Buying HiFi at credit, anyone?


Has any of you ever bought a piece of Hifi with money you knew you did not have? Not talking about a 4-payment free interest deal when you have the cash anyway, I am talking putting the purchase on a line of credit or worse credit card and repaying it over many many months with interests to pay?

If so, no need to give a $ figure but how many months of net income did this represent and how long did it take to pay back? any regret? do you think it is a sign of ultime hifi sickness or true passion (not mutually exclusive!).
beheme
Thefalls1117, you hit the nail on the head. My wife is a Internal Medicine MD. She's always telling me stories just like the one you told. No one on their death bed wants more money! I'm not in debt but,I have been and it was a very stressfull time in my life. Now I live way below my means and don't try to impress anybody with what I own or have achieved. The secret to happy living is having your backyard clean because we are not guaranteed our next breath.
Since this thread has turned into a seminar on credit, I will add my two coppers.
The interest on credit is the SAME as renting the item, only much,much cheaper.
Say you want a car, spend $22,000. @ 7%
That 'rental' costs $128.00 month, with every month costing less as you begin to trade renting it for owning it.
Try 'renting' that car from Hertz for $128. a week!!!
My home theater system on credit:
A Sony 42" plasma, Denon 4806 receiver, Denon 5910 DVD, Canton 7.1 with 4 CD300 and 3 CD360.. even at 'high' interest rates is a rental cost of $75.00 month... Consider 'some' cash in the deal and it is $60.00 month.. or $2 a day 'rental'.
Now you COULD go to RentaCenter and get some cardboard trash for $100.00 a month rental.. but aren't we smarter than that?
Also the (sensible) use of credit builds a credit rating. A must. (I personally know a dude who DID get everything in his life with cash.. Then was totally flabbergasted when a card issuer denied him a card at age 42 with zero debt and $20,000 in the bank. The dude had NO CREDIT HISTORY!)
Anyway, I use and abuse credit whenever and where-ever possible.
For the folks who feel they must be independently wealthy by the age of 35, my strategy is flawed. But, since I am ALREADY way past 35 AND STILL FLAT BROKE, with a (small, very small) mountain of debt.. who cares!
I plan on dying broke... the state can cremate my remains, if they ever find them...
Elizabeth,

Awesome post, I could not agree with you more. One of my former partners (we lost our hospital contract for services) used to rave of the most influential book he ever read about the ideal time of dying being when you absolutely ran out of all funds/credit/assets.... While I think none of use could do this, as time of death is so difficult to assess, but it always comes to my mind when patients are told their disease is terminal, and they have (enter lame guess here) time to live.

I think once I got over the shock and new found drug abuse, I would be rather liberated and it would be perhaps a better way to end my life than some surprise MVA or such that took you out with no forewarning.

BTW How do you like the Canton CD 300's?? I was supposed to get them, then some things changed, I use their Vento's for my main rig and LOVE them, I think you would be hard pressed to find better for less than twice the price.
Like I said earlier, its easy to rationalize the use of credit cards as clearly evidenced in this thead.
Kennyt. I got the CD300 for $350. each instead of $1000. each, And the CD360 for $200 each. all new in box.
My local dealer was having a blowout sale at the warehouse!
And it became an offer I could not refuse! (too bad I did not buy the Vento sub at that time, I could have gotten it for $1,200.. maybe less!
I like them. The sound is ultra clear precise and fast. The CD300 work best right up against a wall. The bass is much better with them that way. The (very) slight 'aluminum' sound is not a problem at the price!!
The Vento's are much better!!!
My 2 channel has B&W 805s speakers