Anyone file an insurance claim for a bent frame?

We had ours fixed free by Lippert, the manufacturer, under warranty. Try calling them. Great to work with.
 
I see you have a 2017 Jayco Eagle HT 324BHTS (TT). Out of curiosity where is the bent frame members?

It is fairly common to hear of outriggers on 5vers that are bent, and repaired.

Pending on what is bent, some autobody shops have a frame straighter jig. Not sure if any have one long enough for a TT, and how applicable it is for a TT.

Pending on the damage, I would have a welding fabrication shop do the work before an autobody shop. Autobody shops do not do a lot of welding anymore, more, remove and replace a damaged component.

Good luck let us know how you proceed and what the repair is (hopefully it can be repaired).
 
We settled with insurance company. Replacement cost. We got back almost $35,000! Love it when things work out in our favor!
 
IAM glad things worked out for you. Now when your insurance premiums go up you will pay more than what they gave you.
 
Let me see the insurance company will make back the money that they gave you over a period of time if you stay with them. They are not in the business of losing money.
 
Let me see the insurance company will make back the money that they gave you over a period of time if you stay with them. They are not in the business of losing money.


LOL They are not going to recoup $35,000 from this customer in premiums over and beyond what he would already be paying.
 
Ok let me say it another way. The insurance company will not lose money. They will raise his rates and other peoples rates so that they can make back that money. This was told to me by a friend that has 30 plus years in the insurance business.
 
So under no circumstances should you ever use the insurance that you pay for. Got it.

Next time a hailstorm comes through and my homes roof is shot, I’ll make sure I don’t call my insurance agent in fear my neighbors premiums might go up.
 
So under no circumstances should you ever use the insurance that you pay for. Got it.

Next time a hailstorm comes through and my homes roof is shot, I’ll make sure I don’t call my insurance agent in fear my neighbors premiums might go up.

I look at it like this- I'm not going to use my get out of jail card for a traffic ticket- I'll save it until I'm facing 20 to life.

We had a claim last summer for a broken awning. $1200. $250 deductible. We considered filing a claim, but now that we are RV'ing, homeowners and 3 cars, there is a lot more chance of something going wrong. (vs. sitting on the porch until we die). So we decided not to put a ding on our record, pay for the repair, and move on.

Good thing we did, because we just had another incident, this time with our car. (it was sitting at the house while we were rv'ing) It was totaled, we put in a claim and got $26,000. So now we just have the one ding, and are less worried about jacked up rates and/or having to be moved to one of those lousy high risk policies.

So there is no clear answer that covers every situation. We've decided for us that about $1000 out of pocket is our deciding point. Below that we don't file, above we will.
So the poster getting $35000 actual replacement cost is a slam dunk, and a real consumer victory.
 
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Ok let me say it another way. The insurance company will not lose money. They will raise his rates and other peoples rates so that they can make back that money. This was told to me by a friend that has 30 plus years in the insurance business.


You're right - they won't. Or if they don't they won't stay in business.


But the whole idea is to spread that $35,000 they paid out over their entire subscriber base of thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands.


Your premium, our premiums, might go up by a buck or three.


If they go up too much, we drop that company and pick another.


If you pay for insurance and have zero intention of ever using it out of fears of rising premiums, well... Probably should have skipped the policy all together.
 
Ok let me say it another way. The insurance company will not lose money. They will raise his rates and other peoples rates so that they can make back that money. This was told to me by a friend that has 30 plus years in the insurance business.

They will not lose money.

However, insurance companies don’t truly make money from premiums exceeding claims, known as an underwriting profit. In a perfect world they will have an underwriting profit. The real money for insurance companies come from investing the float, which is the sum total of premiums across the entire company that “float” until a claim is paid.

Secondly, if the risk of a particular insured doesn’t change, or the risk of pool of insured doesn’t change, rates will remain relatively flat.

I have no idea what caused this frame to bend, but if it wasn’t due to the insureds fault and it’s not a trend of the insured to make claims, there will be relatively small impact to rates.
 
No luck with mine. Shop is saying wdh system caused too much stress on the ultra light weight frame and should have never been put on in the first place. Meanwhile the dealership that put it on claims no wrong doing. I'm stuck in the middle with no trailer, and oh yea, the trailer is still 550 miles from my house where it occurred in the middle of a 3 week trip. Sigh!
 
I have heard that a WD Hitch with a rating that is much over what is needed can cause that. I used a 5,000 lb. WD Hitch on my 4,000 lb. trailer. Could have bought an 8,000 lb. much cheaper.
 

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