No idea what you are asking. Get an interpreter!
They are towed away & then repaired if not totaled.
if the repair job out weights the price of the vehicle
It depends on why it was totaled. If it's cosmetic damage that totaled the car (like a shallow sideswipe) of course. If it's structural, like frame damage, maybe. If it was in a flood, it's probably not a good idea to fix it since quirky electrical problems will haunt the car forever. If it is repaired it would still carry a totaled title but it can be qualified with the brand 'totaled/reconstructed' on the new title.
It can, but obviously the insurance company has decided it is not worth it. Also, note that in some states it may be hard to obtain a non-salvage title on a totaled car, which would make it hard to sell.
Not if you notify you local PVA that the car is totaled and not longer in service. You will pay taxes up to the day it was totaled.
In most states, you will owe whats left owing after the ins. co. pays.
If it cannot be repaired or not worth it to do so, the insurance company will pay the value of the car and depending on the current market value of the vehicle. If you owe money on the car the lender will be paid off first and you may get the remainder.
I totaled my Mustang and was able to buy it back from the insurance company. They gave me the Blue-Book value less my $500 deductable. They would not insure it after I repaired it, I had to switch insurance carriers to get coverage.
You must provide that salvage title in order to claim for the collision aspect of this current claim.
If you mean totaled cars that have yet to be repaired, go to an auction or tow yard. If you mean a salvage car that has been reconstructed to roadworthiness, try Craigslist. There's lotsa salvage vehicles being sold there under the guise of being a clean titled car! But sometimes there's honest seller who are selling totaled/reconstructed cars for what they're worth, which is roughly 60% of the price of a comparable clean titled car.
Home equity loan perhaps. No bank is going to finance a totaled car.
Get a new car. == If someone hit your car you will be paid the actual cash value of the car. If you totaled the car and had collision coverage you will be paid actual cash value, too.