poadeleted20
Deleted
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2005
- Messages
- 31,250
Hull plus 100/1M liability -- 1M smooth is closest answer, so I checked it.
I can't believe so many people fly without hull insurance! I'd think that if you have a loan on the plane the bank would require it, so unless you own the plane outright AND can afford a total hull loss, not carrying hull insurance seems foolish.
It also seems like it could lead to poor decisionmaking. Too many pilots try to save the plane, and some kill themselves in the process. So much for the "insurance company owns the plane" idea if you have a malfunction. Seems like an excessively bad idea to me!
Folks who fly with hull insurance prolly don't care about crashing the plane if something goes wrong. Heck, they just figure the insurance company owns it anyway, so why bother to fly or maintain it right.
Losing my plane will not change my lifestyle. It's a luxury, not a necessity. I won't insure against a loss that will not change my lifestyle. The last time I paid for collision on a vehicle was 1993. That's when I paid off the loan. since then, I've bought used cars with cash. If I total one, I'll buy another. I figure I've saved enough in premiums to pay for it.
Yes, you should have.I prolly should have used a smiley there. It was written totally tongue in cheek.
Tell it to my bank.However, I still think hull insurance is a waste of $$$$.
Yes, you should have.
Tell it to my bank.
I can't believe so many people fly without hull insurance! I'd think that if you have a loan on the plane the bank would require it, so unless you own the plane outright AND can afford a total hull loss, not carrying hull insurance seems foolish.
It also seems like it could lead to poor decisionmaking. Too many pilots try to save the plane, and some kill themselves in the process. So much for the "insurance company owns the plane" idea if you have a malfunction. Seems like an excessively bad idea to me!
Just the oposite, If the weather is bad I just do not fly. I do not have to. If I was in business that needed to fly at anytime I would probably have it.
I do not plan on bending up the plane so spending $2,000.00 a year just seems foolish. I do have life insurance but not hull insurance. So do you really think I am going to save the plane over my life just because I have insurance and the plane does not!
All aircraft registered in Minnesota are required to have liability insurance.
It also seems like it could lead to poor decisionmaking. Too many pilots try to save the plane, and some kill themselves in the process. So much for the "insurance company owns the plane" idea if you have a malfunction. Seems like an excessively bad idea to me!
I'd guess that the average hull value of people's planes is somewhere in the $50-70k range. If so, and if you're actually a safe pilot (those that think they're way ahead of the curve usually are not), maybe buying insurance for hull value isn't necessary. I probably wouldn't do it, because there isn't any dangerous weather here, and I can live with the tiny risk of losing $70k.
But if you're flying a plane with hull value in the $300-400k range, it's a different game. Now we're talking about a house vs. a fancy car. I would get hull for that, even if it is $6k/year.
-Felix
For some reason, when people think about saving their hull insurance premiums, they mistakenly include both hull and liability costs.
If I save hull insurance on all my vehicles(plane, cars, boat, jetski) I save well over $10,000/year in today dollars. Simple non-calculus NPV computation means that every five years or so I can buy another older single engine plane.
I agree, it is relative, Lance. I was saying that if someone could afford a 400k or a 50k airplane, he might chose not to get insurance for the 50k airplane.It's all relative Felix. If you own a $400k airplane you are probably as able to afford the loss as someone who owns a $50k airplane. That said, I still carry hull insurance, I just wish there was a way to get a substantial premium reduction in return for a $10-20k deductible and/or an exclusion for a pilot induced gear up landing. But personally given that hull insurance costs 1.5-2% of the stated value you'd have to go a lot more than 6 years to beat the system (more like 50-67 years). For some reason, when people think about saving their hull insurance premiums, they mistakenly include both hull and liability costs.
Not all of us. Some folks actually have degrees in math/comp sci and know how to compute an actuarial. If I save hull insurance on all my vehicles(plane, cars, boat, jetski) I save well over $10,000/year in today dollars. Simple non-calculus NPV computation means that every five years or so I can buy another older single engine plane.
Not all of us. Some folks actually have degrees in math/comp sci and know how to compute an actuarial. If I save hull insurance on all my vehicles(plane, cars, boat, jetski) I save well over $10,000/year in today dollars. Simple non-calculus NPV computation means that every five years or so I can buy another older single engine plane.
Well it appears to me that your degree isn't holding up too well. Yes every 5 years you could buy another $50k airplane, but could you buy a plan, car, boat, and jetski every 5 years for that? How many years of not paying your hull insurance on a $50k airplane would pay for another $50k airplane? Including the premiums saved on all that other stuff just confuses the issue (just like including the liability premium).
I didn't mean flying in bad weather - I meant you're away from home somewhere, without a hangar, and there's bad weather with the plane tied down on the ramp. Ask Bill and Brent about that one. And the same thing happened to N271G back in the 80's, the whole tail had to be replaced.
You, being an A&P, do have the advantage of being able to make major repairs much cheaper than the rest of us, if you want to put the time into it.
Not at all - However, *nobody* "plans" on bending the plane. Planes still get bent. That's why they're called "accidents." Nobody believes they're going to die in the next 5 minutes either, nor do they plan on it. That simple fact can lead to decisions that lead to bad outcomes.
It's your decision to make. So was financing my airplane, buy you claimed I was nuts (or foolish) for doing so...If you want to buy hull insurance that's fine with me. I just get a little miffed when people think I'm nuts for not buying it.
It's your decision to make. So was financing my airplane, buy you claimed I was nuts (or foolish) for doing so...
When you call others foolish, don't be surprised when it comes back to bite you. If you wish the right to make your choices unmolested, you should grant others that same right. My choice is different from yours; note that I have not said anything about the propriety of yours. Please grant me the same courtesy.I did make a blanket statement to the effect that hull insurance is a foolish waste of money. I stand by that statement.
Also, what was this, then?Well, I just went back and reviewed my post and damned if I can find where I called you personally nuts or foolish.
The first was certainly not a complimentary reference to Animal House, with any one of several derogatory implications; the second was a condescending reminder of a condescending post that had definite statements on how others should manage their money.Thank you sir, may I have another.
See post #43, para 2.
I can't believe so many people fly without hull insurance! I'd think that if you have a loan on the plane the bank would require it, so unless you own the plane outright AND can afford a total hull loss, not carrying hull insurance seems foolish.
It also seems like it could lead to poor decisionmaking. Too many pilots try to save the plane, and some kill themselves in the process. So much for the "insurance company owns the plane" idea if you have a malfunction. Seems like an excessively bad idea to me!
It shouldn't be any state's government business whether you insure or not. This is just simply the insurance lobby trying to force their product on unwilling buyers.
Same here.Own plane; have Liability and Hull coverage.
HR
I hear ya and it's true for lots of pilots regarding their decision making but, then they invariably have other deficiencies as well.
Somehow I have definately gained the ability to decide what I'm trying to save when an airplane is going down and the best way to do it.
Well, given the toy count, I think I'm doing all right. Even though I graduated a long time ago. Although I can't buy all of the toys every five years, I can buy one nice toy, or pay down a mortgage, or pay for grad school for my daughter, or take several nice vacations, or invest in the market, or blow it at Vegas. Seeing a theme here? It's my money, not Allstate's.
If you want to buy hull insurance that's fine with me. I just get a little miffed when people think I'm nuts for not buying it. Heck, maybe next week I'll have a loss and you can all say 'na-na-nana-na, told ya so'.
The hull insurance premium for my fleet is slightly more than 1% of insured value each year. I'm going to keep it. YMMV.
I prolly should have used a smiley there. It was written totally tongue in cheek. However, I still think hull insurance is a waste of $$$$.
As a corollary, finance and insure appreciating assets, but rent or pay cash for depreciating assets(planes).
I had a BLaw professor in grad school, NH Supreme Ct judge who, incidentally, served with Souter and had some great stories about him, who gave very sage advice about insurance. To whit -- buy as much as you can. Particularly liability insurance - one numnut who decides to sue you can cost a whole bunch more than decades of premia. I have assets to protect; ain't no way I'm flying without insurance.
.....That said, I still carry hull insurance, I just wish there was a way to get a substantial premium reduction in return for a $10-20k deductible and/or an exclusion for a pilot induced gear up landing. But personally given that hull insurance costs 1.5-2% of the stated value you'd have to go a lot more than 6 years to beat the system (more like 50-67 years).
Careful when you do this, though, because it also makes the insurance company more likely to total the airplane rather than fix it, since the total value will be lower.How about just underinsure the hull value? At 1.5 to 2% hull insurance cost of stated value, underinsuring the hull by $20K gives you $300-$400 premium reduction/year.
How about just underinsure the hull value? At 1.5 to 2% hull insurance cost of stated value, underinsuring the hull by $20K gives you $300-$400 premium reduction/year.
I can't believe so many people waste money on hull insurance!
And if you happen to crash land on state or federal land and they require on threat of prosecution that every scrap of aluminum be removed from the area, be it mountaintop or swamp, which kind of insurance pays?
So when you experience a less-catastrophic emergency and land off-airport hundreds of yards or even miles from a road, which kind of insurance pays to remove your aircraft for repair?
Which kind of insurance pays for damage to your aircraft from a third party and they can't or won't cover the damage?
And if you happen to crash land on state or federal land and they require on threat of prosecution that every scrap of aluminum be removed from the area, be it mountaintop or swamp, which kind of insurance pays?