Advice: "Guidelines" for selling an expensive bike

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Doesn't your bike insurance cover other licensed people riding your bike? It's no fun making a claim but on a $15k bike that what you'd have to do. I imagine for a Harley you won't get any "test pilots" but anyone can hit a deer I guess.
Ian
 
Whenever I've test ridden a new bike at a dealer, I had to present my current cycle insurance card. I always thought (but never verified for certain) that my insurance would cover any incident. I honestly don't know if that's true or not.

Perhaps you should call your insurance company and ask if this is true. If so, then you might have a solution.
 
One point to remember, cashier's checks, bank checks and money orders can be forged. The bank is required under federal law to cash bank checks, but if it is bogus and does not clear they WILL back charge you in a few days for the full amount. Know who you are dealing with.

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Under federal law, banks must make funds available to you from U.S. Treasury checks, official bank checks (cashier’s checks, certified checks, and teller’s checks), and checks paid by government agencies at the opening of business the day after you deposit the check. For other checks, banks must similarly make the first $100 available the day after you deposit the check. Remaining funds must be made available on the second day after the deposit if payable by a local bank, and within five days if drawn on distant banks.

However, just because funds are available on a check you’ve deposited doesn’t mean the check is good. It’s best not to rely on money from any type of check (cashier, business or personal check, or money order) unless you know and trust the person you’re dealing with or, better yet — until the bank confirms that the check has cleared. Forgeries can take weeks to be discovered and untangled. The bottom line is that until the bank confirms that the funds from the check have been deposited into your account, you are responsible for any funds you withdraw against that check.

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I sold my truck early this year and had the same feelings you have right now. Anyhow I met this guy off craigslist at a local branch of his bank with his business cashier's check. You can go in and verify funds that way. He did get a test drive but guess what the trucks insured, I still have the title so in a worst case scenario it's stolen property and I collect the insurance.

The media has us all worried that everyone is a crook. Sure they're are some and yes you can get burned, but use some safe practices and a little 'un'common sense and you should be ok.
 
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