Catagory D write off or not? :S
Catagory D write off or not? :S
Author
Discussion

smiffy180

Original Poster:

6,021 posts

171 months

Tuesday 17th April 2012
quotequote all
Had a HPI check for a car i want, the guy already told me the previous owner had a bump and the rear bumper and panel was replaced. The hpi check said Cat D write off which means 60% or more of the cars value in damage was done. Now im confused as ive seen the car, been for a test drive etc. The car was in perfect condition.
The claim was made in 2008 which means roughly 15k of damage would have been done? (35k new in 06) so why would someone fix it or is the HPI telling white lies?
Cheers

CampDavid

9,145 posts

219 months

Tuesday 17th April 2012
quotequote all
smiffy180 said:
Had a HPI check for a car i want, the guy already told me the previous owner had a bump and the rear bumper and panel was replaced. The hpi check said Cat D write off which means 60% or more of the cars value in damage was done. Now im confused as ive seen the car, been for a test drive etc. The car was in perfect condition.
The claim was made in 2008 which means roughly 15k of damage would have been done? (35k new in 06) so why would someone fix it or is the HPI telling white lies?
Cheers
Cat D means insurance chose not to repair for a bunch of reasons, by no means does that mean a 15k bill. Was it under 12 months old in that time

not260

143 posts

167 months

Tuesday 17th April 2012
quotequote all
Sounds perfectly reasonable to me. Rear panel, bumper, possible quarter panel etc then paint could cost a fortune depending on the car. Then the hire car costs for the period that the repair takes which could be a while, especially if they have to wait for parts etc.

snuffle

1,587 posts

203 months

Tuesday 17th April 2012
quotequote all
Someone fixed it beacause there was profit to be made.

Cat D, or any Cat rating for that matter, is never done to a fixed % of value, althogh its use as a rough guide.

Get it checked over by someone that knows what they are looking for, unless you are suitably confident.

It should be cheaper to buy than a non Cat'd vehicle, but a Cat rating does not necessarily mean a bad car.

Remember there are plenty of non Cat'd cars out there that may have suffered greater damage or have been repaired to a lower quality,
But they will not show a history due to insurance or private paying the repair bill.

smiffy180

Original Poster:

6,021 posts

171 months

Tuesday 17th April 2012
quotequote all
Ah thats good had an heart attack as i put a deposit down first (oopsies) but i love the car and just waiting for insurance to get back to me. There will be photos when ive bought the car smile

SmoothCriminal

5,746 posts

220 months

Tuesday 17th April 2012
quotequote all
You will have plenty of people on here saying you shouldn't buy a cat registered car and all the related 'mates stories' about bodge job fixing and that insurance companies don't insure cat reg cars (which is bs)

I had a cat registered car and it was faultless.

Aslong as you are happy and you get a good price good luck to you fella.

davepoth

29,395 posts

220 months

Tuesday 17th April 2012
quotequote all
CampDavid said:
smiffy180 said:
Had a HPI check for a car i want, the guy already told me the previous owner had a bump and the rear bumper and panel was replaced. The hpi check said Cat D write off which means 60% or more of the cars value in damage was done. Now im confused as ive seen the car, been for a test drive etc. The car was in perfect condition.
The claim was made in 2008 which means roughly 15k of damage would have been done? (35k new in 06) so why would someone fix it or is the HPI telling white lies?
Cheers
Cat D means insurance chose not to repair for a bunch of reasons, by no means does that mean a 15k bill. Was it under 12 months old in that time
06 car (perhaps a 56 which would take it into 07), 08 claim, maybe just possible I suppose. If the car was less than 12 months old then the car would be Cat D straight away as I think insurance policies will normally do that for new cars. Not too sure as I have never crashed a new one.

smiffy180

Original Poster:

6,021 posts

171 months

Wednesday 18th April 2012
quotequote all
CampDavid said:
smiffy180 said:
Had a HPI check for a car i want, the guy already told me the previous owner had a bump and the rear bumper and panel was replaced. The hpi check said Cat D write off which means 60% or more of the cars value in damage was done. Now im confused as ive seen the car, been for a test drive etc. The car was in perfect condition.
The claim was made in 2008 which means roughly 15k of damage would have been done? (35k new in 06) so why would someone fix it or is the HPI telling white lies?
Cheers
Cat D means insurance chose not to repair for a bunch of reasons, by no means does that mean a 15k bill. Was it under 12 months old in that time
Would have been nearly 2 years old at the day of the crash

deltashad

6,731 posts

218 months

Wednesday 18th April 2012
quotequote all
So come on then, what car is it?

Alex@POD

6,454 posts

236 months

Wednesday 18th April 2012
quotequote all
The cost of repair quickly piles up when insurance companies are doing estimates... I bought a cat D Laguna once at auction, to be repaired professionally would have needed a new headlight, wing, bonnet and grille, plus spraying the lot and labour.
I got the wing, headlight and grille from a car the same color in a scrappy, and bent/filled/sprayed the bonnet myself, total cost of repairs £100 or so.

essayer

10,317 posts

215 months

Wednesday 18th April 2012
quotequote all
You must tell your insurance company.

Make sure you get it cheap, because when you sell it in future, people will batter you on price.