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  1. Default September Roadtrip: SF to Las Vegas and Beyond

    Hi guys,

    Been checking out the forums while i plan my roadtrip and got lots of excellent information from it. So thanks an awful lot already and I'm hoping you can help me out with a question, or a choice depending on how you look at it.

    From reading guide books they've described some of the roads as gravelly, bumpy, etc etc and I'm wondering if
    A) these would count as "off-road" in hire car insurance speak
    and
    B) if so is it worth hiring a 4x4/SUV if your car hire forbids you from going on these less than perfect roads?

    I'm basically trying to choose between an SUV and a sportscar of some description. Obviously if the roads are less than perfect I'd prefer to be in a 4x4 but if any roads that are gonna be like that would invalidate the insurance than maybe a cool little car is a better idea?

    Thanks in advance for any help on this first of many questions. ;-)

    David

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 1998
    Location
    Las Vegas, Nevada
    Posts
    13,012

    Default the terminology is "off-pavement"

    Quote Originally Posted by davidwebb_uk View Post
    From reading guide books they've described some of the roads as gravelly, bumpy, etc etc and I'm wondering if
    A) these would count as "off-road" in hire car insurance
    From the point of view of car rental companies, any road that is not on pavement is forbidden. So, if the guidebooks you are looking at refer to gravel, bumpy, etc. You can assume that travel on them would invalidate your rental agreement. That being said, some people still rent 4x4/SUVs for that purpose and as long as you don't get stuck/break-down or etc -- you will be fine.
    I'm basically trying to choose between an SUV and a sportscar of some description. Obviously if the roads are less than perfect I'd prefer to be in a 4x4 but if any roads that are gonna be like that would invalidate the insurance than maybe a cool little car is a better idea?
    Cool little car will trump 4x4 for all of the reasons described. The thing to remember -- that the sports car isn't supposed to be taken "off-pavement" either.

    Mark

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Washington state coast/Olympic Peninsula
    Posts
    3,614

    Default Yup...sports car!

    Cool little car will trump 4x4 for all of the reasons described.
    We have a winner!

    If you really need 4x4 to drive that road, you really shouldn't be driving on those roads with a rental of any kind. However, there are numerous roads that might be considered "off pavement" that you could easily drive in a sports car. Just go slow! (And you would want to go slow in a rental SUV, too.)

    I say get the type of car you will most enjoy driving. 4x4 and SUVs aren't needed for most roads any traveler is going to encounter.

  4. Default Thanks for the replies

    Cheers guys. If i went down the cool little car route I think I'd want something more sporty than what it seems we can hire from the UK.

    The 4x4/SUV selection is better though. Dodge Journey and Durango both being available within our budget.

    Personally I'm vearing towards suv just in case. But hell a sportscar would be very nice on the open roads.

    Time to do more investigations and speak to a couple of hire car companies.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Joplin MO
    Posts
    10,321

    Default

    The closest thing you are going to get to a sports car from a mainstream US rental company is a convertible - if you are lucky, it might be a Mustang, but then again, it might be a Chrysler Sebring.

  6. Default

    They've been Sebrings on the ones I've looked at so far...

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Western/Central Massachusetts
    Posts
    1,711

    Default One exception

    Quote Originally Posted by glc View Post
    The closest thing you are going to get to a sports car from a mainstream US rental company is a convertible - if you are lucky, it might be a Mustang, but then again, it might be a Chrysler Sebring.
    Granted, it might be outside of the budget, but Hertz has the Fun Collection, with the Corvette available. 436 horsepower of fun!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Location
    Green County, Wisconsin
    Posts
    13,831

    Default keep in mind

    Quote Originally Posted by davidwebb_uk View Post
    They've been Sebrings on the ones I've looked at so far...
    Keep in mind, with any rental companies, they aren't promising a specific model. If they say Sebring it will also say "or similar" and in some cases you could end up with a Mustang. There aren't many convertable options, so in that case there are only a couple models that you are likely to find.

    The same is true with SUVs, even though they might say Dodge Journey or Durango, you're really just booking a class. In case of the Journey, its the Small SUV/"crossover" class, where you could end up with a Journey or a Subaru Forester, or a Chevy Equinox, or a Ford Escape. If you went with a Durango, you'd be getting one of any number of mid-sized like the Ford Explorer or a Toyota Highlander. They will simply give you what they have available on a given day.

    The only exceptions are if you go with something like the Hertz Fun Collection mentioned previously, where you are reserving a specific model. However, companies do charge a pretty substantial premium for specific reservations like these.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Joplin MO
    Posts
    10,321

    Default

    FYI, the last time we rented a "crossover", Enterprise gave us a Ford Edge.

  10. Default

    A car I love renting is a Dodge Charger. Very sporty with an intimidating quality.

    May not be a Mustang or a Corvette. But it's got eye-appeal.

    Sykotyk

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