NULevo
Well-known member
You just destroyed my world - I'm an iSheep. Fuuuuuuuuuuuck!
Welcome to my world!
You just destroyed my world - I'm an iSheep. Fuuuuuuuuuuuck!
Yup was heavily invested myself but glad to say its recovered nicely as I stayed invested and actually bought quality companies near the bottomMmm, congratulations.
Try selling that one to anyone who bought a bike in February 2020, your +9% would most likely have been -40%.
Yeah, well our 'kiss the babies' Prime Minister and her motley incompetent crew, are going to cease importing Japanese used cars in about 3-4 years. They haven't got the intelligence to realise the majority of lower income New Zealanders won't be able to afford e-mvs, or the newer used petrol or diesel motor vehicles.I don't have a *credit* card and here in Oz the tax is slightly higher for eBikes than regular stuff (yes, I think it's stupid too but we also pay luxury car tax on electric cars instead of promoting them because our PM is a coal loving fucktard.). Even my Matercard and Visa are *debit* cards and the funds come directly from my bank account. It took me nearly 30 years to get out of debt and I want to stay that way. I realise I'm one of the lucky ones in that regard.
I know some people need to use credit or a loan and that's fine if you really use the bike and it's insured. You weigh up the benefits versus the payments. Riding any type of bike is good for the body and the mind. I know a lot of roadies who drop this kind of money and even golfers! When we could travel a three week holiday could cost as much as a mid range bike. People put those on cards all the time.
The real question is whether it's worth the cost, including the extras, interest and running costs? You invest in a bike and the repayments are smiles, a bit of fitness, playing in the mud and the odd broken rib. For me the answer is a resounding yes. I'd sacrifice lots of other things to buy a bike if I had to. (Does anyone know if you have to feed ALL of your kids or just a portion of them?)
Gordon
You can get 0% credit cards on purchases for up to two years. If you buy the bike via this route you get the consumer rights protection here in the UK and have two years to 1) Save up the money 2) Invest in the stock market 3) Offset your mortgage 4) Earn more money 5) get a divorce
My Visa extended warranty states motorized vehicles not covered So I assume ebike would not be covered. They do cover electronic devices like mobile phones and computers.Now I'm wondering - is an emtb an electronic device and covered under my visa extended warranty program?
Paid on visa, cleared the visa the next day.
Bike was over 5k so paid a deposit upfront and 0% finance over 3 years.Given how expensive bikes in general, and emtb's in particular are getting, it made me wonder how many people are actually dropping the full amount up front when making their purchases, and how many are financing the purchase is some way or other.
With the explosion in the EMTB market, rising bike sales and prices, it seems to me that a lot more people than I imagine have the disposable income to blow on the bikes, or there must be some good deals to be had financing them.
Personally one of my EMTB's I paid in full funded by selling one of my motorbikes, and the other I did on a 0% finance deal over two years.
Obviously a kind of personal question, but given how may 5k plus emtb's I see rolling around the Surrey Hills these days it got me thinking.
I take it "Exchanged for Sexual Favours" falls under the all encompassing "Finance Deal" ?
A hookah smoking caterpillar told me to use a credit card...... your wife bought it for you?
Buying on finance is generally not a good idea. If you can't afford it, enjoy the perfectly good bike you have until you can.
Sounds just like my life to be honest I am in that hard 3 years of buying nothing at the momentPaid with Visa for the points but then paid off the Visa with cash.
I'm now saving for my next eMTB -- I could get one now and finance it but as I've gotten older I've realized how less stressful it is to pay for stuff with money you have. I end up having more money quicker to pay for stuff because I'm not making payments on stuff I already bought.
It did take about 3 years of hardship to flop my life around this way (meaning: buying really nothing new and just paying for what I had). But after that 3 years the money I had felt crazy..
Plenty of hub drives at that price - not the bike just the hub powered wheel .I wish my employer would increase the C2W limit from the £1000 they are stubbornly sticking with.
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