Would you buy a cat N?

Would you buy a cat N?

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Discussion

Chris77

Original Poster:

941 posts

194 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
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As per title I suppose, looking at a new work van and have found one that is listed as a category N, normal would keep scrolling when seeing anything listed as written off but this is the exact spec, colour and condition I’m after but priced around £6K less than others the same spec.

It’s with a dealer and states inspection welcome, so would look at getting an independent inspection done. Have read that it can make insurance harder/more expensive, any other advice or tips?

james_gt3rs

4,816 posts

191 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
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Not really worth it for me because although it makes it cheaper to buy, it's then harder to sell, so when you move on it probably costs the same as a non cat car overall?

V6todayEVmanana

765 posts

144 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
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I bought a repaired cat C car, the new classification of N and S is better than the old system which was based on cost of the damage I think.

Cat N is non structural so could just be panel/external fittings/wheel damage or water, either way wouldn't expect major issues.

Take it for a good drive, include 70 mph and hard braking, that should show up any badly fixed suspension, if it judders or the wheel pulls then I'd be likely to walk.

Always stated it to insurance companies after doing online quotes and prices never went up, none refused. The value of the car is reduced so don't expect to receive the current market value of a non-cat car if it comes to it.

I got a car that was cheaper, took it for 2 test drives, on my own inspection got a idea of where the damage was.

Planned to put 100k miles on the car hence when it comes to selling I didn't expect it to be popular anyway.

If it's quite new then I'd inquire about the warranty and if it's still covered.

Bit of context on cat N
A colleague had front offset collision in his E-Class, air bags fired and a bit of frontal damage, insurance company agreed to fix it and work started before further damage was found that if previously known would have resulted in a cat. Car now looks great and no one would be any the wiser but the car probably had more damage than most cat N on the market.

ZX10R NIN

27,625 posts

125 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
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if you plan on running it for a long time & it clears an independent inspection then this would make sense it's always worth chipping for a bit more off just because it's harder to sell.

maz8062

2,247 posts

215 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
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As has been stated, Cat N is the lesser of the evil damaged repairable cars. If you plan on using the van for a while and the price represents a significant discount (30-40%) of the non-salvage price, go for it. The only advice I would give is to find out who repaired the car post-accident. If it is an insurance approved Bodyshop you'll be fine - if it was an enthusiast that sourced the parts and did it themselves be wary as most cut corners and leave stuff out.

Good luck

Trevor555

4,457 posts

84 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
quotequote all
These gradings.

Does anyone actually go and inspect these cars to decide the grading?

I only ask as I spoke to a bodyshop manager years ago and he said no one comes out, it's done on a photo, or a discussion over the phone.

Has this changed?

I also bring this up because I've seen plenty of CAT D cars over the years that were awful underneath, with clearly visible kinks/damage.

I can't see insurance companies paying expert engineers to travel around the UK and put every car on a ramp to inspect it just to give it a grading.

There must be someone on here in the know.

I presume the categories are done before the cars get to Copart?

Anyone?

I've seen so many bodge repairs over the years, downright unsafe cars, that I stopped accepting jobs to inspect written off cars. I got fed up with sellers telling me "it was only minor damage" "it's only a CAT D"

And as a poster has said above, hit the brakes at 70mph to see what happens, do you feel lucky?

And a side note, I've also seen plenty of awful repairs on cars with clear Hpi's

maz8062

2,247 posts

215 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
quotequote all
Trevor555 said:
These gradings.

Does anyone actually go and inspect these cars to decide the grading?

I only ask as I spoke to a bodyshop manager years ago and he said no one comes out, it's done on a photo, or a discussion over the phone.

Has this changed?

I also bring this up because I've seen plenty of CAT D cars over the years that were awful underneath, with clearly visible kinks/damage.

I can't see insurance companies paying expert engineers to travel around the UK and put every car on a ramp to inspect it just to give it a grading.

There must be someone on here in the know.

I presume the categories are done before the cars get to Copart?

Anyone?

I've seen so many bodge repairs over the years, downright unsafe cars, that I stopped accepting jobs to inspect written off cars. I got fed up with sellers telling me "it was only minor damage" "it's only a CAT D"

And as a poster has said above, hit the brakes at 70mph to see what happens, do you feel lucky?

And a side note, I've also seen plenty of awful repairs on cars with clear Hpi's
The grading is classified as a result of an inspection by the insurance companies' loss adjuster, which takes into account the cost of repair, car value, hire car costs etc. They will then classify the car as Cat N, S, B, or whatever.

A lot of people buy these cars on Copart or wherever, buy the spare parts on eBay or a scrappy and get their mate to fix the car. In such circumstances, they tend to focus on what the eye can see and miss out on fundamental parts under or within the car

Trevor555

4,457 posts

84 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
quotequote all
maz8062 said:
The grading is classified as a result of an inspection by the insurance companies' loss adjuster, which takes into account the cost of repair, car value, hire car costs etc. They will then classify the car as Cat N, S, B, or whatever.
But do you know from personal experience they go to every storage compound site and actually see the car in the flesh?

Actually crawl underneath and have a good look?

Because they never used to.

V6todayEVmanana

765 posts

144 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
quotequote all
maz8062 said:
A lot of people buy these cars on Copart or wherever, buy the spare parts on eBay or a scrappy and get their mate to fix the car. In such circumstances, they tend to focus on what the eye can see and miss out on fundamental parts under or within the car
Even some dealers/companies behave in that way. The outfit that repaired mine made it look perfect, about 18 months later I noticed the paint on the wing and door was prone to stone chips, rest of the car's paint was fine.

The door still had tiny bits of broken glass visible, after a year or so the handle on the door broke, I took apart the door and noticed the handle had previously been glued together. I brought a new handle. Whilst the door was apart i saw the rivets for the inner door had been drilled out and replaced with bolts in a poor manner, some of the bolts were in holes drilled too large (poorly).

The handle and the paint was annoying but didn't lose sleep over them, the door bolts was poor workman ship and bothers me know as I think it;s the reason the door doesn't made a nice thud when closed.

Financially I did okay and I enjoy the car, it was bought as a workhorse to eat up the big commute so I'm not particular about the issues currently.

Chris77

Original Poster:

941 posts

194 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
quotequote all
Thanks for the input guys, I didn’t make it very clear in my post having read it back. The reason it caught my eye is the same spec is above my budget in that to get one fully loaded it would be 3/4 years older and 80k ish or higher mileage. The cat n one is 33k.

Plenty of food for thought, to be honest with the current situation and it is 6 hours drive away so not practical I don’t think

Trevor555

4,457 posts

84 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
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Chris77 said:
Thanks for the input guys, I didn’t make it very clear in my post having read it back. The reason it caught my eye is the same spec is above my budget in that to get one fully loaded it would be 3/4 years older and 80k ish or higher mileage. The cat n one is 33k.

Plenty of food for thought, to be honest with the current situation and it is 6 hours drive away so not practical I don’t think
If you do go take someone with you that's worked in a bodyshop, they'll know what they're looking for.

Vans can get written off quite easily because of the huge side panels. Some bodyshops that do insurance work will quote to cut out and replace whole panels rather than knock out and fill/repair.

Check the airbag light comes on with the ignition. You don't want to find out your airbags aren't working when you need them.

And as I said before, you need to get underneath and have a very good look.

Most of these vehicles are bought to resell and make money, so are often repaired as cheaply as possible to hold on to the profit.

Chris77

Original Poster:

941 posts

194 months

Tuesday 12th May 2020
quotequote all
Trevor555 said:
If you do go take someone with you that's worked in a bodyshop, they'll know what they're looking for.

Vans can get written off quite easily because of the huge side panels. Some bodyshops that do insurance work will quote to cut out and replace whole panels rather than knock out and fill/repair.

Check the airbag light comes on with the ignition. You don't want to find out your airbags aren't working when you need them.

And as I said before, you need to get underneath and have a very good look.

Most of these vehicles are bought to resell and make money, so are often repaired as cheaply as possible to hold on to the profit.
If I decide to investigate further I will certainly take your advice, thanks!

A500leroy

5,133 posts

118 months

Saturday 13th May 2023
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Are they more expensive to insure?

Nickp82

3,188 posts

93 months

Saturday 13th May 2023
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No not usually.

spoodler

2,093 posts

155 months

Saturday 13th May 2023
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A500leroy said:
Are they more expensive to insure?
Not in my experience, and I've owned a few.
Most of my cars nowadays are so old that it's taken for granted that they will have been damaged/repaired at some point. Whether that shows on an insurance marker is a different question...

macp

4,059 posts

183 months

Saturday 13th May 2023
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I bought a CAT N VW UP and it never once let me down. Drove perfectly. And as mentioned above it was no more expensive to insure. I then loaned it to my daughter for a holiday in Cornwall. Which it did with no issues. I then gave it to her and she wrote it off biggrin. In fairness it wasnt her fault. But although shook up she was fine and the car protected her. And still drove perfectly well. So absolutely I would buy another without hesitation.