Build Your Own Arcade Controls Forum
Main => Everything Else => Topic started by: gavkiwi on May 17, 2006, 05:29:07 pm
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Financing 2 vehicles on one income?
just curious if anyone's done this or is currently doing it?
Already have one car, need a 2nd vehicle, and its got to be financed.
I'm sure income to debt ratio, overall yearly salary comes into play.
but is it possible on one salary?
any input would be appreciated
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Can you lease one? Shows up differently on your credit score.
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it depends on how much that one salary is. I financed my vehicle and am getting 100% financing on a new house, all from my one income. Obviously if my annual salary was only $10k a year that wouldn't be possible, so it all depends on how much you make.
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Financing 2 vehicles on one income?
just curious if anyone's done this or is currently doing it?
Already have one car, need a 2nd vehicle, and its got to be financed.
I'm sure income to debt ratio, overall yearly salary comes into play.
but is it possible on one salary?
any input would be appreciated
I fix computers for the largest used car franchise in the USA. If you are interested, I can ask one of our underwriters, how possible it would be on your income, vs. your debt.
If anyone would know, they would. If interested, let me know, and I can ask them what info they would need.
Good luck!
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Your question, as noted by another, is entirely dependent on how much that income is. It's also dependent on how much the car in question is, how much you owe on the current vehicle, etc.
Seriously, there's no way to answer this properly without more information on your part. Give answers to the 3 questions above to give us at least SOME place to start, otherwise the answer is a resounding YES!...or a resounding NO!...but definitely could fit in the MOST CERTAINLY MAYBE! category.
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I'll tell you. Just post your name, address, social security number and date of birth...
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Your question, as noted by another, is entirely dependent on how much that income is. It's also dependent on how much the car in question is, how much you owe on the current vehicle, etc.
Hey Drew, how long is a piece of string?
-S
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Your question, as noted by another, is entirely dependent on how much that income is. It's also dependent on how much the car in question is, how much you owe on the current vehicle, etc.
Hey Drew, how long is a piece of string?
-S
Twice the hypotenuse multiplied by pi divided by the square root of twelve congruent sides. At least that's the easiest formula I've found
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Twice the hypotenuse multiplied by pi divided by the square root of twelve congruent sides.
Are we summing the sides, finding the product of them, or neither? ;)
And snap to it, as I think I'm close to solving life's most perplexing mysteries! :dizzy:
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Twice the hypotenuse multiplied by pi divided by the square root of twelve congruent sides. At least that's the easiest formula I've found
You'll have to ask me for permission to do that... ;)
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Twice the hypotenuse multiplied by pi divided by the square root of twelve congruent sides.
Are we summing the sides, finding the product of them, or neither? ;)
The answer to your question is yes! :cheers:
Twice the hypotenuse multiplied by pi divided by the square root of twelve congruent sides. At least that's the easiest formula I've found
You'll have to ask me for permission to do that... ;)
Oh, I wasn't referring to you. I was referring to the pi with more or less hair. I hadn't even realized pi was such a common name until I was paging through my friend's "Revised For The Aught's Book Of Baby Names". Of course, it WAS a Chinese version too.
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Oh, I wasn't referring to you. I was referring to the pi with more or less hair. I hadn't even realized pi was such a common name until I was paging through my friend's "Revised For The Aught's Book Of Baby Names". Of course, it WAS a Chinese version too.
It's not a name, but sometimes I feel chinese. Definitely there's a lot of hair around here ;D
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It's not a name
Says you!
I honest-to-goodness actually know a Pi. Works on the ski patrol with my father-in-law. Pi Toon, but I don't think he's Chinese, I think he's Hmong or Korean.
And I asked him. I'm able to use him for my equation ;)
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Sorry if I wasn't too explicit. I don't use it as a name. I refer to pi, known as the greek letter commonly used to represent a certain transcendental number. I am referring to the number. I'm irrational, if you haven't noticed ;D
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It's not a name
Says you!
I honest-to-goodness actually know a Pi. Works on the ski patrol with my father-in-law. Pi Toon, but I don't think he's Chinese, I think he's Hmong or Korean.
And I asked him. I'm able to use him for my equation ;)
If he had a name like F. Scott Fitzjerald, it could be...
S. Pi Toon
don't know why it makes me laugh, but it does.... :laugh2: