Your guns ARE covered as any other items in your home... up to the amount of your policy. If your homes contents are valued over the amount in your policy, THEN you should either raise the policy or add a rider.Good luck! I have been shopping insurance lately and it seems like unless you schedule your firearms or anything of remote value you don't get covered for it.
Your guns ARE covered as any other items in your home... up to the amount of your policy. If your homes contents are valued over the amount in your policy, THEN you should either raise the policy or add a rider.
I know the NRA offers free insurance on guns as well, so if he is a member and filled out the form that might be a place to seek payment. Also the manufacturer of the safe usually will cover anything in the safe that was damaged up to a certain amount.
It really doesn't seem to awful bad, compared to the other revolvers. I'll email Denny at Sand Burr and see if maybe a good going through could save it.Following with interest. I thought once they got this hot the temper (?) of the steel was ruined for use.
We hope for the best for your in-laws. I was following the shotgun thread when you posted about the fire. The pictures are heartbreaking. So horrible to lose pets like this. And then to add insult to injury the cars even burned.
So sorry to hear about this. Give your in-laws hugs because they are still alive and things could have been much worse. Has anyone set up a Go-fund-me account for them yet?
Here's an observation that might be something for future reference/others to consider. We had a neighbor and a family member who both had house fires. Both homes were completely gutted. The refrigerators in both protected the contents completely. I was amazed. The neighbor's refrigerator was still cold inside after the house had been burning for a few hours, and the outside was damaged but the interior was unaffected. The cousin's refrigerator was melted shut but when we pried the door off, everything inside was completely intact...including the ketchup bottles, etc. in the door. It obviously isn't as secure as a safe, but if you had a secure location to hide one, it might be a good place to store things to protect them in the event of a fire.