Forum Discussion

DryCamper11's avatar
DryCamper11
Explorer
Jul 19, 2016

Goodbye to our Beast- a 1973 Sportscoach

It was our retirement trip. Planned 6 months duration, We'd been out 6 weeks. Driving along in New Brunswick, a lovely morning, almost no traffic on a 2 lane highway, approaching Bathurst, NB. We'd left Kouchibouguac a couple hours earlier and we were headed for the Gaspe.

A car comes over the hill and then, with no warning, swerves head on into us. The impact took off the left side and the entire front of the RV, including the steering and brakes. We continued with no control across the highway and into the gulley, mud, water, and rock wall on the left. Our pride and joy, a 1973 Sportscoach, with 43 years of happy memories and its 4th rebuilt Chevy 454, 8 months old, was destroyed. Even the Jeep Wrangler toad was totalled (well, almost, we convinced them to just give us book value and we paid to have repairs to make it roadworthy to get us home.)

The other driver was apparently a 4 insulin shot a day diabetic who'd been sick that morning. She died in the impact. Our Beast died keeping us both alive. Cuts, scrapes, bruises, worsening of my back injury (I can't stand or sit for long and was horizontal in the side bed/couch) , the wife (driver) has broken bones in her foot, but we're both alive.

It's been 2 weeks and our Jeep was just repaired yesterday. We leave for home tomorrow. If you have a classic Sportscoach and need windows or other rare parts, contact B&C wrecking yard in Bathurst NB for possible salvage. The engine is probabky ok, and the generator 4kw Onan ran like a top, but we can't get them home.
  • DryCamper11 wrote:
    A photo:

    WOW! That's worse than I imagined. Thank goodness you guys are alright.
  • If the insurance company doesn't play fair on the RV then play really hard ball on your injuries compensation.
  • Agreed. It should be the other guy's insurance settling with you, not your insurance company, that is provided they other folks in the wrong had a policy in effect.

    I would already have a lawyer on tap, because the insurance company will surely try to minimize their costs. Given your injures, and future pain and suffering, you should sue for their policy maximum. That should bring them to the bargaining table with a reasonable compensation for your motorhome.
  • vjstangelo wrote:
    Agreed.
    I would already have a lawyer on tap, because the insurance company will surely try to minimize their costs. Given your injures, and future pain and suffering, you should sue for their policy maximum. That should bring them to the bargaining table with a reasonable compensation for your motorhome.

    I agree. This reminds me of an ad run by an attorney in Nevada that simply states; when the other guys insurance say you don't need an attorney, you need an attorney.
  • There were two steel barriers in front, the bumper and the front crossframe piece, which acted together to protect the front cab. However, even that would probably not have been sufficient to protect us. We were lucky that the two vehicles did not completely lock together at impact. We were still traveling forward after impact, and the car ended up several hundred feet behind us, after removing the lower left side of the Sportscoach.

    I just hope everyone out there takes care of themselves. I was thrown from the back to the front due to the impact. Without the seat belt, my better half would have gone through the front window.
  • The financial side of this tragedy illustrates the desirability of having "agreed value" insurance for older motorhomes in particular. Since list values are so low, one that has been maintained and upgraded has a greater value than what insurance companies are normally willing to pay. While I don't have it yet for my coach, I will be getting it in the near future as I have done considerable upgrades to my coach. It doesn't need to be an unrealistic value, but something that the owner can live with both the premium and the payout should it ever be needed such as in this case.
  • BigRabbitMan wrote:
    The financial side of this tragedy illustrates the desirability of having "agreed value" insurance for older motorhomes in particular. Since list values are so low, one that has been maintained and upgraded has a greater value than what insurance companies are normally willing to pay.

    I don't know if this will apply to motorhomes, but here goes anyway.
    My brother owned an automotive body shop back in the day that specialized in classic cars, Corvettes, etc. One day a customer came in with a very nice 69 Plymouth GTX with a wrecked front end. He told my brother that he went to the other guys insurance agent (other guy was at fault) to get compensation or repair for his car. The insurance agent told him the car was a total and here's a check for $2500. This guy looked the insurance agent straight in the eye and informed him that he could claim the car was a total, but he will now have to pay the appraised value of $30,000. He had the documents in hand. That was how the car ended up in my brothers shop as opposed to the scrap yard.
  • My wife and I were pretty shocked as we added up the cost of all the improvements we'd added over the years. I know I won't get all that back, but we've sent it to them as a detailed list of everything we'd done, and we're waiting for their response. Everyone is in limbo right now waiting for the final police report. When a fatality occurs, the report takes a long time. Nonetheless, the other insurance company has acknowledged informally that their driver was at fault.

    It seems kind of mercenary to be thinking about money, but I'm disabled and can't walk far so I don't know how long I'll be able to take RV trips. We'd like to get this resolved by next spring, if possible, so we can finish the lengthy vacation we've dreamed of. Every other trip we've had to head home on a time limit schedule, and during the return drive home, we've always thought about just chucking our responsibilities, and heading for some place new. This was the first trip where we could actually do that.

    We took our honeymoon in the Beast in 1979, and it has decades of happy memories for us, from the Yucatan, to Yellowstone, Newfoundland to Nova Scotia, and California to Florida. We miss it.
  • DryCamper11 wrote:
    My wife and I were pretty shocked as we added up the cost of all the improvements we'd added over the years. I know I won't get all that back, but we've sent it to them as a detailed list of everything we'd done, and we're waiting for their response. Everyone is in limbo right now waiting for the final police report. When a fatality occurs, the report takes a long time. Nonetheless, the other insurance company has acknowledged informally that their driver was at fault.

    Good luck to you both, and please post back here on what happens.