Essentially they are saying that your car is worth $4230 ACV (actual cash value) or what you could sell it for. Now for the important question, what was your car "realistically" worth before the accident? Do not add up all the bolt ons you have and come with a total... What would the car sell for in the real world as it was 1 minute prior to the accident..?
Insurance companies settle total losses based on ACV. This (as mentioned above) is the real market value of the vehicle just prior to the accident.. If you feel the car was worth $8k, then that is what you should get and then they should offer to let you buy it back for the salvage value.
The likely determined the ACV of your vehicle by running a CCC (Certified Collateral Corportation) report which essentially surveys cars for sale in your market similiar to yours.. This likely included ALOT of base model regals which could have skewed the value downward.
Here's what I suggest.... Print off ALL the adds from this board, get copies of local adds (classifieds, TR's, etc.), search
www.autotraderonline.com and print out adds for TR there.. Present this information to them and show them what the REAL value of a TR (and not a run of the mill regal) is really worth..
With that said, if you convince them to come to a more realistic ACV, then the vehicle may NOT be considered a total loss. A vehicle is determined to be a total loss if the unit has damage above a certain % of the total value of the vehicle.. MOST states use a 75% to value total threshold... I.e. If the damage is $7500 on a $10000 car, it LEGALLY must be considered a total loss. If the damage is $7499 on a $10k car, it is repairable (unless severe frame or other structural integrity damage causes it to be deemed unrepairable)..
You have a hard row to hoe, BUT if you do your homework, you can show the insurance company that their value is an Inaccurate one..
Goodluck..
1ARUNEM <---- (former insurance adjuster for the Good Hands)