In general, AI-style tools work by taking inputs—like injury seriousness, treatment timing, and economic losses—and producing a range. That can be useful if you’re trying to understand which categories of damages typically get included.
But in a Robinson truck case, the estimate may be incomplete if:
- Liability is disputed (common when the trucking company argues the crash was unavoidable or the driver acted correctly)
- Medical causation is challenged (insurers may argue symptoms were pre-existing or unrelated)
- The injury timeline isn’t fully documented yet (early numbers often change after follow-up care)
- Truck-specific fault issues exist (maintenance, cargo/security, log compliance, or supervision)
A calculator can’t verify whether your medical records, work restrictions, and crash evidence will line up the way an adjuster (or a Texas jury) expects.


