherwise, the keys would have been with me.
First: I would run over the cat because it a animal. Not a person
If you look at these key locations, the car is totaled. If you try to fix this, the car will be completely weak in the unibody, and the fitment will be off. For example, the roofline has buckling along the top of the window, which is very very hard to straighten. Also, the mirror popped out due to the pressure of the chassis bending. The lower body line along the ground is severely bent - this is near to where the jack points for the front and back are located. This is a structural member. This car is seriously damaged, you wouldn't want it fixed.
I haven't seen it in person yet, but when I saw the picture of the roof being bent, that is what worried me most. When I see it tomorrow I will get better pictures. What I was told by those who saw it, is that the pictures look worse than it is, but what do they know.
What you guys are missing is the insurance company's % of total value
to determine total/salvage. It's very high, often 80%+... We know this
can be "fixed" for less, hence it's not totaled by their standard.
THIS IS WHY YOU NEED ADEQUATE REPRESENTATION.
I'll assure you that should you try to handle this on your own you'll get
screwed.
to determine total/salvage. It's very high, often 80%+... We know this
can be "fixed" for less, hence it's not totaled by their standard.
THIS IS WHY YOU NEED ADEQUATE REPRESENTATION.
I'll assure you that should you try to handle this on your own you'll get
screwed.
Anyways, enjoy whatever car you get next.
What you guys are missing is the insurance company's % of total value
to determine total/salvage. It's very high, often 80%+... We know this
can be "fixed" for less, hence it's not totaled by their standard.
THIS IS WHY YOU NEED ADEQUATE REPRESENTATION.
I'll assure you that should you try to handle this on your own you'll get
screwed.
to determine total/salvage. It's very high, often 80%+... We know this
can be "fixed" for less, hence it's not totaled by their standard.
THIS IS WHY YOU NEED ADEQUATE REPRESENTATION.
I'll assure you that should you try to handle this on your own you'll get
screwed.
Hitting an animal is no fault but you still have to pay the deductable. Me paying $500 because a pet owner did not have their pet on a leash would suck. Not hitting the pet and destroying the car turns it into a single vehicle accident, still out $500 and will have higher insurance costs for the next 3 years. I'll hit the pet.
Hitting an animal is no fault but you still have to pay the deductable. Me paying $500 because a pet owner did not have their pet on a leash would suck. Not hitting the pet and destroying the car turns it into a single vehicle accident, still out $500 and will have higher insurance costs for the next 3 years. I'll hit the pet.
so squirrels and crows are okay to hit since they dont exactly constitute as pets
I don't even swerve from a deer, unless it is on a pretty wide road, like the freeway. Keep the wheels straight, slam on the brakes, and hope for the best. The natural instinct is to lock up the brakes and swerve - the worst possible combination for keeping a car on the road.
Sorry about your bad luck OP.
Sorry about your bad luck OP.
I don't even swerve from a deer, unless it is on a pretty wide road, like the freeway. Keep the wheels straight, slam on the brakes, and hope for the best. The natural instinct is to lock up the brakes and swerve - the worst possible combination for keeping a car on the road.
Sorry about your bad luck OP.
Sorry about your bad luck OP.
I just saw the car, and the body shop said It's looking like it is a total. Luckily I have mercury. Now to research the highest possible price I can get for it.







