![]() 05/03/2015 at 18:25 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
Today, I took a trip to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, the home of an incredibly gruesome battle and some quaint gift shops with wonderful little trinkets to commemorate it. As I was partaking in the age old Sabbath ritual known as the afternoon snack at an ice cream shop, I noticed a fleet of Harley’s, sport bikes, muscle cars, and old classics pass us by. While some of those vehicles were definitely fair weather daily drivers, others were definitely what we call Sunday cars.
If these aren’t a popular trend in your area, Sunday cars are basically appreciating classic cars that people only drive on Sundays in the spring and summer. Sunday cars can be very cheap to insure, given that they are only driven about 25 days in a year, making them easier to own for the average Joe.
I didn’t see anything too wild today, but there’s bound to be some good stories from you guys, and we all love a good story.
![]() 05/03/2015 at 18:30 |
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Wait can you tell your insurance company you only drive it on Sundays or only drive it 25 days a year or whatever?
![]() 05/03/2015 at 19:19 |
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Doh, your pic won’t enlarge. What a cool “hybrid”.
![]() 05/03/2015 at 19:31 |
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Special car insurance companies that only work with collectors and special vehicles offer special contracts. Involves work with the DMV too. You can’t get this for your Subaru Outback or a motorcycle that you only ride in real weather. It’s for specially designated cars deemed special by specific companies.
![]() 05/03/2015 at 19:34 |
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Cool, I didn’t know that. Makes sense. I know people who have huge car collections (40, 50, 100) have policies where they basically call the insurance company when they’re taking a particular car out for a drive, since each individual car gets driven so infrequently.
![]() 05/03/2015 at 20:02 |
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That might be the one cool thing about being in Florida...
No real Winters mean every day can be Sunday for some people!