As the Irish would say, 'cute whores'.
The correct saying is..........'cute hoooooooores'
As the Irish would say, 'cute whores'.
4500 euros is the going rate down here for an 18 year old in a golf depending on full licence etc could be higher i know one young lad paying 3500 third party what would similar cost in the north i would imagine a lot less
my work insurance went up 30% last year,they tried to put it up another 40% this year the reason well its in the papers and on the telly so i told them to feck right off ended up 1% less than last year because i refused to pay the inflated permium because the newspaper said i should
i know of a case where a woman had so many claims on the go at 1 time she brought the wrong doctor as her witness to court who told of the wrong injuries for that claim so the judge just gave her 10000 and the legal expenses were 25000 so insurance company paid out 35000 for an obvious bogus claim and that is a huge problem
No: That's the polite version!The correct saying is..........'cute hoooooooores'
85% is a huge increase whichever why you do the maths?
Yes, but.... the reporting chooses to use this number as it is spectacular. If you could dig down and find the actual number it might only be a small number.
The trend is still worying and I doubt it's restricted to Ireland.
...those of us who do insure our vehicles will run the gauntlet of being involved in an incident with one of these cnuts.![]()
In my opinion, being caught without insurance should result in similar penalties to being caught driving drunk, ie loss of licence and having to retake a driving test. The potential for serious injury and death to fellow motorists is every bit as real but not having the wherewithal for people to claim for damage or loss is highly irresponsible and should result in the uninsured driver being liable to lose everything, their house and possessions and their liberty in the event of a death or very severe injury being inflicted.
Is right, Keith. My first two cars cost me less than £100 each and I spent most Saturday mornings trying to keep them on the road. Learnt a bit how they work out of necessity. Part of the test here is answering a couple of very basic questions about looking after a car. Under the bonnet, not a clue. Boys or girls.
That was around 1972 and my third party only policy cost me £365.
Nowadays I regularly see my pupils with their Polo, Golf, Fiat 500, etc. sitting waiting for them before they even pass their test. Taxed, insured and ready to go.
Recently, I was waiting at the local test centre with another instructor while our pupils were on the test. His pupil's mother came over and asked what sort of money his car (a Mini) would cost, as her daughter liked driving it. He told her a decent one would cost around £10k.
'Oh that's fine, I thought they'd be dearer than that.' Said the mother. The daughter was still in her school uniform when she came back from her test!
Mind you, it's our generation that's to blame for giving them high expectations. Daddy's girl wouldn't be safe in an old banger if it broke down, would she?
That's one in every thirteen cars on the road Frank. Fuckin scary thought.
It's not like insurance is an optional purchase, it is a legal requirement. I certainly don't want to have any dealings with the 1 in 13 fucker on our roads, especially if I'm on the bike. If I'm in a Scania then the problem becomes theirs.
Phaedrus,
I'm a RoSPA Trainer - if that's any use to you when preparing for the test, give me a shout.![]()
I will for sure. Thanks!
I mentioned to the tester when taking my Stage 2 ADI test that I'd be looking to take a RoSPA test at some point, and he commented to be wary that - in the context of me becoming an instructor - the manner of riding that would achieve a high RoSPA "score" probably wouldn't necessarily be the manner of riding that would see a new rider pass the RSA bike test, and as such it's not necessarily a manner of riding that an RSA-approved instructor should be imparting to a new rider.
Those weren't the exact words, but that was the just of it.
I want to get plenty more miles under my belt before I commit to entering the RoSPA process.
Mark