I see a lawyer in your future. I hate to say it but her ins co is going to do all they can to total your car and not want to give you much for it. What ever you do DO NOT SIGN ANY MEDICAL RELEASES NOW. Your claim is good for 7 years. At least that is what it's here in ND. If they say they need you to sign one to fix your car then get ahold of a lawyer. Talk to Crazy Pete on here. He just went through this on his T/A a year ago.
As much as I hate to say it, I tend to agree here.....
The insurance company;s goal is going to be to spend as little as possible.....
Did you have your car appraised by chance after the restoration? do you at least have a record and receipts of all the money and labor (INCLUDING YOURS)?
They will probably balk at the total bill, which to do it right I am sure will be hefty. They will not look at it as a sweet classic piece of history but as a 40 year old car.
Yeah, the lady feels real bad right now...as she should.
But once all the adrenaline and shock wear off a few weeks into it, and the money figures start popping up, people start looking out for themselves.
I hate to say it but you really should discuss the case with an attorney...not an ambulance chaser looking to screw the other party over, but a decent one who will work to make this right.
I hope you luck out and are dealing with an insurance company who wont try and screw ya. I have never had to file a claim for a classic vehicle so I may be talking out of my butt....LOL
I guess all I am saying is cover all your bases to prove the car's prior worth before this happened.