โFeb-08-2023 04:21 AM
โFeb-23-2023 08:33 AM
โFeb-21-2023 05:59 PM
Grit dog wrote:Lol!! I'm trying too hard?! My post was meant to be speculative humor that you took way, way, too seriously ๐otrfun wrote:Nope, itโs just insurance. Youโre trying too hard here tooโฆ.
I sometimes wonder if GEICO's approval of Pavel's claim (snapped frame on his Ram 3500 dually) was a one-time marketing decision. With his photos going viral, they knew approving this particular claim would generate free, positive publicity for GEICO---more than enough to make up for the $17k payout. GEICO knows they're under no obligation to approve any future claims of this type in the future.
No wonder stupid human tricks like breaking your truck in half go โviralโ. It ainโt just the Instagram generationโฆ..
Well, that and you actually have no idea what youโre taking aboot. About 101% off base speculation on your part.
It was a little claim. Like the 1000s of little claims they process every day.
And thereโs no details. This all sounds hinky since $17k wouldnโt replace the crane under that truck. Not even close.
โFeb-20-2023 06:35 AM
otrfun wrote:3 tons wrote:
Insurance company pays for driver-ownerโs irresponsible malfeasance, then he unloads his truck on some poor unwary, meanwhile others wonder why their rates keep climbingโฆWhy complain, isnโt this just the American way?? (LOL!)
3 tonsJimK-NY wrote:I sometimes wonder if GEICO's approval of Pavel's claim (snapped frame on his Ram 3500 dually) was a one-time marketing decision. With his photos going viral, they knew approving this particular claim would generate free, positive publicity for GEICO---more than enough to make up for the $17k payout. GEICO knows they're under no obligation to approve any future claims of this type in the future.
Having recently dealt with an insurance claim, it seems that the insurance companies do not care about the high cost of coverage. Higher expenses just mean they can justify higher premiums . . . .
โFeb-20-2023 06:33 AM
JimK-NY wrote:
Having recently dealt with an insurance claim, it seems that the insurance companies do not care about the high cost of coverage. Higher expenses just mean they can justify higher premiums.
I had some very minor damage. Another car rubbed my front bumper when trying to parallel park. The only damage was a small area where the plastic on the bumper was torn. They had no problem paying for a new bumper for a total cost of a bit over $2000. I even qualified for a rental car for the week the repair took but did not need it.
โFeb-20-2023 06:18 AM
3 tons wrote:
Insurance company pays for driver-ownerโs irresponsible malfeasance, then he unloads his truck on some poor unwary, meanwhile others wonder why their rates keep climbingโฆWhy complain, isnโt this just the American way?? (LOL!)
3 tons
JimK-NY wrote:I sometimes wonder if GEICO's approval of Pavel's claim (snapped frame on his Ram 3500 dually) was a one-time marketing decision. With his photos going viral, they knew approving this particular claim would generate free, positive publicity for GEICO---more than enough to make up for the $17k payout. GEICO knows they're under no obligation to approve any future claims of this type in the future.
Having recently dealt with an insurance claim, it seems that the insurance companies do not care about the high cost of coverage. Higher expenses just mean they can justify higher premiums . . . .
โFeb-20-2023 03:18 AM
valhalla360 wrote:
Fact is this guy was grossly negligent. We aren't talking about being a couple hundred pounds overweight. He was wildly overweight with poor weight distribution.
Considering the payload is right there on the door jam, claims that he was told he had more payload don't ring true.
โFeb-20-2023 12:37 AM
JimK-NY wrote:
Having recently dealt with an insurance claim, it seems that the insurance companies do not care about the high cost of coverage. Higher expenses just mean they can justify higher premiums.
I had some very minor damage. Another car rubbed my front bumper when trying to parallel park. The only damage was a small area where the plastic on the bumper was torn. They had no problem paying for a new bumper for a total cost of a bit over $2000. I even qualified for a rental car for the week the repair took but did not need it.
โFeb-19-2023 06:43 PM
โFeb-19-2023 05:29 PM
โFeb-16-2023 08:22 AM
otrfun wrote:
TCA did an outstanding job of explaining, what I feel, is the primary reason this guy's frame failed---improper COG. If the COG had been located directly over the rear axle, and not a number of feet behind, this particular failure would have never occurred---even overloaded as he was.
If the owner of this truck would have taken the time to visit a scale (unloaded and loaded), yes, he would have discovered his truck was overloaded. However, he would have also discovered his front-axle was being off-loaded hundreds and hundreds of pounds---indicating a COG far behind the rear axle.
IMO, it's not a simple case of calculating GVWR and payload and calling it safe. *Where* you place the payload (COG) is a critical consideration, too.
โFeb-16-2023 08:09 AM
โFeb-16-2023 07:58 AM
โFeb-09-2023 07:08 AM
โFeb-09-2023 06:51 AM
mkirsch wrote:deltabravo wrote:
This situation has me really taking a closer look at my RVing situation, all because I am over the GVWR of my truck
Several thoughts have crossed my mind:
1. Sell the pristine 2009 truck in my signature, which only has 75k miles on it and buy a newer truck with a higher GVWRE
2. Sell my AF 992 and get a smaller truck camper.
By rv.net TC forum standards, and the loudest advice given here, that guy had at least another 1000lb of payload capacity left.
He was NOT overloaded. The truck had an AAM axle. Can't be overloaded.
If he wasn't overloaded, you sure as heck aren't. Hit the road and enjoy yourself.