OFF: insurance for CDs and/or tapes ?
Frank Weil
frankw at COMM.MOT.COM
Wed Apr 17 13:38:37 EDT 1996
> > In Britain, and I suspect the same is true for the USA (and most
> > everywhere), it pays to check your policy carefully to see what is and
> > what is not covered. The home contents policy I had in Britain
> > specifically did *not* cover music collections (and I never saw a policy
> > that did as standard).
> >
> Correct. You need a specific rider on the policy, which will bump up
> the cost of the premiums, I'm afraid.
My policy with State Farm specifically covers my music collection as
part of my normal homeowner policy. I have a replacement-cost policy,
so they will pay me for what the collection is currently worth, not
what I paid for it. When I got my policy, my insurance agent went
over with me how much I had in records, CDs, etc., and my estimate of
their current value. I keep a list of all these things on my computer
at home, with a backup copy at work.
This, of course, doesn't mean we'll see eye to eye on the replacement
cost if something should happen, but I explained the rarity of part of
my collection to my agent when I got the policy. I don't remember the
exact numbers, but we estimated the replacement cost of the albums at
about US$10 each, and the CDs at about US$15 each. As an average over
my whole collection, these are probably pretty accurate.
YMMV.
Frank
--
==============================================================================
Frank Weil | frankw at comm.mot.com | phone: (847) 576-3110 | fax: (847) 576-3240
Monage a trois - I am three years old.
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