Could end up being an insurance claim. My electrical/battery issue from spring fried most of my electrical system (you can read about it in my May 2021 post if you wish).
Since a definitive cause could not be found (most of my electrical system melted away and nearly caught on fire), the dealership and Bennington declared it “must have been owner error on trying to charge the batteries”. I am certain that wasn’t the case, and I had absolutely not crossed my wires when hooking up the battery charger, but no way to ”prove” it. Thus, warranty claim denied, and I had to file an insurance claim. Insurance agent said this is typical in electrical problems on boats, as the cause is often melted/damaged and indeterminable for warranty coverage. Ugh.
Anyway, it became an insurance claim. It is about $6k in damages to most of the boats electrical wiring and electrical systems. They still are unsure on any damage to the actual motor because they ”cannot determine that until they replace the electrical system and run power through it“ to test all systems - including the motor. Thus, the current claim amount does not include any potential damage to the motor. Fingers crossed on that one.
Going on 5 months next week on waiting for repairs. Still have some electrical components on back order from Bennington. Just spoke to dealer today, and we still don’t have any ETA’s on the few remaining back ordered components they are waiting on. Sigh…
I wish you the best of luck with it, and sincerely hope you don’t end up in my situation - deductible and deprecation insurance costs (about $1300) mixed with unknown and extremely long part replacement timeframes that are still open-ended.
