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"C J Campbell" wrote in message ...
If you do find a private individual who is willing to rent his plane to you for instruction, be sure to carry your own renter's insurance. I doubt this will work. First of all the owner will have to add insurance to allow the student to be training in his airplane. For my plane it adds about $6000/year with a prohibitation on solo. Most companies do not want to ensure commercial instruction insurance on planes unless there are at least 3 airplanes on the policy. I wish this myth of buying renters insurance would die. A renter's policy ONLY covers situations where you can PROVE the renter was at fault. The owner's policy will only cover those situations that the policy allows for. I guarantee your policy only allows named insureds to receive instruction. So, if the "student" were flying the plane and the landing gear broke on its own and totaled the plane, there would be NO insurance. The student's renters' insurance would say, "Prove the student caused this". The owners insurance would say "Prove a named insured or open pilot was piloting" (almost all open pilot polices require at least a private and sometimes an instrument rating). My policy (AIG ) makes no distinction between who is PIC. It simply says only a named insured can be "piloting" the plane. This means there is no insurance if they think anyone else touched the controls. -Robert |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Got burned - Don't go to Lansing Jet Center. | Jon Kraus | Piloting | 57 | December 14th 03 06:39 PM |