NoDo$h
Member Since: 02 May 2006
Location: Finding new and exciting ways to milk badgers.
Posts: 19689
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I agree it's not a sunroof by any definition that the general public might be expected to use. Where an insurance contract has exclusions, they should be in terms that the GP should understand without recourse to a technical expert. The LR Spec clearly states it is a FIXED Alpine roof, so it doesn't meet the usual definition of a sunroof.
With glass full-length roofs becoming increasing common, insurers are going to have to get a lot clearer with their definitions if they intend to avoid claims on fixed roofs like this.
Claim, and if they decline it give me a shout I know it's not considered "kind" to say no these days, but no. Just no, ok? And if it's not ok, still no.
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16th Jul 2009 6:39 pm |
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AndrewS
Tarquin of the Desert
Member Since: 06 May 2005
Location: Y...... because I can
Posts: 10442
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Contact Autoglass and ask them. They were the ones that replaced mine when I stood on it. They treated it like a windscreen. Technically its an Alpine roof isn't it. In the Beginning there was nothing, which exploded.
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16th Jul 2009 6:48 pm |
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ronp
Member Since: 29 Nov 2006
Location: North Yorkshire
Posts: 15264
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AndrewS wrote:
Technically its an Alpine roof isn't it.
But that's just a posh description of a window, isn't it? ...... always on the road less travelled 🚧
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16th Jul 2009 7:06 pm |
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