tom d. friedman wrote:
damned insurance companies are money sucking vipers.
Then don't get insurance (i.e. self insure). There is no federal law requiring insurance. You should only insure what you can't afford to lose.
Perhaps Steve Hinton is the only pilot because he is the lowest cost warbird pilot to insure. I haven't read that the owner is complaining about the cost of insurance, only some unfounded suppositions.
Is 10% a year unreasonable? Insurance companies have to cover their losses plus a profit.
In the past 30 years there have been 8 P-38 crashes (on the books, there may have been others unreported) resulting in 4 fatalities in the US, and at least 1 fatal crash in the UK:
Probable Cause
Factual ,
Probable Cause
6/25/2001
12/4/2001
Greenwood, MS
Lockheed P-38L-5LD
N25Y
Nonfatal
Part 91: General Aviation
Probable Cause
Factual ,
Probable Cause
6/6/1997
10/30/1998
TILLAMOOK, OR
Lockheed P-38L
N7973
Fatal(1)
Part 91: General Aviation
Probable Cause
Factual ,
Probable Cause
5/4/1997
12/15/1997
GALVESTON, TX
Lockheed P-38L
N9005R
Nonfatal
Part 91: General Aviation
Probable Cause
Factual ,
Probable Cause
5/28/1994
1/12/1995
BRECKENRIDGE, TX
LOCKHEED P-38
N38LL
Nonfatal
Part 91: General Aviation
Probable Cause
4/9/1981
SALT LAKE CITY, UT
LOCKHEED P-38
N6961
Fatal(1)
Part 91 General Aviation
Probable Cause
10/19/1974
LAFAYETTE, LA
LOCKHEED P-38L
N38LL
Fatal(1)
Part 91 General Aviation
Probable Cause
5/23/1971
PARIS, TX
LOCKHEED P-38
N5596V
Nonfatal
Part 91 General Aviation
Probable Cause
8/4/1965
LOS OLIVOS, CA
LOCKHEED P-38
N504MH
Fatal(1)
Part 91 General Aviation
That is about one every 3 years. As a P-38 insurer you would have to collect about $2 Million every 3 years plus a profit- assuming that you didn't have a rash of claims in one year that would put you at risk of losing money.
How many P-38s are flying in the US? 4 or 5? So if you take $666k a year in claims average divided over 5 aircraft you would need to collect $133k each P-38 per year to break even. This assumes each aircraft is totally destroyed in an accident, doesn't include profit, doesn't include any money as a buffer against a rash of losses, and totally ignores any liability insurance (!).
I'm not an insurer (although I have played one on TV), but the logic above would seem to indicate that 8-12% is probably reasonable for a P-38. 10% for a Cessna 150 would be in the $2k range annually, right? Does that sound unreasonable? What are Warbug and Spam Can owners paying these days?