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Diminished Value Appraisal Pat Goss
Larry Batton: Thanks for having me.
Goss: Okay. Give us a brief explanation of diminished value.
Batton: After a car has been in an accident, it could have diminished
value because of the accident and severity of the damage done to the
vehicle.
Goss: Okay. So more severe accident, more diminished value?
Batton: Absolutely.
Goss: What about the quality of repair? Is that going to have an
affect on it too?
Batton: Absolutely. Repair-related issues, how the car was repaired,
the type of material that was used to repair the vehicle, whether it was
OEM or non-OEM parts.
Goss: Okay, so the driver wants to specify OEM, which is original
equipment manufacturer, as opposed to after market parts.
Batton: Yes.
Goss: Okay. All right, now what can the driver do to help protect
themselves?
Batton: Well, first they need to understand how they determine
diminished value. They could take the car to a dealer to see if the
dealer thinks that the car's been affected and the value is lessened
because of a result of the accident, or they could hire someone like the
Auto Appraisal Group that does diminished values across the United
States in 43 different states.
Goss: Okay, so you're all over the place.
Batton: That's correct.
Goss: And looking at these cars every day.
Batton: On a daily basis. In fact, we attend sales on a weekly basis
across the country to see what people would pay for cars that had been
damaged versus the cars that had not been damaged even after the
repairs.
Goss: All right. Okay, so they're going to look for a quality shop,
they're going to look for a quality repair, and all such, but are they
going to know if it's done right?
Batton: If they can look at the car after the car's been repaired, and
they can see the difference in the areas of the repair in the different
areas of the other car that had not been repaired, it's probably not
done right, Pat.
Goss: Okay. So even if it was mildly wrong, the average person isn't
going to know the difference.
Batton: No. It would take a professional eye a lot of times to see the
difference.
Goss: Okay, so we're going to recommend that. All right, briefly, what
are the things that you recommend for people to protect themselves here?
Batton: First they should choose someone to repair their car that's
familiar with that type of make of vehicle, and look at their work that
they've done on other cars. And when you go into the shop, watch to see
how they work, if it's done a professional way, if they have
qualifications, and is it a busy shop or is it just a lot of cars out
there that need to be repaired.
Goss: And maybe even references.
Batton: Absolutely. It never hurts.
Goss: Okay, Larry, thank you very much for joining us.
Batton: Thank you, Pat.
If you have a question or comment, write to me. The address is
MotorWeek, Owings Mills, MD, 21117.
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