It was a big unit... 4 tons.... regular system would prob be like $3-5K maxis this because it broke altogether or it was a few decades old and needed to be replaced anyway?
It was a big unit... 4 tons.... regular system would prob be like $3-5K maxis this because it broke altogether or it was a few decades old and needed to be replaced anyway?
What u mean...... negus seen my house breh. Nukka bout his business too. My parents came from nothing, I cant waste thisS/N: Africans is pulling ppls cards HARD in this thread. You aint posting shyt with out recipients in chea![]()

That's what I want a four dour black one
on me that's exactly what I wantThe dude who lives across the hall from me pays $550 a month for a 2007 BMW 335 w/ 93k miles. Got new wheels on it too and I know he paying another $100 a month for them.
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You can't drive a Roth IRA though
And if your credit is good it's not too difficult to find places that will give you a killer interest rate these days. My car loans are like $150/mo a piece @2.5% or some shyt. Meanwhile there are conservative blue chip stocks returning 8, 9, 12% on nothing but dividendsI will gladly pay a 2.5% penalty to net 6-8%
And buying a new car is a stupid financial move period. That depreciation will kill you. If you can get a used car and an extended factory warranty you should be good. Average age of cars on the road in the US is like 11 years. You get a 5-7 year old Honda or Toyota or something you should be able to get like 4-5 years out of that bytch no problem. shyt my wife's car is an 11 year old VW and we haven't had any big issues over the last 3 years we owned it
The thought of blowing cash on a depreciating asset that gives no more functionality than a cheap used one makes me shudder. We just spent $12K replacing the central A/C in our house..... having cash on hand instead of tied up in bullshyt like cars is GOD in America

Anybody gotta Jeep Wrangler, how much y'all shyt hittin for![]()
I love them shyts but they cost $30K nicely loaded. Even with 0% (interest) that's a payment over $500 if youre financing it allThat's what I want a four dour black one
Just for kicks i did a roth ira calculator, starting at 25 until 62 (social security age), doing 5500 a year and i put a very conservative 8% earnings rate. At least 1.2 million. Over 1.2 million from about 200k in contributions. That grew TAX-FREE. And that's a low estimate, seeing how even the S&P 500 averages about 10% annually even after inflation.
Hope those new car payments are worth it
The Roth IRA just might be the GOAT retirement/investment tool for people, especially for beginners. Putting in after tax dollars, the earnings/growth is tax-free as well when you withdraw at retirement age. It's basically a savings account that has the ability to earn at least 10%, and if a catastrophic event happens, you can access and withdraw the contributions you've made at any time with no penalty or taxes.
i'm not saying your right or wrong, just that the less debt you have the better. Especially on a car loan. Don't even pay 2.5%, not even zero percent interest, just buy a car. I don't believe in buying new cars anymore, it's just not worth it unless you basically got no debt whatsoever (no mortgage too), at least 6 month emergency fund, 15-20% income retirement savings, college savings for kids if you have any, and a bunch of money to blow. Read up on millionaires. Just about all of them do not buy new cars while building their wealth/net worth. They save the money up and buy a car outright. OWN is the key.
The whole point of being debt free is minimizing risk. Anytime you have anything like a car loan, student loan, loans of any kind (mortgage too), it's a risk. Risk of foreclosure, repossession, etc. Debt means you are leveraging items with future earnings that have not been earned yet.
I understand the value of credit scores, but increasing credit should not involve car loans. Ever.
Being in debt just means that you're making someone else rich while you take all the risk.
This and the student loan situation and also Blackstone selling derivatives from mortgages make me think another crisis is near.
The dude who lives across the hall from me pays $550 a month for a 2007 BMW 335 w/ 93k miles. Got new wheels on it too and I know he paying another $100 a month for them.
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let me guess it's a 3 series tho right?! What a waste...