I just spoke with the Acura dealer where I want the repairs to be done... if that is the case and he also agreed with @fidodie assessment about lot of the wiring harness being damaged based on my description. He also said that its very likely that they only got an estimate for superficial damage only and once they take a more detail inspection on mechanical and electrical aspects, there is a good probability that they will consider this a total loss.Did an appraiser come out and look at that mess or photo estimate? Writing for used/salvage/recycled parts is common nowadays. Unfortunately that stuff is in your policy...somewhere. As far as valuation, most insurance companies flag around 70-80% of value not 50. If a car (probably such as this) is going to be a nightmare before and after we will talk to our ins rep and see if we can write to total it. It's also pretty common for the outside appraisers to write low estimates initially.
As @ReggieHammond said, the initial estimate is usually a starting point, we've had photo estimates for $800 bucks be really $2400.00 just looking at the car in the parking lot without taking a thing apart.
On the phone with State Farm.... car is totaled
On the phone with State Farm.... Bike is ordered
I don't have to... but I would have assumed my insurance would have went to bat for me considering they will get the money from the other insurance anyways.do you "have" to use your insurance company? why not the one that started the fire?
Perhaps you can go after them for the gap?
remember Patience.....
I don't have to... but I would have assumed my insurance would have went to bat for me considering they will get the money from the other insurance anyways.
Bike will come when I get the settlement from the property side... 😵Fixed it for you.
Oh wow... thank you!i just reached out to a lawyer friend, will see what he says.
Cn8 already stated it was total loss. He was disputing the cash payout for the car.I can't image how this is not a total loss. Every state is different. Most states use a set percentage. NJ and a handful of others are different. I've totaled 2 cars. In NJ if the cost of repairs + the salvage yard value of your car > cars appraised value then it's a total loss.