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#1
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Hi,
Right now (1pm West Coast time) on cnn.com, there is a picture of numerous overturned planes. Presumably insurance pays for this and since I pay for insurance, should I feel a bit bummed that these owners didn't fly their planes to safety and help lower my insurance costs? Taking it to the other extreme, perhaps some owners wanted to upgrade from a 172 to a 182 (for example) and... Sorry, I just don't get it. Thanks, Hilton |
#2
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Well, its even worse than you think. The owners/pilots simply abandoned
their old pipers and cessnas to the hurricane's winds in order to collect the insurance proceeds. They wanted to get what they could before the ADIZ is approved and expanded, before the user fees kick in, and due to the historically high price of Avgas. Its like when a slumlord torches his apartment building to (1) get rid of the nuisance and (2) collect a few bucks in the process. |
#3
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Hilton wrote:
Right now (1pm West Coast time) on cnn.com, there is a picture of numerous overturned planes. Presumably insurance pays for this and since I pay for insurance, should I feel a bit bummed that these owners didn't fly their planes to safety and help lower my insurance costs? Taking it to the other extreme, perhaps some owners wanted to upgrade from a 172 to a 182 (for example) and... Sorry, I just don't get it. Using this same mindset, one could also criticise the pilot who attempts to save the aircraft during an engine failure or fuel starvation emergency, rather than the people inside. There are more important priorities in life than possessions. -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#4
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![]() "Hilton" wrote in message ink.net... Hi, Right now (1pm West Coast time) on cnn.com, there is a picture of numerous overturned planes. Presumably insurance pays for this and since I pay for insurance, should I feel a bit bummed that these owners didn't fly their planes to safety and help lower my insurance costs? Taking it to the other extreme, perhaps some owners wanted to upgrade from a 172 to a 182 (for example) and... Sorry, I just don't get it. Thanks, Hilton Remember, those folks had to prioritize thinks in there life. Maybe the plane didn't make the cut. |
#5
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Correct!,
Let's see I have 4 or 5 days notice. I have to spend most of one day standing in line getting enough plywood to cover the house to try to protect that major investment..that by the way the entire family benefits from. Now I have the plywood, I spend another 2 days or even more getting it all up around the house ( oh yes did I mention my job still requires that I be at work ?) Then you have all the get the family things together time. Now you are in fact running out of time to "get gone". Do you drive a car and your wife take hers as well...if you can save them you both have your way to work when you get back. Do you put the entire family on a plane ( which may or may not even be able to carry your whole family). OH NO, someone shouts almost to late! We almost forgot about Spot the mangy mutt! Well that settles it, no room for the dog in the plane, we need our cars. We have a Uhaul rented with some of our stuff in it just in case. So now even the beloved family boat has to stay put as well. I sure wish I could have got the plane out of here but MAN, just did not have time trying to get my home and family together. I would guess that scenario happens alot during those times. I love airplanes..but my family comes number 1. I think that's how most folks would feel about it. Patrick student SP aircraft structural mech "Gig 601XL Builder" wr.giacona@coxDOTnet wrote in message news:IMb7f.49175$b65.9251@okepread01... "Hilton" wrote in message ink.net... Hi, Right now (1pm West Coast time) on cnn.com, there is a picture of numerous overturned planes. Presumably insurance pays for this and since I pay for insurance, should I feel a bit bummed that these owners didn't fly their planes to safety and help lower my insurance costs? Taking it to the other extreme, perhaps some owners wanted to upgrade from a 172 to a 182 (for example) and... Sorry, I just don't get it. Thanks, Hilton Remember, those folks had to prioritize thinks in there life. Maybe the plane didn't make the cut. |
#6
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![]() "Hilton" wrote in message news:O5b7f.1103 Right now (1pm West Coast time) on cnn.com, there is a picture of numerous overturned planes. Presumably insurance pays for this and since I pay for insurance, should I feel a bit bummed that these owners didn't fly their planes to safety and help lower my insurance costs? That assumes the aircraft were airworthy, the weather was flyable as equipped, the pilots were current, that they didn't have higher some more-substantial priority, and that they didn't in fact try to move them someplace safe. After Hurricane Andrew, for example, I volunteered for a day at an FBO at Baton Rouge to which planes from New Orleans had been evacuated. The storm missed NOLA and hit Baton Rouge and the flight line looked like airplane wrecking yard. -c |
#7
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A plane is just like any other investment. Although if I owned one, I
think it would be my most beloved material possession and would work hard to protect it. But, you often have to decide . . . getting the family to higher ground or protecting the property. Then you get to decide which piece of property . . . the house that everyone lives in . . . or the plane . . .. or the boat . . . or . . . (whatever). Sometimes the family/property question is in the form of an "either or" question, not both. If you fly out, how do you get back to take care of the family? Airlines will typically cancel service 24 or more hours before the storm's arrival. The dead time of driving back from any appreciable distance is critical time wasted. Finally, you never can be sure if by moving you are not going from bad to worse. I have friends in South Florida who didn't leave when Andrew approached. They could go North or South (though not too far). When I asked (in quite colorful language) why they didn't bug out, they replied there was uncertainty where exactly the storm would strike, forecast information was confusing, and they didn't know until it was too late which way to run. Even with days of warning, a lot of what you have to do is very last minute. Finally it has always been about all of us paying for choices that other pilots make. I would much rather help pay for this type of settlement, then for the pilot who ran out of gas on a clear day because he or she decided to stretch things too far. |
#8
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Look on the bright side: maybe the loss of all those planes will make
yours more valuable and offset the incresed insurance premium:-( Maybe the premiums will only increase for people in hurricane alley, though I don't know. Hilton wrote: Hi, Right now (1pm West Coast time) on cnn.com, there is a picture of numerous overturned planes. Presumably insurance pays for this and since I pay for insurance, should I feel a bit bummed that these owners didn't fly their planes to safety and help lower my insurance costs? Taking it to the other extreme, perhaps some owners wanted to upgrade from a 172 to a 182 (for example) and... Sorry, I just don't get it. Thanks, Hilton |
#9
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Hilton,
My insurance company will pay for the relocation expenses. Flight cost and hotel for duration. Hey we are all paying for the re-building of New Orleans. That bums me out. I should not have to pay for some one else's mistake. Michelle Hilton wrote: Hi, Right now (1pm West Coast time) on cnn.com, there is a picture of numerous overturned planes. Presumably insurance pays for this and since I pay for insurance, should I feel a bit bummed that these owners didn't fly their planes to safety and help lower my insurance costs? Taking it to the other extreme, perhaps some owners wanted to upgrade from a 172 to a 182 (for example) and... Sorry, I just don't get it. Thanks, Hilton |
#10
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Morgans wrote:
Let's see I have 4 or 5 days notice. I have to spend most of one day standing in line getting enough plywood to cover the house to try to protect that major investment..that by the way the entire family benefits from. I don't buy it. You would only have to move the plane 60 miles or so. There is time in there to move "that" major investment, also. I flew the night Hurricane Hugo showed up *towards* the storm (for my job) and tied the aircraft to the best of my ability out on the flightline. Gust locks, etc... everything I could do to make it secure. When I was finally able to get back to the airport three days later my airplane was fine. It was the ones in the hangars that took the hit.... fallen trees caused the roof to collapse, squashing the planes within. Sometimes it's just a matter of luck. And frankly, nobody expected Hugo to amount to much more than a windy night since we were a good 150 NM from the coast. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN VE |
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