Cool car, my aunt had one.My Dad was a Chrysler/Plymouth guy. When I was a kid he bought a brand new Fury III.
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Cool car, my aunt had one.My Dad was a Chrysler/Plymouth guy. When I was a kid he bought a brand new Fury III.
Mine turns 4 in August currently at 17.5k miles. I still treat it like it was brand new!!My Eco turns 3 in July. I only have 16,000 miles on it. I plan to run the wheels off it and the buy new wheels. At the current rate it'll take me 15 years to hit 100,000 miles. So, I plan to enjoy the no payments for the next decade.
So you're thinking of selling the vehicle because of out-of-warranty repairs that might never come up?Would you keep it or sell while it’s still low miles and under warranty? If I decide to keep it, I'm open to recommendations on Ford Warranty, best pricing.
I hope you have supplemental insurance for all the modifications. I was way too lazy to get that drawn up (stated cash value of mods) until it was too late. Insurance will pay out actual cash value, which to me didn't cover half the parts I put on, not to mention all the labor I did to install it.I for one, have no intention of parting from my 2022 hybrid due in part to all the modification I made to make it uniquely personal. Money and time not to be earned back.
Thanks for the advice. You make a valid argument. I hadn't thought of supplemental insurance, in fact, I didn't know such a thing existed. I will check with my agent. Thanks.So you're thinking of selling the vehicle because of out-of-warranty repairs that might never come up?
I suppose it's the same for extended warranties. You're basically betting that the vehicle will have repairs total up to more than the cost of the warranty. Extended warranties pay out far less in claims than they collect in revenue, otherwise they wouldn't be offered.
I suppose the answer depends on your financial situation. If the vehicle is an extra one that's just taking up space, sell it. If it's your only vehicle, keep it. At less than 4,000 miles a year, you could buy a low-mileage ESP for fairly cheap. Miles do more to wear out a car than age, hence why the ESPs are priced accordingly.
I hope you have supplemental insurance for all the modifications. I was way too lazy to get that drawn up (stated cash value of mods) until it was too late. Insurance will pay out actual cash value, which to me didn't cover half the parts I put on, not to mention all the labor I did to install it.
Now I'm still lazy and I got to the point where I'd rather just buy a vehicle with as much of what I want already installed. I carry supplemental coverage for the topper, but that was easy enough to set up since I had an invoice for the thing plus the labor to have it installed.
Another not-so-fun insurance fact: if you own a cargo trailer, your insurance will cover the trailer itself but generally not the contents, at least past a certain amount.Thanks for the advice. You make a valid argument. I hadn't thought of supplemental insurance, in fact, I didn't know such a thing existed. I will check with my agent. Thanks.
Good to know. Thank you. Why hasn't my insurance agent educated me about these things?!Another not-so-fun insurance fact: if you own a cargo trailer, your insurance will cover the trailer itself but generally not the contents, at least past a certain amount.
This is because insurance is about distribution of risk. The value of the trailer is known so the risk can be calculated. However, the trailer might contain air, or it might contain a million dollars in equipment and jewelry. Thus the contents are of an unknown risk and not covered past a set amount.
So if you're storing or transporting your antique heirlooms or really expensive tools or equipment in your cargo trailer, you generally need what is literally referred to as inland marine insurance. That covers property transported over land.