
26 April 2013 | 32 replies
I bought a $400 toilet, a Kohler low profile one piece type for $35.00...brand new!
19 May 2011 | 13 replies
I am brand new to this site and I've done my best to complete my profile the best I can.

28 May 2011 | 11 replies
Plus would it be as good of a system as ADT or another comparable brand?

26 May 2011 | 10 replies
We do want to increase the brand awareness though and get dialog with people.

30 December 2009 | 7 replies
Also, if you want to add a certain "flare" to your image and brand you could even use a company in the UK.www.jam.uk.com for example.

30 January 2010 | 10 replies
As others have stated, typical replacement should run $100-200, depending on whether it's a plumber who is used to working with contractors or a plumber who is used to working retail.It shouldn't take more than 1-2 hours, and even having to purchase a brand new water heather ($450-500 plus maybe another $40 for an expansion tank), the bill shouldn't come to more than $700 on the high end.

16 February 2010 | 28 replies
These are the comps I used to influence the BPO.Then, there's brand new construction (built in 2009), with similar square footage and beds/baths, which sold recently for $380k.I'm very curious to know if the $345 would get appraised, because that buyer is not willing to pay the difference in a short appraisal.And I'm seriously thinking about emailing my title agent and asking for a new HUD at $260k.

11 March 2010 | 24 replies
If I bought a brand new $100,000 Mercedes convertible today and sold it to Brian tomorrow for $5,000, does that mean that the Mercedes is only worth $5,000?

10 March 2010 | 2 replies
I would think that if it is a brand new home, just built, the builder has already figured the price for this market.If it is a "new" house and it's unsold inventory, sitting unsold for a couple of years, the builder would be very willing to listen to low offers.

10 March 2010 | 3 replies
Brand new office complex, 3 stories, 45,000 feet or so, elevator, stucco, across from city hall, closes for just over $2.3 million, purchased by an LLC by five of the "sharpest businessmen" in town.