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#1 |
![]() Drives: 2010 Rally Yellow 2SS/RS Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Boston, MA
Posts: 417
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Flood damage question...is this a total loss? (Not Camaro)
I know a lot of people have dealt with flood damage in recent years with Superstorm Sandy and whatnot, and on a forum full of "car guys" I'm sure a few of you have been down this road and can advise.
One of the other cars in my household had an incident yesterday with the major storms in Boston. It was in the bottom floor of a city parking garage, and the sewers backed up and then the garages pump failed. I think the whole thing was handled pretty negligently actually....once the pump failed the property management company would not let my girlfriend get to the car to remove it. It sat for hours while the water rose....at the end of the day, they insisted on trying to move the cars for people. They took her keys, tried to start it, and it was a no-start. There's about 10 other cars in the garage that had the same fate. I went down there last night to assess....they had trucks pumping out most of the water, but the car was still inaccessible. I tried to take a pic of the water line, I don't know if you can make it out but it starts at the spoke on the front wheel that's closest to "3 o'clock" and goes across the door. Definitely above the exhaust. We did put rubber boots on and trudged over to the car, and it's inside and all over the carpets. Is this a no-brainer total loss, or am I in for a headache? It's a 2010 Venza with about 40k. |
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#2 |
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Master of Nothings
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it's a total loss. I would contact your insurance and tell them exactly what happened, of how you tried to remove it prior to water filling up to where it did but you were not allowed by the garage company. They will be held liable because you tried to prevent damage and they stopped you. It's even worse because it's sewage
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2010 Chevrolet Camaro 2LT/RS |
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#3 |
![]() Drives: 2010 Rally Yellow 2SS/RS Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Boston, MA
Posts: 417
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That's what I'm hoping...just thinking about putting our children in the car after they suck out all the fecal water makes me ill.
I'm a little concerned that the city and the garage owner are going to have a pissing contest about accountability. I'm not a civil engineer, but my understanding is that the city's system backed up, and the garage's pump couldn't handle it. Is there any reason NOT to just contact our own insurance company? I generally like the hold the responsible party accountable and not put claims on my own insurance, but I just want this over with. |
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#4 |
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If your not 1st your last
Drives: 2014 Camaro 2SS / RS Join Date: Jun 2014
Location: Boston, MA
Posts: 248
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Wild weather yesterday indeed Yellow Camaro. Notify your insurance company so they can document it. With the storms came heavy downpours and a tornado in Revere, they must being receiving a ton of calls today. Good luck.
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2014 Camaro 2SS / RS ~ Blue Ray Metallic w/ Silver Rally Stripes ~ V8 6.2L ~ Blue & Black 2-tone leather interior accent trim package ~ Custom decals from Emblem Pros
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#5 |
![]() Drives: 2010 Rally Yellow 2SS/RS Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Boston, MA
Posts: 417
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Yeah Sheriff, wild indeed. This happened in nearby Somerville.
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#6 | |
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Forever Pontiac
Drives: 2012 Black 2SS/RS Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Naples, FL
Posts: 1,389
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Quote:
If you need said car, they might be able to "fund" you so you can go get another and then they'll go after the responsible party. Especially in a situation like this where many cars may be damaged and there may be a fight between who is "responsible", best to just get on with your life and let the insurance company fight to recoupe their costs than to have you "wait and see."
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#7 |
![]() Drives: 2013 1Lt Conv, Blue Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Rockville, MD
Posts: 86
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It happened to me with my Jeep Wrangler in Sandy. I had 26" of water. the insurance company totaled it on the spot. I did buy it back from the insurance company for about 30% of the value. It runs fine, I changed the fluids as a precaution, I expect there will be a few sensors to replace down the road due to corrosion.
If you like to work on cars, then keep it. If you have to pay somebody to fix it every time something goes wrong, it might be more trouble than it is worth. |
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#8 |
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War Horse Pilot
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Probably a total loss. I would almost insist on it if I were you to make sure you do not have any electrical issues down the road. Also if they tried to start it and the tail pipe was under water, it may have sucked water back up into the engine as well when they tried to fire it up.
I would be upset for sure. But let insurance fight this out. |
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#9 |
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Buick 455 Fan
Drives: 1970 Buick, 2012 1SS LS3 Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Boston MA
Posts: 5,957
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Co-worker here in MA is going through same thing. Bizarre, freak huge deep puddle, swallowed his car to the hood. Crazy.
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#10 | |
![]() Drives: 2010 Rally Yellow 2SS/RS Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Boston, MA
Posts: 417
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Quote:
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#11 |
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7 year Cancer Survivor!
Drives: 17 Cruze RS, 07 G6 GT, 99 Astro Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: East Tennessee
Posts: 21,546
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You should contact your insurance company, even if they don't pay for your car they have the clout to get the city ( or responsible party) to pay for it if they try to wrangle their way out.
Whomever tried to start the car made a big mistake. In my opinion It should have been towed to a garage and dried out first.....make sure no water got into the engine or air box or the electronics. It could have fried the ECM.
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Cancer's a bitch! Enjoy life while you can! LIVE, LOVE, DRIVE...
The Bird is the word! |
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#12 |
![]() Drives: 2010 Camaro rs/ss inferno orange Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Birmingham, AL
Posts: 232
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I don't know about the rest of you but even if the car runs fine I would be worried about what was floating around inside that car if it was sewage backed in there.
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HOT ROD SS MTH35115 |
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#13 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: '15 SS 1LE, '69 Z28 drag car Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Mich
Posts: 4,482
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Document everything. Get the names and times of who would not allow the vehicle to be removed by the owner. Names and times of who tried to start a water damaged car...
Contact insurance company for their guidance. Yes, that is a total loss. But it will probably wind up on the road again in some used car lot. If the end result is not satisfactory, law suit. My opinion would be the storm and flooding would not be negligence, so I'd concentrate on the actions of the garage owner as negligence. A flooded car should not be attempted to start until inspected by a qualified technician. If it was flooded with sewage water, might have been the right thing to do to prevent people from walking in it. Dangerous crud. On the plus side, one more Toyota off the road. Buy her a new Chevy! ![]() Good luck, hope all resolves itself in the long run. |
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