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Hurricanes: Evacuating aircraft out of the way...

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Hurricanes: Evacuating aircraft out of the way...

Old 7th Sep 2017, 16:58
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Hurricanes: Evacuating aircraft out of the way...

Was wondering what aircraft owners ideally do when a hurricane is on its way, especially in a place like Florida or the Bahamas?

Are the aircraft evacuated inland and parked up? Do some people trust in hangars?

There always seem to be GA types flipped over when storms hit....
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Old 7th Sep 2017, 18:49
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Most of the US insurers have an inland relocation reimbursement clause and a higher deductable if you don't relocate and suffer consequential loss.

There's been quite a bit of this going on lately and generous hangar owners offering their spare space.
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Old 11th Sep 2017, 10:46
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If you use an ADS-B apps for aircraft tracking and have been monitoring the south of America area recently (Irma), you’d notice at times there are long convoys of light aircraft transiting northbound towards better forecasted weather.


For example this one: https://twitter.com/flightradar24/st...48986579591168
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Old 11th Sep 2017, 14:00
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With mine there is a "named storm" endorsement.

Basically, the excess goes up.

That is with my custom written policy (no one of the insurers who advertise in the airplane mags will insure airplanes down here).

My previous insurer has a very simple rule if the storm gets a name you have no cover.

Oddly policies written in the Caribbean give no cover in US airspace and no US insurer will insure a US registered airplane in the US if one has a non-US address. Mine was up in Florida for nearly three years no cover even though it was just sitting on the ground not being flown.

When I bought it back down my insurer gave me two weeks to get it out of the US (my last US airspace was St. Croix) and during that time I was not permitted to carry a US citizen in the airplane. Yes, US people sue for anything - but my insurance on my 40 year old PA28 cost $12,000, a policy with a US insurer would have been $4,000 if I was a US address holder operating in the US and with lots of US citizens flying in the airplane.

I cannot understand it - I have asked for a reason, only answer I ever got was "computer say no" or I need a zip code for the computer.

I spoke with a top broker in Florida, he just gave up. In the end I got my professional indemnity insurance broker from Trinidad to speak with a Lloyds syndicate in London to get it. So a custom written policy, agreed hull value (like classic cars), the named storm thing reduced i.e. I have cover unlike before.

Airplane insurance is very weird.
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