Ouch!
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LesXRN

Original Poster:

771 posts

142 months

Wednesday 3rd January 2024
quotequote all
I feel for the owner, a hydraulic misshap will be a pretty penny. The last Vanquish I saw having a new engine cost £28,000.

cayman-black

13,251 posts

239 months

Wednesday 3rd January 2024
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poor car....

CatalystV12V

872 posts

204 months

Wednesday 3rd January 2024
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oh dear.... hydro-lock is very easy to achieve on our cars..

kevin_cambs_uk

553 posts

77 months

Wednesday 3rd January 2024
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That is what I call a bad day

Kev

wibble cb

4,093 posts

230 months

Wednesday 3rd January 2024
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It happens a lot , this was a Ferrari left in an underpass by a lawyer trying to get to Toronto airport back in 2013….can’t have been cheap either


LesXRN

Original Poster:

771 posts

142 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
quotequote all
The photo of the Aston led my wife to ask if the insurance would cover the damage, I guess not.

As for the road in question, it has flooded ever since it was opened a few years ago, it's a nightmare for the locals.

CatalystV12V

872 posts

204 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
quotequote all
LesXRN said:
The photo of the Aston led my wife to ask if the insurance would cover the damage, I guess not.

As for the road in question, it has flooded ever since it was opened a few years ago, it's a nightmare for the locals.
I would doubt it... as the drive made the decision to enter the water... The air intakes are right behind the grill, water will just wash in and get sucked straight up in to the inlet manifold.

skhannes

301 posts

35 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
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Another sad case - this is a brand new Mclaren less than 1000 miles, a victim of Hurricane Ian. Car was in the owner's garage, sea water made its way in the garage (like filling a swimming pool) once the water pressure was too great, it blew the garage doors off sending this car floating out into the street.


C5_Steve

7,501 posts

126 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
quotequote all
skhannes said:
Another sad case - this is a brand new Mclaren less than 1000 miles, a victim of Hurricane Ian. Car was in the owner's garage, sea water made its way in the garage (like filling a swimming pool) once the water pressure was too great, it blew the garage doors off sending this car floating out into the street.

Just wait until you see what Freddie's done with it......

(look up Tavarish on YouTube)

alscar

8,086 posts

236 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
quotequote all
LesXRN said:
The photo of the Aston led my wife to ask if the insurance would cover the damage, I guess not.

As for the road in question, it has flooded ever since it was opened a few years ago, it's a nightmare for the locals.
A successful ( or not ) Insurance claim will all depend on whether the applicable Insurer classifies the incident as Avoidable or Unavoidable.
If a driver has simply driven into water on a road having seen other cars successfully go through it may be difficult for said Insurer to decline the claim.
It might also depend upon the Insurance policy itself small print !

Lionhead

27 posts

29 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
quotequote all
LesXRN said:
The photo of the Aston led my wife to ask if the insurance would cover the damage, I guess not.

As for the road in question, it has flooded ever since it was opened a few years ago, it's a nightmare for the locals.
The insurance company may pay out. An idiotic friend of mine thought it would be cool to show off in his X5M50D and drive fast through some light road flooding and the innevitable happened. When speaking with the insurance company, they asked whether it was reasonable to assume he could make it through the water based on the level, to which he replied that he assumed he could get through as he had seen others drive through it and the road wasn't closed. He obviously suggested he went through at a sensible speed. Car was written off and he got a full payout.

macdeb

8,727 posts

278 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
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I honestly can't believe how stupid some people are to drive through and unknown depth of water. Especially not knowing where air intakes are. Just a very small amount of water in cylinder will wreck an engine.

Jon39

14,454 posts

166 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
quotequote all

Lionhead said:
The insurance company may pay out. An idiotic friend of mine thought it would be cool to show off in his X5M50D and drive fast through some light road flooding and the innevitable happened. When speaking with the insurance company, they asked whether it was reasonable to assume he could make it through the water based on the level, to which he replied that he assumed he could get through as he had seen others drive through it and the road wasn't closed. He obviously suggested he went through at a sensible speed. Car was written off and he got a full payout.

Whether the car in the picture would be an insurance uneconomic write-off, would probably depend on whether the electrics have become waterlogged.

If the rectification work required, is replacement engine only and the insurers agree to pay, then a further problem may occur.
There are no replacement V12 (non-turbo) engines available from Aston Martin.
Rebuilt replacement engines used to be supplied on an exchange basis, but if the owner's engine block had been holed, it would not have been accepted as an exchange.

Some independent specialists are beginning to buy salvage Aston Martins, so that they have parts available for their own use.


Pflanzgarten

6,936 posts

48 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
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Whenever I see these or the various Rufford Ford expensive car mishap videos I immediately think it's an insurance job to bin off a problematic/unwanted car.

I know two people who have (accidentally) written off cars by driving into flood water (one when I was in it!) and both received full payouts with no questions asked.


CatalystV12V

872 posts

204 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
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Pflanzgarten said:
Whenever I see these or the various Rufford Ford expensive car mishap videos I immediately think it's an insurance job to bin off a problematic/unwanted car.

I know two people who have (accidentally) written off cars by driving into flood water (one when I was in it!) and both received full payouts with no questions asked.
Wow , I'm amazed... but as you say its difficult to prove it wasn't accidental..

LTP

2,864 posts

135 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
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CatalystV12V said:
Wow , I'm amazed... but as you say its difficult to prove it wasn't accidental..
Especially as the Owners' Manual states that the maximum wading depth is no higher than the level of the front splitter.

Pflanzgarten

6,936 posts

48 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
quotequote all
LTP said:
CatalystV12V said:
Wow , I'm amazed... but as you say its difficult to prove it wasn't accidental..
Especially as the Owners' Manual states that the maximum wading depth is no higher than the level of the front splitter.
It just looked an inch deep to me your honour.

Stanley Rous

122 posts

232 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
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I don’t know the road but it looks like a dual carriageway. Is there a hard shoulder there as if not and there are other cars driving through it’s a tricky one to avoid? Not like you can turn around or reverse back by the looks of it and would take a call to the emergency services on a case of what “might” happen if you attempt it.

ram_g

68 posts

28 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
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Maybe that Aston driver had just relocated from Miami after selling his C8 Corvette…

https://youtu.be/DTy8CyFq_hI?si=dVCPVfKTZrg-y1XA

LooneyTunes

8,944 posts

181 months

Thursday 4th January 2024
quotequote all
alscar said:
LesXRN said:
The photo of the Aston led my wife to ask if the insurance would cover the damage, I guess not.

As for the road in question, it has flooded ever since it was opened a few years ago, it's a nightmare for the locals.
A successful ( or not ) Insurance claim will all depend on whether the applicable Insurer classifies the incident as Avoidable or Unavoidable.
If a driver has simply driven into water on a road having seen other cars successfully go through it may be difficult for said Insurer to decline the claim.
It might also depend upon the Insurance policy itself small print !
Bit of a difference watching much higher vehicles go through vs trying in a Vanquish? Doesn’t take a genius to realise that the wading depth for such a car is likely to be minimal.