schmookeeg
En-Route
...what?
In fact, this guy too:
It's been two weeks of my trying to get an insurance quote. I have an active policy, so they know my deets and they know that my checks clear. I've wanted to move on an airplane but will not do so without understanding the current insurance landscape for the thing. It's another Beech, it's even another Baron. I ooze time in type and am a BPPP Instructor and they know these too.
My requested hull value quote is for 100K. Current ask from the selling broker is 105K. The plane is probably in the lower 50% of equipage for the type, but not a roach. Nice paint, reasonable interior, middle class avionics with autopilot and waas gps. Engines at 3/4 TBO, neither one over.
What are these underwriters worried about? I thought the moral hazard was with OVER-insuring an aircraft then dunking it into the ocean and enjoying a fraudulent little payday. You'd think they would love someone under-insuring and then they pocket the salvage to boot after a weak payout.
I'm sort of gobsmacked that my broker didn't throw it in the underwriter's face before presenting it to me as a reasonable statement. I sent a terse but patient reply, however... my first draft was the equivalent of a Howler in the JK Rowling universe.
I'm missing something here, or someone is on crack. Ideas?
Plane is likely sold by now due to insurance bungling. Sigh.
In fact, this guy too:
It's been two weeks of my trying to get an insurance quote. I have an active policy, so they know my deets and they know that my checks clear. I've wanted to move on an airplane but will not do so without understanding the current insurance landscape for the thing. It's another Beech, it's even another Baron. I ooze time in type and am a BPPP Instructor and they know these too.
My requested hull value quote is for 100K. Current ask from the selling broker is 105K. The plane is probably in the lower 50% of equipage for the type, but not a roach. Nice paint, reasonable interior, middle class avionics with autopilot and waas gps. Engines at 3/4 TBO, neither one over.
What are these underwriters worried about? I thought the moral hazard was with OVER-insuring an aircraft then dunking it into the ocean and enjoying a fraudulent little payday. You'd think they would love someone under-insuring and then they pocket the salvage to boot after a weak payout.
I'm sort of gobsmacked that my broker didn't throw it in the underwriter's face before presenting it to me as a reasonable statement. I sent a terse but patient reply, however... my first draft was the equivalent of a Howler in the JK Rowling universe.
I'm missing something here, or someone is on crack. Ideas?
Plane is likely sold by now due to insurance bungling. Sigh.