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Parking lot Fender Breaker
- captaincrusty51
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She yelled at me to move my bike so she could get her car out of the lot. Well, her front fender was ripped open and wedged against the rear brake lever and points cover. I tell her that it looks like she may have done some damage to the bike and her car and I didn't want to move anything until it could be inspected. She then yelled some more about how she needed to get going and nothing was broken and I should get my bike out of her way at which point I had had enough so I called the cops.
The local shows up and immediately figures out who was at fault. He does about a half hour of paperwork and then helps me unwedge my bike. He tells me that the police report will clearly lay out that she was at fault, and gives us back our papers. She leaves, we chat about vintage bikes for a bit (he has a early 80's 750 Honda), and away he goes.
Anyway, the most obvious damage is to the now bent up brake pedal, and the cracked points cover. But what I am more concerned about is if she may have bent the frame. The bike was on the sidestand which took a lot of the pressure from her car, and when I look at where the sidestand is attached to the frame, the frame looks slightly bowed in. I rode the mile back home and didn't notice anything unusual, but I didn't have time to give it a high speed run.
Any suggestions on how to determine if there is additional damage. Fellow KZ650 owners, is your frame straight at the sidestand?
Also, I have basic insurance coverage and am wondering if I can even make a claim for repairs. If the frame is tweaked, I would think the repair would outweigh the value of the bike. Would her insurance company pay the minimum value of the bike and take it for salvage? How does the insurance company determine the value of the damage? There is no way I am going to give up this bike now that I have her running great.
I am finally cooled down but I was livid this afternoon. At least I wasn't on the bike at the time.
Post edited by: captaincrusty51, at: 2006/06/22 21:26
Post edited by: captaincrusty51, at: 2006/06/22 21:27
1978 KZ650C
Keihin CR Special carbs, MAC 4 into 1, Koni Shocks, Emgo Pods
2002 ZRX1200R
Akrapovic exhaust, Teds Ignition Advance, Steering Damper, Dunlop Qualifier tires, Corbin GF/L,Rear tire hugger, Tsukigi braces
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- neilage66
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Best of luck to you with the claim.
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- hardr0ck68
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I wonder how much they will give you, as vintage means "junk" to insurance companys.
1977 kz650 c1
bought it because I was told it would never run again...I like to prove people wrong.
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- captaincrusty51
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when i wrecked my truck there was a buy back price. so if they gave me 1200 for the truck the buy back was 250 i believe, they just take that out of the claim and i keep the truck. The old girl was shot, so i had to let her go.
I wonder how much they will give you, as vintage means "junk" to insurance companys.
That's my fear. I can repair the pedal and cover with eBay parts for under $50. Frame damage would be more work than I am willing to do since I assume the bike would have to be dismantled to straighten it out. Since mint KZ650s book out around a grand, a clean one with the normal "patina" of 28 years may only be worth a couple of hundred to the insurance company. And I am sure they have every angle covered on how not to pay claims.
1978 KZ650C
Keihin CR Special carbs, MAC 4 into 1, Koni Shocks, Emgo Pods
2002 ZRX1200R
Akrapovic exhaust, Teds Ignition Advance, Steering Damper, Dunlop Qualifier tires, Corbin GF/L,Rear tire hugger, Tsukigi braces
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- agawam
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- Pterosaur
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Call her insurance agent and find out what her deductable is - usually in the range of $250 - $500. The call her and offer to settle for some miniscule discount off of her deductable in order to do the repairs yourself, keep the insurance companies out of it, off her record, yadda, yadda....
Nothing underhanded about that in the least, you get replacement parts value pluse a dime or two for pain & suffering, and her agent might get a week off the Pepto Bismol... :whistle:
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- captaincrusty51
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Condolences on your mishap.
Call her insurance agent and find out what her deductable is - usually in the range of $250 - $500. The call her and offer to settle for some miniscule discount off of her deductable in order to do the repairs yourself, keep the insurance companies out of it, off her record, yadda, yadda....
Nothing underhanded about that in the least, you get replacement parts value pluse a dime or two for pain & suffering, and her agent might get a week off the Pepto Bismol... :whistle:
That was my initial thought, but the way she was bitching at me in the parking lot, she probably thinks it's my fault for parking there.
After I pick up the police report tomorrow, I guess I'll try her agent.
I hope I have the good sense to get off the road when when my brain turns to mush.
1978 KZ650C
Keihin CR Special carbs, MAC 4 into 1, Koni Shocks, Emgo Pods
2002 ZRX1200R
Akrapovic exhaust, Teds Ignition Advance, Steering Damper, Dunlop Qualifier tires, Corbin GF/L,Rear tire hugger, Tsukigi braces
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- KZ_Rage
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If her insurance uses their guidelines for value of bikes no longer listed in any "blue book", it will be a total probably. Hopefully they will let you get estimates yourself and not use a flat value chart due to the age of the bike. Don't be afraid to ask what the max dollar is before you submit. Once you submit the damage has been established and the bike might get a salvage title if you buy it back as a total loss from the insurance company. Try to work with them on a settlement amount based on your expense you have in the bike if the amount they are willing to pay and the amount you need differ in their favor and not yours.
Bring in copies of bikes for sale the same or similar for a bike like yours, plus all recent receipts of parts or work you have had dome to it, be sure to bring up loss of use and any other expense you may have from dealing with this claim like plate transfer fees and the such. If the insurance company tries to screw you you can take them and her to court for not providing reasonable recovery for your loss. Depending in what state your in you might be able to take them to small claims court if you can keep it under the maximum for claims in that court. This is assuming your willing to settle for that amount. If you need more than the small claims damage limitation amount or they exclude insurance disputs, you'll have to get a lawyer and file an action against the insurer and the old lady.
As for the frame, if the bike doesn't lean more than it used to when on the side stand then you're probably OK. Check the welds nearest to the sidestand mount for signs of paint missing or cracks. Check any nearby bolts or flanges for signs of stress, this would probably show up in anything that threads into aluminum like the engine case first. As for the handle, check your handlebars really good for being bent. Same goes for the forks. If you go back and look at the pavement where the bike was when hit it should give you a good idea of how much the bike scooted after impact. The more the better in my opinion as it didn't plant and take the full force. If it planted and the push force rather than sudden sharp impact force cracked the point cover I'd be worried a bit and check everything I could for signs of stress.
If worse comes to worse and you lose your fight, you can always buy it back from the insurer for salvage value. You then can find another low cost titled bike in need of what you have on your old bike and transfer your better parts onto that bike as needed. It isn't as bad as it might seem, just use a digital camera and take a million photos if your not intimate with where things go. You'll do fine and there is always sites like this to ask for help if you forget how something goes back on.
1979 KZ1000E1 SOLD!
1984 KZ550F2 SOLD!
2006 ZG1000A6F (Totaled)
2001 ZRX1200R (Sold)
2001 Sprint 955i ST (daily rider)
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- KZ_Rage
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Post edited by: KZ_Rage, at: 2006/06/22 23:40
1979 KZ1000E1 SOLD!
1984 KZ550F2 SOLD!
2006 ZG1000A6F (Totaled)
2001 ZRX1200R (Sold)
2001 Sprint 955i ST (daily rider)
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- Pterosaur
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Pterosaur wrote:
Condolences on your mishap.
Call her insurance agent and find out what her deductable is - usually in the range of $250 - $500. The call her and offer to settle for some miniscule discount off of her deductable in order to do the repairs yourself, keep the insurance companies out of it, off her record, yadda, yadda....
That was my initial thought, but the way she was bitching at me in the parking lot, she probably thinks it's my fault for parking there.
After I pick up the police report tomorrow, I guess I'll try her agent.
Capital idea.
While KZ_Rage pretty much has reality mapped out, if her agent is an independent, you might luck out...
By confining your contact to the agent, and sounding him out amiably, you may be able to manouver into the above scenario.
If Granny Muckinfuss' assault vehicle is as cod-walloped as it sounds, that poor agent probably has a book on her a foot thick, and the carrier may be perilously close to dropping her. That's a lost premium, something he would like to avoid, perhaps enough for him to make a phone call to her so as to broker a private deal...
It's worth a shot.
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- rattler
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- pumps
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Check out our site. kcvjmc.org
1977 Yamaha XS650
2000 Kaw W650
2 KZ440 LTDs , a 79 KZ400H and an 83 Belt Drive
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