The unibody could be bent. can't fix that at home. In the end you will probably end up with a salvage title. That makes a HUGE dent in resale value if you decide to sell it later.
Unless you have a body shop, all the correct tools and software for programming sensors this is not a diy. The right headlight alone if an led headlight is $400-800 if not more. If the radiator brackets and supports are bent/ broken that's alot of work. I see alot of bent/broken plastic parts plus the hood. The airbags should have deployed with the hood pushed back that far.2018 Hyundai sonata hybrid vs 240lb mule deer.
I had full coverage on it.
More of a question of can I, not should I. By I, I mean me myself and I, not a shop, I know labor will be equal to at least that of the parts maybe more.
My wife has perfect credit and she could go buy another one today. At some point we'd like to retire, that would put a major dent in paying off the house early.
I had her talked into driving this car till it runs up 80 to 90,000 miles then private sale it and buy a lease turn in hybrid.
Around 80 to 90,000 miles the house ought to be paid off or just about paid off. View attachment 283484
You'd probably need to talk to a vet instead of us.Hit a deer can it be fixed?
The radiator bracket is sheared off.Unless you have a body shop, all the correct tools and software for programming sensors this is not a diy. The right headlight alone if an led headlight is $400-800 if not more. If the radiator brackets and supports are bent/ broken that's alot of work. I see alot of bent/broken plastic parts plus the hood. The airbags should have deployed with the hood pushed back that far.
With all the hail dents yeah. But it will be drive able.Totaled was my first impression.
Thats what I'm thinking. Get it to where it's drivable, new radiator, lots of zip ties and duct tape and drive it to a pick a part and start ripping one apart that was hit from behind or on the driver's side.If you're handy, you could buy it back from the insurance company and DIY it back together.
Exactly what I was thinking.I think the only way I'd want to tackle that job is to have the same car sitting beside it(rear ended one), to use as a reference and for parts. Identifying and ordering a zillion miscellaneous parts under the hood from a dealer seems like a big project in itself...
I think as long as the front wings aren't bent at the strut towers, getting those perfectly straight is more of aesthetic issue for making fender/hood/grill/headlights/bumper cover gaps easy to line up. I would guess the front bumper support is still straight and that held the unit body straight, as well as the subframe.
So you probably could cob it back together to be functional, but maybe not all that pretty, which is fine if you intend to run it into the ground.
I never heard an insurance report/body shop joke before.No air bags were deployed in the killing of this deer.