since their value will barely be 4 figures anyway.
Here that Jez? Your S430 with Cat C after a small carpark dink is barely worth 4 figures anyway.
since their value will barely be 4 figures anyway.
i was referencing the scenic posted above. Stop being an arse fox !
On older cars, there are ones (like the scenic posted above) that get written off as a cat C with very little damage. But these cars are of so little value anyway to get written off the in the first place, the savings of going cat C won't be worth it, since their value will barely be 4 figures anyway.
Sorry to dig up this thread again, but i was just mooching about the PH classifieds and saw this:
http://www.pistonheads.co.uk/sales/2461141.htm
It's a Cat D and LOOK at it. It's destroyed! Just something to think about if you go to look at a car and the owner says "oh yeah, it's a Cat D, but don't worry about it, that just means it had light, superficial damage".
P.s. also, that seller is being a bit optimistic isn't he?! £8.5k for a destroyed 2006 335i with 73k on the clock and no iDrive. I could get an uncrashed one with that spec for about £12k!
[TW]Fox;18414591 said:Did you know Jez's Mercedes S430 is a Category C writeoff? Do you know why? Because it had a scrape in a carpark. Literally just that - a scrape in a carpark. A scuffed bumper and a cracked light cluster with a mark on the wing. It was written off Category C for that because the cost of an S Class light cluster, replacement bumper and work at a Mercedes Benz authorised repairer along with a hire S Class was many thousands of pounds.
Jez fixed it himself for literally a few hundred quid.
YOU ARE OVER REACING
THERES NOTHING WRONG WITH IT !!!! ONE ONE ONE
Lick of paint and some T Cut it will be good as new![]()
[TW]Fox;18495745 said:I do wonder about you at times. Nobody has disputed that a high value Cat D/C car might have been involved in quite a hefty accident![]()
you were because you'd pick an argument with yourself if nobody was around.
No, this isn't neccesarily the case at all. It simply means the repair cost exceeds the value of the vehicle
Some Cat C writeoffs, especially higher value cars, have indeed been involved in nasty accidents but many have not.
The biggest factor in whether a car becomes a Cat C or Cat D writeoff is the value of the car, not the severity of the accident.
Thats because new and expensive cars which are Cat C have been involved in major smashes.
Cat C cars *can* be a major risk. If you are buying a 2 year old Mercedes and it's Cat C it's almost certainly been in a huge accident. If you are buying a 10 year old Mercedes and it's Cat C there is a high chance somebody broke a light cluster and scraped the bumper so its worthy of more investigation.
[TW]Fox;18495900 said:This irritated me.
Would have sufficed to explain what happened. I've learnt that when that happens the best thing to do is to leave the thread first, because like a dog with a bone, that won't be you. So i'll do it instead.
[TW]Fox;18497648 said:That wont be a Cat C - it will be completely unclassified.
Why do you say that out of curiosity?
I would think its high cost of repairs offset by its high value would make it thus?