Tuesday
The drives that do random writes have a very long lifespan. The cheap ones that do contiguous writes from sector 0 are the ones that fail prematurely.
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From: Funtown
Car Info: A limousine with a chauffer
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From: In SoggyNoodles Low Rise Pants
Car Info: 2008 Legacy Spec-B
Ya, I think i've made up my mind. I am just going to keep the camaro
Now question #2...
I have a 200 dollar a month car payment, at which I pay 220 bucks a month on. Would it be better/smarter to just pay off the camaro so I don't have any form of debt anymore(aka better credit score), or keep the extra 6k and use it on the future house purchase
Now question #2...
I have a 200 dollar a month car payment, at which I pay 220 bucks a month on. Would it be better/smarter to just pay off the camaro so I don't have any form of debt anymore(aka better credit score), or keep the extra 6k and use it on the future house purchase
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From: Front pleated TWill pants...
Car Info: 2004 PSM WRX
You can still get an add-on drive...this was the only way to make it that thin methinks. Plus now everyone is supposed to buy movies/music through iTunes, so who needs a DVD/CD drive anymore?
Isn't Paul building you a new motor or rebuilding your old one?
Where are you looking to buy?
Originally Posted by GT35 STI
Ya I'm aiming for Nov. Dec. to buying a house, if I go with option A) I would have at the worst 10% down(given the prices of houses atm)
Now question #2...
I have a 200 dollar a month car payment, at which I pay 220 bucks a month on. Would it be better/smarter to just pay off the camaro so I don't have any form of debt anymore(aka better credit score), or keep the extra 6k and use it on the future house purchase
I have a 200 dollar a month car payment, at which I pay 220 bucks a month on. Would it be better/smarter to just pay off the camaro so I don't have any form of debt anymore(aka better credit score), or keep the extra 6k and use it on the future house purchase
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iTrader: (7)
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 25,095
From: Funtown
Car Info: A limousine with a chauffer
Ya, I think i've made up my mind. I am just going to keep the camaro
Now question #2...
I have a 200 dollar a month car payment, at which I pay 220 bucks a month on. Would it be better/smarter to just pay off the camaro so I don't have any form of debt anymore(aka better credit score), or keep the extra 6k and use it on the future house purchase
Now question #2...
I have a 200 dollar a month car payment, at which I pay 220 bucks a month on. Would it be better/smarter to just pay off the camaro so I don't have any form of debt anymore(aka better credit score), or keep the extra 6k and use it on the future house purchase
It's up to you, but you should evaluate how much interest your paying on the car over that next $6k vs. how much that $6k in your bank account would earn. Don't forget that the loan should be amortized, so the amount of interest you're paying on each payment from here on out likely won't equal the apr of the loan. You can use an amortization calculator on the internets to figure it out.
Debt isn't necessarily bad, if you can pay it.
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Posts: 15,877
From: In SoggyNoodles Low Rise Pants
Car Info: 2008 Legacy Spec-B
It's up to you, but you should evaluate how much interest your paying on the car over that next $6k vs. how much that $6k in your bank account would earn. Don't forget that the loan should be amortized, so the amount of interest you're paying on each payment from here on out likely won't equal the apr of the loan. You can use an amortization calculator on the internets to figure it out.
well if I don't spend the 6k on the car, i'd be able to invest around 30k. I'd put it in some form of investment that I couldn't touch for atleast 6 months(so I don't accidentally spend it). Kind of like a CD or something
I'm just fixing the threads on the motor, and selling it... I am looking to buy in the roseville area, I found a few brand new(no previous owners) houses off of blue oaks that are LIST, 260k
Amortization (simplified) means that your first payment is like 99% interest and 1% principal, and your last payment is 1% interest and 99% principal. Its actually a curved line with lots of math theory behind it, and blah blah blah.
If you take the loan out to term, there is no difference. What it does, though, is give the banks a bit more of their profit on the loan early, just in case you default on the loan, or you decide to pay it off early.
If you take the loan out to term, there is no difference. What it does, though, is give the banks a bit more of their profit on the loan early, just in case you default on the loan, or you decide to pay it off early.
You've never heard of Amortization!? 
If I were you, I would invest the $30k to gain the interest and use part of that for a down payment. Per the "rule of thumb" for buying a house. You should be making ~$55,000/year for a $250,000 house.
Not saying you can't do that, just making sure you're aware.

If I were you, I would invest the $30k to gain the interest and use part of that for a down payment. Per the "rule of thumb" for buying a house. You should be making ~$55,000/year for a $250,000 house.
Not saying you can't do that, just making sure you're aware.



I hate not having any history, I have never had a late payment, and my credit score is 700