
22 December 2010 | 22 replies
Setting it to the proper temperature is one part of the picture, and I posted earlier on how I do that.The other part of the picture is that bath faucets have scald-safe limiters built-in; these also need to be set up and adjusted properly to limit the temperature that can be produced at the faucet.

24 December 2010 | 18 replies
The desire to succeed can overcome fear and they are much more likely to do the work necessary to produce success.
28 December 2010 | 51 replies
I'm still growing my assets and there are years that my net worth declines slightly which is okay because fundamentally I know my assets are producing and paying down the debt so in time net worth will grow even more.

22 January 2011 | 11 replies
It's not something we've really pushed heavily though as we kind of like the idea of the re-occuring income that rentals produce and I think we'll really appreciate that income once we reach retirement age and all of the houses are paid off.Kel

11 January 2011 | 9 replies
We put all the addresses in a spreadsheet, look up the owners, and mail to that list once a month and keep mailing to them until we know it's been sold.It's my favorite list to work from because it doesn't cost anything to produce (ok, a little gas) and it can yield some great deals.

22 February 2011 | 5 replies
Knowing the area and what companies own or produce what is an important consideration with larger areas.

28 February 2011 | 31 replies
I sure would.If you wanted to learn from another and pay them for it, would you want to learn from someone who did not or could not produce evidence they had done the deals in which they were going to teach you about (remind you of gurus!).

9 March 2011 | 72 replies
The decreased volatility should, in theory, mean that the note buying community would pay more for the note or require less of a discount to produce the desired yield.

17 September 2013 | 40 replies
All in good areas (I do not invest in the ghettos) all have undergone renovations, are now tenanted and producing positive cashflow.

25 February 2011 | 22 replies
So if you pay somebody $550 for one job and then later in the same year you pay them $50 for another job - they are to get a 1099.If they buy materials, and you pay them for that plus labor when you make a payment - then you 1099 them for the full amount paid; you do not separate out materials and labor when producing a 1099.