Not sure where you were going this this. The "Who's an Insured" applies to the whole policy but it applying to collision is moot. It does not come into play as collision is a first party coverage to the named insured only anyway. If I loan you my car and you run it into a wall it does not change any thing if you are an "insured" or not. But in my concern it does matter... as a liability claim. The insured driver gets liability coverage from the same carrier who is attempting to say he's liable for the damage to their named insured's car. The end result being that they cannot collect from the driver.. as if they tried, they'd also owe him a defense... from themselves. Me thinks that would look really odd in court.Show me the "who is an insured" section of a collision coverage form. I don't think there is one. It's an coverage added to the PAP form.....but the PAP form references only liability coverage. IIRC.