dodge man
Super Star Member
Its easy to unbolt a hood, throw it out and put a new one on. Its not so easy to do that with a door skin or quarter panel.
How is that different than today with the F150 and Mustang (and other vehicles I am sure) having an aluminum hood? Do they just replace them or have that part repaired elsewhere?
Its easy to unbolt a hood, throw it out and put a new one on. Its not so easy to do that with a door skin or quarter panel.
That's what I keep asking, as a former and current owner of cars with big aluminum parts (hoods, roofs, trunks). Our previous car with an aluminum hood was repaired (i.e., repair and not swap) after an accident with a deer, and the body shop didn't blink an eye. Repair costs were inline with any other bodywork I have had done.
I get that, but they don't just throw away every hood because of a ding or scratch that needs a little work. 'Oh look, this hood has a ding in it. It's aluminum, so better just throw it away!' No, it doesn't work that way!
Somebody gets what I'm saying!
I do. I have stayed out of this thread for a reason other than my post where I posted "ACTUAL FACTS".....
I took the time and called my insurance man and used my 2012 Ecoboost Super Crew as a baseline against a 2015 F150, Chevy Silverado, and Ram. End result was the F150 was actually cheaper than the GM and Ram.
Chris
I do. I have stayed out of this thread for a reason other than my post where I posted "ACTUAL FACTS".....
I took the time and called my insurance man and used my 2012 Ecoboost Super Crew as a baseline against a 2015 F150, Chevy Silverado, and Ram. End result was the F150 was actually cheaper than the GM and Ram.
Chris
Might be splitting hairs here, but can you say the COLLISION part of the premium was cheaper for the 2015 F-150, or was it just the total premium? Sorry if I am stepping on your toes but my brother purchased a 2014 F-150 because his agent told him the premiums for a 2015 model were going to be higher.
Might be splitting hairs here, but can you say the COLLISION part of the premium was cheaper for the 2015 F-150, or was it just the total premium? Sorry if I am stepping on your toes but my brother purchased a 2014 F-150 because his agent told him the premiums for a 2015 model were going to be higher.
Have no clue and don't care. All I care is what I like and what it cost me at the end of the day. The 2015 was about $60 more per year than my 2012. To me that is reasonable.
Chris