krusty the clown
Member Emeritus
i found this. i thought some of you would find it interesting since we were talking toolboxes.......
http://gozips.uakron.edu/~vlf5/vlf5_module2.pdf
http://gozips.uakron.edu/~vlf5/vlf5_module2.pdf
Interesting, I really wasn't aware that mechanics sometimes had to finance their toolboxes.


LOL, that article is written by someone who goes to the University of Akron, the college that I go to. Interesting how things like that happen.
-dan
That article looks like it was written by a middleschooler.i don't do any of my stuff on finance. everything on a revolving account or whatever Snap-on calls it.
i'm not sure how they've calculated the finance in that article either.
$4,500 with 22.5% interest is $5,512.50.
Yea with the interest calculated as "simple interest". What the company (and just about everyone/everything else) is doing is calculating compound interest, IE once a week/month/year/whatever they recalculate your interest vs. principle. That's why credit cards have a minimum payment each month, you're basically just paying off the interest you've accrued that month and not knocking down the balance.
I think being a tech can be tough and making a good living period is hard; maybe the techs here can tell us what the reality is these days..... there just seems to be many people who get out of industry, for financial or physical reasons; it makes you wonder.....its got to be tough....
That article looks like it was written by a middleschooler.

Looking at it again, I have to agree.That's what I was thinking too... except I gave the benefit of the doubt and though high school freshman. Definitely not a good example of college-level writing....![]()