- Wed Mar 27, 2019 3:11 pm
#9172
Not sure if this counts as technical... Well, it can certainly GET technical.
Having built this 612 special, I went to get an agreed value insurance policy on it, because I'm damned if I'll have some insurance assessor offering me 500 bullet book value for it if I'm involved in an accident. That wouldn't even buy a new crank. Having done a detailed breakdown of all the parts and costs it took to build this bike via bikesure/Adrian Flux, they've come back with a valuation of £5500. That doesn't even cover the purchase cost of a donor bike + the parts. Never mind labour, engineering work and finishing (there's £450 worth of candy paint on it).
I wonder if they have gone more towards a "market value" rather than a "replacement value". In fairness, it would cost a lot more to build a bike like this than you'd necessarily sell one for. But surely that's the point of a specialist insurance policy? Top allow me to replace my one-off/rare bike in the case of a total loss.
I was wondering a couple of things:
1) If anyone has any tips/tricks/advice for dealing with agreed value insurance? I'm frankly pretty pissed off with them. I've paid WAY over the odds for an insurance policy that I don't feel covers the replacement value of my bike. I'm actually minded to cancel it I'm so cross so if anyone has tips for another company I could use...(mind you, it's more than 14 days since I took it out. They only just came back to me with the valuation).
2) I have no idea where they got this figure from anyway. It seems plucked out of thin air. I've listed more than £5500 worth of parts, and that's without the many, many hours of labour involved. I wonder if anyone has bought/sold/seen for sale a 612 bullet recently and minds letting me know what it changed hands for? The one I've built is based on a 2003 bullet. It's a ground-up build with powdercoated frame and custom painted bodywork, a hitchcocks 612 kit, alloy mudguards, single seat, close ratio gearbox, aftermarket electronic dynamo/ignition and disc brake conversion (electra fork lowers rather than the bolt-on jobby). Umpteen extras/details (like £150 on LED lighting) but that's the bulk of the major parts.
Having built this 612 special, I went to get an agreed value insurance policy on it, because I'm damned if I'll have some insurance assessor offering me 500 bullet book value for it if I'm involved in an accident. That wouldn't even buy a new crank. Having done a detailed breakdown of all the parts and costs it took to build this bike via bikesure/Adrian Flux, they've come back with a valuation of £5500. That doesn't even cover the purchase cost of a donor bike + the parts. Never mind labour, engineering work and finishing (there's £450 worth of candy paint on it).
I wonder if they have gone more towards a "market value" rather than a "replacement value". In fairness, it would cost a lot more to build a bike like this than you'd necessarily sell one for. But surely that's the point of a specialist insurance policy? Top allow me to replace my one-off/rare bike in the case of a total loss.
I was wondering a couple of things:
1) If anyone has any tips/tricks/advice for dealing with agreed value insurance? I'm frankly pretty pissed off with them. I've paid WAY over the odds for an insurance policy that I don't feel covers the replacement value of my bike. I'm actually minded to cancel it I'm so cross so if anyone has tips for another company I could use...(mind you, it's more than 14 days since I took it out. They only just came back to me with the valuation).
2) I have no idea where they got this figure from anyway. It seems plucked out of thin air. I've listed more than £5500 worth of parts, and that's without the many, many hours of labour involved. I wonder if anyone has bought/sold/seen for sale a 612 bullet recently and minds letting me know what it changed hands for? The one I've built is based on a 2003 bullet. It's a ground-up build with powdercoated frame and custom painted bodywork, a hitchcocks 612 kit, alloy mudguards, single seat, close ratio gearbox, aftermarket electronic dynamo/ignition and disc brake conversion (electra fork lowers rather than the bolt-on jobby). Umpteen extras/details (like £150 on LED lighting) but that's the bulk of the major parts.