Home > Maintenance & Mods (L405) > Repair or Not? |
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Fat Wolfie Member Since: 23 Jul 2017 Location: West Yorkshire Posts: 150 |
For £4.5k think I'd be claiming on the insurance. You can pass the culprits details to them and they will (or won't) pusue him for the money.
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10th Aug 2017 2:36pm |
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Poocherama Member Since: 11 Apr 2017 Location: London Posts: 35 |
Thanks for the reply.
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10th Aug 2017 2:45pm |
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Alistair Member Since: 11 Feb 2011 Location: Peterborough / Bordeaux / Andorra Posts: 7941 |
As far as I understand it - thing aren't that granular - the premiums are affected by the overall risk across a broader area - at least the postcode minus the last 2 letters - maybe even just the first half of the postcode - so yours will be just one of many claims.
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10th Aug 2017 4:03pm |
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Basilfawlty Member Since: 18 Oct 2015 Location: Cheshire Posts: 655 |
I think the best advice I can give you is to go into your local LR Dealership and ask them? At least you'll know if it's something that you should repair yourself and how much it'll affect trade in. And they may put you in touch with whoever they use themselves. The problem with painting it again is you paint scratcher is still out there. |
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10th Aug 2017 4:23pm |
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Cam-Tech-Craig Member Since: 03 Aug 2011 Location: Gloucestershire Posts: 16294 |
May be worth checking with your MD that the paintwork would be upto their standard? You may pay to have the damage painted then get penalised at PX time because it needs re doing to their standard???
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10th Aug 2017 4:59pm |
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Alistair Member Since: 11 Feb 2011 Location: Peterborough / Bordeaux / Andorra Posts: 7941 |
^ Ouch !
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10th Aug 2017 5:19pm |
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Rob99 Member Since: 03 May 2016 Location: Gatwick Posts: 1421 |
I agree with a number of previous comments recommending you talk to your broker and the dealer. Good point from Alistair about getting online quotes by declaring a claim and the repair cost. At least that gives you a starting point for the discussion with your broker.
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10th Aug 2017 5:39pm |
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RR2008HSE Member Since: 06 Jan 2013 Location: British Columbia Posts: 2932 |
I suspect the dealership will be able to get a cheaper deal than you will for the repainting. They just have more cars than you do! If you're thinking of trading it in, I wouldn't bother. If you keep it, then get it fixed. Selling privately, I'm not sure.
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10th Aug 2017 6:22pm |
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peanutbob Member Since: 02 Mar 2013 Location: UK Posts: 57 |
AFAIK the revised 18 will not arrive until next year. So, if you take the car to dealer now for a quote for paint they will either be non committal or give you the worst case scenario. By the time the 18 version is available your car will be 4 years old so a dealer might throw it out to trade, unless it's low mileage. In which case they will not be that bothered, and just give you a trade price, in not A1 condition . If they do retail it the margins are so large that if the car looks nicely presented, even with scratches, and with full service history, the cost of paint you have been quoted will be less precisely calculated.
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10th Aug 2017 7:00pm |
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GGDR Member Since: 26 Nov 2016 Location: London Posts: 3545 |
Poocherama this would be a non-fault claim. In theory (yes I know insurance is a black art) this would not affect your premium. And there is usually no excess to pay. Ask them. And - there is also no official claim on your policy until you do just that - make a claim. That is not triggered by a chat. Meaning you can ring them and discuss what's happened and that does not constitute 'making a claim'. So there is no harm IMO in speaking to your insurer about the ins and outs of what happened.
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10th Aug 2017 9:21pm |
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CS Member Since: 14 Apr 2015 Location: Edinburgh Posts: 1384 |
Hmm, I wonder whether absence of fault means there would be no effect on future premiums, surely that would be true of theft claims too, and it does not seem to be? I would expect discussion with the insurer or a broker to put the incident on the insurer's record and therefore it would be something to take into account when pricing next year's cover. There are presumably not that many vandals that could meet a claim for £4,500, so I expect the insurers generally won't bother, as it would be good money after bad. By way of illustration a friend who has had shop windows smashed found it wasn't worth getting payback orders after conviction, as one tended to recover nothing or almost nothing, there was extra hassle and there was no practical method of enforcement anyway. Too much of that sort of thing can lead to not being able to get insurance at all, never mind higher cost...
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11th Aug 2017 11:36am |
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Poocherama Member Since: 11 Apr 2017 Location: London Posts: 35 |
Thank's for the replies and advice chaps.
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11th Aug 2017 2:56pm |
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Weegie Member Since: 09 Jun 2014 Location: East Sussex Posts: 3236 |
Have you considered taking him to court. The small claims limit is now £10,000. At least you could go for the amount you can prove. John
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11th Aug 2017 3:33pm |
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Poocherama Member Since: 11 Apr 2017 Location: London Posts: 35 |
I have indeed, I've sent him a couple of letters and am awaiting a reply. |
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11th Aug 2017 3:35pm |
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