
18 December 2007 | 8 replies
Travis,Welcome aboard the crazy little engine that not only could, it did!

4 January 2008 | 12 replies
We visited the property at least semi-annually, but more if needed.Unless the leases are NNN, then the Landlord is responsible for most maintenance and therefore you at minimum need a local building engineer that the tenants can contact when needed and check on the property on a regular basis.

24 April 2020 | 27 replies
The Fed has engineered two booms and busts (the dot-com boom/bust and the real estate boom/bust).

18 January 2008 | 6 replies
q=house+inspection+checklist&rls=com.microsoft:en-us:IE-SearchBox&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&sourceid=ie7) Other search engines may bring up different ones.

21 January 2008 | 1 reply
Go to a search engine… Type in Mortgage Fraud… They are now looking for this stuff more than ever!
10 February 2008 | 14 replies
I work as a network administrator for a global engineering firm, with entry level pay.

9 October 2011 | 6 replies
The search engine on this site is great and can be closely focused to your needs.Obviously, private money is best found locally.

20 October 2011 | 13 replies
I use one Chinese engineered off a home loan application.

25 October 2011 | 14 replies
Converting some of the downstairs into a master bedroom with walk in closet and ensuite, 50 % new roof, new floors throughout, paint, finishing a sunroom, refinished kitchen and baths.ARV: $189,000 1)In looking at the pics, you really need to have a good general contractor take a look at the sub-floor structures as it look like it suffered from severe water damage. 2) If you have not already, you should budget new engineered flooring because even if some of it is salvageable, you're not going to be able to match it up. 3) Going to convert downstairs space into a master?

21 October 2011 | 5 replies
I'm a 22yr old Design Engineer who is getting started in the real estate investing industry.