BYRON
Member
Registered: 1st Jun 04
User status: Offline
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As above.
Reasons for and against please
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bradfincham
Member
Registered: 20th Sep 02
Location: East Of England Drives: Clio 172
User status: Offline
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erm no, resale is going to be a bitch, always thinking the cars quite not fixed right as well
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mwg
Member
Registered: 19th Feb 04
Location: South Lakes
User status: Offline
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I wouldn't go near any car that I know has been damaged as they are never the same again no matter how good the repair work is
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Kirkers
Member
Registered: 10th Jan 06
Location: Bangor, N.Ireland
User status: Offline
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would consider a cat d, but wouldn't go near a cat c
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NovaGTE
Member
Registered: 16th Dec 02
User status: Offline
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What are the differences?
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Siberia
Member
Registered: 9th Oct 03
Location: Leprechaun Land Drives : Zafira GSI
User status: Offline
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depends how much your spending... 600 quid shitter... this is the kinda car you get...
over 1500-2k not a hope!
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p4uls corsa
Member
Registered: 2nd May 05
Location: BRADFORD
User status: Offline
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yeah i would buy cat c damaged cars but id repair myself would not buy one allready done. cat d is nothing to worry about could be just lock damage small dent in wing ect
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p4uls corsa
Member
Registered: 2nd May 05
Location: BRADFORD
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by NovaGTE
What are the differences?
http://www.car-crime.com/salvage_category.htm
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big eck
Member
Registered: 20th Apr 03
Location: Tullibody. Drives - Audi B8 S4 & Fiesta Zetec-S
User status: Offline
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CatD aint bad, its only minor crash repaired cars
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BYRON
Member
Registered: 1st Jun 04
User status: Offline
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spoken to a few people in the know and even our accident management team here at work.
Providing the repairs have been carried out to a high standard then its all good.
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1_Litre_Porsche_Beater
Member
Registered: 9th Apr 02
Location: Kent
User status: Offline
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i wudn't touch one for the only reason that it mite deter future buyers when u come to sell. If your gonna keep it for a while and its a bargain then go for it mate.
Any interest with the merc yet?
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BYRON
Member
Registered: 1st Jun 04
User status: Offline
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Some interest in it, but no sale. bummer.
I have been informed that legally you dont have to disclose that it is a catd, but as this is a trader they have to give this information.
Sometimes it wont even show on a HPi....
That solves the future buyer problem potentially...
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p4uls corsa
Member
Registered: 2nd May 05
Location: BRADFORD
User status: Offline
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yeah thats true its down to the buyer to do there checks the person selling doesnt have to disclose anything about the car. most cat c cars will now show on the logbook as having a vic check in the notes section but can d cars dont need the vic check so its down to finding out through hpi ect
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scriv
Member
Registered: 10th May 00
Location: Birmingham
User status: Offline
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i love people that say thet wouldnt touch a cat d or c car whats the diference between say someone restoring a old nova to put a 2.0 litre in it u are still replacing panels as long as the repair is gd then they can be stronger than when they left the factory
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Steve
Premium Member
Registered: 30th Mar 02
Location: Worcestershire Drives: Defender
User status: Offline
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because cars that have been in an accident could be bent as fuck, you can never tell, you could repair it and have nothing but problems, tyre wear, bearing wear etc, insurance companies dont stick it on a jig to determine if the car is a cat d write off
[Edited on 03-02-2006 by Corsa_Sam]
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scriv
Member
Registered: 10th May 00
Location: Birmingham
User status: Offline
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what do u think measuring systems are for ?
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M2RTY
Member
Registered: 25th May 01
User status: Offline
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cat d could be something so stupid like a new set of locks or windows or seats
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BYRON
Member
Registered: 1st Jun 04
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Corsa_Sam
because cars that have been in an accident could be bent as fuck, you can never tell, you could repair it and have nothing but problems, tyre wear, bearing wear etc, insurance companies dont stick it on a jig to determine if the car is a cat d write off
[Edited on 03-02-2006 by Corsa_Sam]
CatD damage would not be so severe to cause chassis damage. Been reading up on it.
Read one story where a fellas car had been stolen. It had lock damage (big deal), but the theif pissed all inside the car. The owner refused it back because the insurers could not gaurantee it was not Hepatitis infected.
Which equalled a write off.
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ainsley_brader
Member
Registered: 24th Mar 02
Location: Tattershall, Lincolnshire
User status: Offline
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Cat D can often include chasis damage on newer cars!
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Kerry
Member
Registered: 5th Oct 01
Location: Norwich
User status: Offline
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depends on the damage
ive sold 2 cat d's on and they were literally panal damage but written off kus insurance companies dont usually bother repairing imports as they cant be bothered to wait for parts
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Ally
Member
Registered: 2nd Jul 03
Location: Pontypool Drives: a Skoda
User status: Offline
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My car is cat D, written off for light panel damage.
Bought it for £600, had it colour coded and repaired. Car only had 58k on it (M reg tallic green clio) resale may be hard, but car runs purfect, never had a problem and its only my first car so i'm not too worried
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Ry_B
Banned
Registered: 1st Dec 05
Location: Solihull, W Mids Drives: 45BHP beast!
User status: Offline
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No, once it has been crashed it's never the same again
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Kerry
Member
Registered: 5th Oct 01
Location: Norwich
User status: Offline
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what if its been keyed?
thats not crashed but can stil be a cat D
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