Should I notify Them?????
#1
i agree with green scooby and mr.cookie 100percent.
god forbid, if you are in an accident the insurance company will have no hesitation in stroking you for undeclared mods.
[Edited by jon44w - 11/1/2001 1:23:01 AM]
god forbid, if you are in an accident the insurance company will have no hesitation in stroking you for undeclared mods.
[Edited by jon44w - 11/1/2001 1:23:01 AM]
#2
Having Scooby D/Pipe fitted this weekend, I've got a scooby back box already, should I notify the Insurers. I was told today I should.
What do you reckon & what am I expecting to pay as an extra.
Thank you
SCOBY
What do you reckon & what am I expecting to pay as an extra.
Thank you
SCOBY
#3
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Apr 2000
Location: www.mrcookie.co.uk
Posts: 5,757
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Possibly won't pay any extra, as some companies allow for a set percentage increase, and yes you should coz if you have a prang it'll be there quickest route out of insuring you and you'll be well up the creek and lacking a paddle.
Si
Si
#5
Yes, definetely tell them.
I told my insurance company before I took out the policy that I intended to fit a SS Zorst. There was no charge.
Don't tell them if you replace the CAT with a plain pipe.
I told my insurance company before I took out the policy that I intended to fit a SS Zorst. There was no charge.
Don't tell them if you replace the CAT with a plain pipe.
#6
I'd speak to the dealer as well if it's under warranty. I was considering removing one of the cats, etc. and checked with the dealer. In their words any mods to the exhaust that aren't approved could give cause to invalidate the warranty on the engine. AT £12K a pop for a new unit I'm notta messing unless it's a ProDrive.
#7
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: The Great White North
Posts: 25,080
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Should I notify them, YES! without a doubt or hesitation. You might be lucky and find it won't cost anything for the DP, however, if you don't delcare it and have a prang and the ins co find out about the DP then they might well refuse your claim, then you're stuffed.
From my somewhat very,very limited understadning of insurance, most ins co's consider a mod to be anything that changes the car from the original specification as defined by the cars manufacturers. Think they might be ok with you adding an air freshener or two but a DP certainly changes it (for the better ) from the original spec.
If the above is wrong them someone (Rum*? InsBro?) please correct me.
As it happens I'm considering a DP and am in process of contacting my insurers to find out a) if they'll let me do it (should do seeing the other mods I have!) b) how much it'll cost me to do it.
From my somewhat very,very limited understadning of insurance, most ins co's consider a mod to be anything that changes the car from the original specification as defined by the cars manufacturers. Think they might be ok with you adding an air freshener or two but a DP certainly changes it (for the better ) from the original spec.
If the above is wrong them someone (Rum*? InsBro?) please correct me.
As it happens I'm considering a DP and am in process of contacting my insurers to find out a) if they'll let me do it (should do seeing the other mods I have!) b) how much it'll cost me to do it.
Trending Topics
#9
Declare it but don't tell them it's decatted unless they ask. If you have the centre cat still in the system it is still legal but if it is totally decatted it won't pass it's MOT and the company might refuse to insure it! I had a company cancel a policy on these grounds.
#10
Posted by Markus:
From my somewhat very,very limited understadning of insurance, most ins co's consider a mod to be anything that changes the car from the original specification as defined by the cars manufacturers.
What about different tyres??. Surely every Tom, Dick or Harry with any car you care to mention replaces tyres /exhausts with Kwik-Fit specials rather than getting manufacturers original spec. Everyone with a car over a few years old would have to declare mods. This simply does not happen.
From my somewhat very,very limited understadning of insurance, most ins co's consider a mod to be anything that changes the car from the original specification as defined by the cars manufacturers.
What about different tyres??. Surely every Tom, Dick or Harry with any car you care to mention replaces tyres /exhausts with Kwik-Fit specials rather than getting manufacturers original spec. Everyone with a car over a few years old would have to declare mods. This simply does not happen.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
ozzy
Computer & Technology Related
3
16 October 2002 05:05 PM