Crash damage assessment

Crash damage assessment

Author
Discussion

georgeyboy12345

Original Poster:

3,573 posts

37 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
Thought I’d draw upon the pistonheads hive mind, see if anyone has any useful opinions on what needs doing to fix this crash damage, or is it terminal?

My nephew in the Philippines crashed his car, see pics. The car is a Toyota Vios, which you don’t get in the UK, I think they are basically a Yaris with a boot. Madly, he was able to drive it the 10 miles or so home from where he crashed it, he said the steering felt heavy. He has no insurance, it’s not a requirement there. Also, no requirement for any kind of roadworthiness test, or even a driving test - seemlingly, once you are over 16, you apply for a licence, pay some money and that’s it, you can drive! Labour is also very cheap, so what might write a car off over here, won’t over there.






Edited by georgeyboy12345 on Monday 20th May 11:33

Krikkit

26,672 posts

183 months

Monday 20th May
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Doesn't look that bad - slap a bumper, wing and headlight on it, cheap spray job, get the steering checked, job jobbed.

Triumph Man

8,751 posts

170 months

Monday 20th May
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Good god. Apparently you don't require tyres with tread on them either!

georgeyboy12345

Original Poster:

3,573 posts

37 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
Triumph Man said:
Good god. Apparently you don't require tyres with tread on them either!
Indeed. It’s a good job there isn’t a monsoon season there or anything like that!

georgeyboy12345

Original Poster:

3,573 posts

37 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
Krikkit said:
Doesn't look that bad - slap a bumper, wing and headlight on it, cheap spray job, get the steering checked, job jobbed.
This was my thinking too, but didn’t know if there was anything obvious I missed.

LunarOne

5,402 posts

139 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
georgeyboy12345 said:
Triumph Man said:
Good god. Apparently you don't require tyres with tread on them either!
Indeed. It’s a good job there isn’t a monsoon season there or anything like that!
The road has plenty of ruts and grooves so that the tyres don't need to.

stef1808

957 posts

159 months

Monday 20th May
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Impossible to tell from the pictures if any damage to the steering / suspension.

poo at Paul's

14,218 posts

177 months

Monday 20th May
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Tell him to get hunting for a second hand wing and bumper for it, and look for them in the same colour, so it will save him 700 quid of paintwork.
The bonnet has a little nick on the corner, I’d not worry about it, or get a smart repair, or a sticker on it! 2nd hand headlight, Polish wheel up, and it’s sorted.

Wing and bumper just bolt on parts. Just take time hunting for the correct parts in correct colour.

InformationSuperHighway

6,151 posts

186 months

Monday 20th May
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That part of the frame that holds the wing on looks bent to me. Might be tricky to just bolt a new wing on.

Piersman2

6,612 posts

201 months

Monday 20th May
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That front chassis leg looks a bit damaged, but just do what I did once with an old cavalier, bottle jack / hammer it roughly correct again and just bolt on the replacement wing.

Strangely enough that old cavalier looked OK when I'd finished, well enough to sell it a few months later. So long as you didn't park it on a flat surface and look at it from the front, then the inch difference in wing heights and slightly skew-whiff front bumper became much more noticeable. biggrin