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insurance grouping
- Thebusofwoe
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insurance grouping
Guys, just been looking through insurance groups of cars ive had/own and the lude is crazy high (as i would expect)
. Question is, has anyone had fitted/own a lude with any Thatcham alarm/immobilizer fitted?? And does it reduce the rating/premium down at all?? Cheers chaps

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- jjmartin349571
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- Thebusofwoe
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Interesting cheers chaps. I only ask because apparently having a approved fitted Thatcham device of some sort COULD POSSIBLY reduce grouping by up to 2 groups!!
On thatchams site i looked and my vti aerodeck is a group 27D and the lude is a 33D. But that's to be expected as the ludes didn't come with anything apart from optional dealer fitted alarms!! 


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- Sailor
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I have the same problem.jjmartin349571 wrote:I have a Thatchman cat 1 device on my BB4, all I've noticed is that if I don't provide a letter from a garage stating that it's fitted then I don't get contents/theft cover. Bit jobby really
Photos of the installation, plus a short video of the lights and the alarm noise etc didn't help. The original supplier still exists, but has no records older than 10 years. Apparently, the insurance is fully comp .... except for theft!
Let's hope any twocker sets light to the car after use - I could then pretend that I drove it to its final destination and all would be OK. Madness.
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- wurlycorner
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- Thebusofwoe
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Really?? How strange!! Would of thought it would of come down or added extra cover like the others, 

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- wurlycorner
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I think may be to do with age/value of the car.
An old car with little value shouldn't need an alarm and the value of any theft claim would be very small to the insurer, so the theft risk weighting in the premium calculation actually reduces the cost attributed to that part of the policy.
If you have an all singing all dancing alarm, it may be seen as you must have done something to the car to increase its value (you've decided it's worth protecting) and therefore increased the insurers liability in the event of a theft claim and so the theft risk rating changes from one which reduces the premium, to one that reduces it less, or even weights it?
An old car with little value shouldn't need an alarm and the value of any theft claim would be very small to the insurer, so the theft risk weighting in the premium calculation actually reduces the cost attributed to that part of the policy.
If you have an all singing all dancing alarm, it may be seen as you must have done something to the car to increase its value (you've decided it's worth protecting) and therefore increased the insurers liability in the event of a theft claim and so the theft risk rating changes from one which reduces the premium, to one that reduces it less, or even weights it?
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