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Results (4,879+)
Brendan Chetuck Knob and tube electrical
4 September 2019 | 58 replies
You can do some simple math to gauge potential costs, if you know what master electricians charge per hour in your area and add to that the hourly rate for 1 journeyman and 1 apprentice and multiply that by 80 hours you will have a rough idea as to labor costs.
Evan Scott Help with SBA 7(a) Process
30 June 2019 | 4 replies
Whatever your total project cost is, if the lender is requiring 10% down you just multiply the two numbers and you get your down payment or "injection".
Nick J. Some More Useless Math?
22 April 2011 | 15 replies
If you multiply your answer by 4, you get mine. :)
Katie Cool Calculating ARV for a flip
3 May 2011 | 3 replies
Then I multiply the average $/sf by the sf of the house I'm considering to get the ARV.
Mark Fitzpatrick Spending cuts, tax increases, or both? How's the debt ceiling debate going to work out?
11 June 2011 | 4 replies
When you increase spending, you increase the amount of money circulating, which is the multiplier effect.
Account Closed ARV Confusion
21 June 2011 | 7 replies
The price per SF came to 90.62, and I used this value and multiplied it with 1797 (subject property's SF).
Stinson Bland Analyze: Possible Sub-To Rehab (my first)
18 July 2011 | 7 replies
I then multiply my square ft. by the average price per sq
Ana Hyler Not sure who this quote is from, but I find it quite interesting.
6 January 2009 | 3 replies
You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it."
Jean T. Have you partnered with your contractor?
29 January 2009 | 13 replies
All costs are multiplied by our mark up.
Michael Ueltschey $15,000 Tax Credit
12 February 2009 | 12 replies
How is multiplying the same priciples that got us into this mess (times ten) going to help the economy?