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#1
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I have a retractable single (R182). I have lots of hours. My insurance (1
Mil Smooth + 120 K Hull value) is $1800. The previous thread here (Light Twins - How Soft???) showed insurance rates for light twins (1 Mil Smooth + 85 K Hull value) with lots of hours at about $2800. There is only one reason for this disparity in price. The insurance companies only care about their wallets. They are not emotionally involved owners. The light twins crash more often. If they crashed less, the insurance rates would be lower. It is not the number of passengers, BTW. A quick look through NTSB statistics shows only a few fatal crashes with 4 passengers, and many of those are singles. A great irony, isn't it? DB |
#2
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"Doodybutch" writes:
The light twins crash more often. If they crashed less, the insurance rates would be lower. That's quite a leap. It is not the number of passengers, BTW. A quick look through NTSB statistics shows only a few fatal crashes with 4 passengers, and many of those are singles. Are you also claiming that it costs the same or less to repair a light twin that's been landed gear up as it would to fix your R182? Do you have data to support that claim? A great irony, isn't it? Mmmmm...I'm not seeing it yet. --kyler |
#3
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"Doodybutch" wrote
I have a retractable single (R182). I have lots of hours. My insurance (1 Mil Smooth + 120 K Hull value) is $1800. A C-182 RG is an incredibly docile airplane, very forgiving of pilot error. We worry a lot about mechanical failures (especially in night and IFR flight) but the truth is that most pilots fly and train so little that pilot error is far and away the biggest cause of accidents. Of course a more forgiving airplane is going to have better safety statistics. I assure you that a high performance retractable single like a Bonanza worth $120K is going to cost significantly more to insure - most people I know with Bonanzas are paying around $2500. And have you looked into insuring a Bellanca 14-19 lately? Of course a Bonanza with the big engine or a 14-19 will keep up with my twin - a C-182RG will not. The docile handling of the C-182RG comes at the cost of speed. The previous thread here (Light Twins - How Soft???) showed insurance rates for light twins (1 Mil Smooth + 85 K Hull value) with lots of hours at about $2800. I pay $2500, and that wasn't the lowest quote (I didn't like the high deductible for gear collapse on the lower quote, and this is a known issue with PA-30's). So really there is no disparity, once you start comparing apples to apples. Michael |
#4
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I pay $1915 for liability on a nine seat airplane which is probably
comparable (roughly) with most airplanes/pilots on a per seat basis. Hull coverage, which I don't carry, would be about $25,000 which reflects the cost of repair. Mike MU-2 "Doodybutch" wrote in message . net... I have a retractable single (R182). I have lots of hours. My insurance (1 Mil Smooth + 120 K Hull value) is $1800. The previous thread here (Light Twins - How Soft???) showed insurance rates for light twins (1 Mil Smooth + 85 K Hull value) with lots of hours at about $2800. There is only one reason for this disparity in price. The insurance companies only care about their wallets. They are not emotionally involved owners. The light twins crash more often. If they crashed less, the insurance rates would be lower. It is not the number of passengers, BTW. A quick look through NTSB statistics shows only a few fatal crashes with 4 passengers, and many of those are singles. A great irony, isn't it? DB |
#5
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Since when did a corpoaration care about anything other than
maximizing profits and return on its stock for it's share holders? Besides market forces such as collusion or competition there may be some physics reasons for the disparity is prices as well. Being larger and faster, the twin is carrying more than twice the energy into a crash. So crashes, when they do happen, tend to be more destructive. Another market force may be that people that can afford a twin, have more money and are willing to pay more when billed. Nothing to do with safety. "Doodybutch" wrote in message .net... I have a retractable single (R182). I have lots of hours. My insurance (1 Mil Smooth + 120 K Hull value) is $1800. The previous thread here (Light Twins - How Soft???) showed insurance rates for light twins (1 Mil Smooth + 85 K Hull value) with lots of hours at about $2800. There is only one reason for this disparity in price. The insurance companies only care about their wallets. They are not emotionally involved owners. The light twins crash more often. If they crashed less, the insurance rates would be lower. It is not the number of passengers, BTW. A quick look through NTSB statistics shows only a few fatal crashes with 4 passengers, and many of those are singles. A great irony, isn't it? DB |
#6
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For what it's worth...
I'm refinancing my airplane, and my lender wont even finance twins anymore. This is an aviation lender, too. I'd like to move up to a Seneca someday, but the banks and insurance aren't making it feasible. So, since I'm not independently wealthy or with rich-soon-to-be-dead parents, it'll never probably happen. Chris "Doodybutch" wrote in message . net... I have a retractable single (R182). I have lots of hours. My insurance (1 Mil Smooth + 120 K Hull value) is $1800. The previous thread here (Light Twins - How Soft???) showed insurance rates for light twins (1 Mil Smooth + 85 K Hull value) with lots of hours at about $2800. There is only one reason for this disparity in price. The insurance companies only care about their wallets. They are not emotionally involved owners. The light twins crash more often. If they crashed less, the insurance rates would be lower. It is not the number of passengers, BTW. A quick look through NTSB statistics shows only a few fatal crashes with 4 passengers, and many of those are singles. A great irony, isn't it? DB |
#7
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"SeeAndAvoid" writes:
I'm refinancing my airplane, and my lender wont even finance twins anymore. This is an aviation lender, too. I'd like to move up to a Seneca someday, but the banks and insurance aren't making it feasible. So, since I'm not independently wealthy or with rich-soon-to-be-dead parents, it'll never probably happen. I had a loan with US Aviation Finance http://www.usaviationfinance.com/index2.html on about 80% of the appraised vallue of my Aztec for awhile. They made it easy. I recommend giving them a call if you're serious about getting a Seneca. They certainly don't seem to shy away from multis. http://www.usaviationfinance.com/prefli/ For insurance, call Andy Facer. http://www.facer-ins.com/ I'd appreciate a report if either of them turn down your application. --kyler |
#8
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Doodybutch wrote:
The light twins crash more often. And, not incidentally, cost the insurance companies much more when they have to settle. |
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