Most calculators work like this: you enter injury severity, treatment timelines, and losses, and the tool produces a rough range. That can be useful for getting your bearings—especially when you’re trying to understand how medical treatment and lost time from work may factor into a claim.
But AI tools typically struggle with what’s often decisive in truck cases around Robins Air Force Base area commuting corridors, including:
- Causation details (what exactly caused your symptoms after the collision)
- Conflicting accounts (including reports that don’t match the physical evidence)
- Trucking-company proof (maintenance history, driver paperwork, safety policies)
- Georgia-specific dispute dynamics (insurers’ tendency to narrow fault and challenge “necessity” of certain treatments)
In short: an AI number is not the same thing as a settlement value backed by records.


