Engineering Economy (17th Edition)
Engineering Economy (17th Edition)
17th Edition
ISBN: 9780134870069
Author: William G. Sullivan, Elin M. Wicks, C. Patrick Koelling
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 8, Problem 44P

Your company manufactures circuit boards and other electronic parts for various commercial products. Design changes in part of the product line, which are expected to increase sales, will require changes in the manufacturing operation. The cost basis of new equipment required is $220,000 (MACRS five-year property class). Increased annual revenues, in year zero dollars, are estimated to be $360,000. Increased annual expenses, in year zero dollars, are estimated to be $239,000. The estimated market value of equipment in actual dollars at the end of the six-year analysis period is $40,000. General price inflation is estimated at 4.9% per year; the total increase rate of annual revenues is 2.5%, and for annual expenses it is 5.6%; the after-tax MARR (in market terms) is 10% per year (im); and t = 25%. (Chapter 7 and 8.3, 8.7)

  1. a. Based on an after-tax, actual-dollar analysis, what is the maximum amount that your company can afford to spend on the total project (i.e., changing the manufacturing operations)? Use the PW method of analysis.
  2. b. Develop (show) your ATCF in real dollars.
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Your company manufactures circuit boards and other electronic parts for various commercial products. Design changes in part of the product line, which are expected to increase sales, will require changes in the manufacturing operation. The cost basis of new equipment required is $220,000 (MACRS five-year property class). Increased annual revenues, in year zero dollars, are estimated to be $360,000. Increased annual expenses, in year zero dollars, are estimated to be $239,000. The estimated market value of equipment in actual dollars at the end of the six-year analysis period is $40,000. General price inflation is estimated at 4.9% per year; the total increase rate of annual revenues is 2.5%, and for annual expenses it is 5.6%; the after-tax MARR (in market terms) is 10% per year (im); and t = 39%. (Refer to Chapter 7 and Problem 8.7)   a. Based on an after-tax, actual-dollar analysis, what is the maximum amount that your company can afford to spend on the total project (i.e., changing…
A company is developing a new electronic product. It expects to spend $38 million on Research and Development and then another $6 million on Manufacturing Engineering. After completing all this, the company expects a cost of $15 per unit to manufacture and plans to build in a profit of $5 per unit into the price. The company needs to recover the cost of R&D plus Manufacturing Engineering over five years through sales of 4 million units over those five years. What will the company need to establish as the sales price for the unit?
Joseph and three other friends bought a $290,000 house close to the university at the end of August last year. At that time, they put down a deposit of $20,000 and took out a mortgage for the balance. Their mortgage payments are due at the end of each month (September 30, last year, was the date of the first payment) and are based on the assumption that Joseph and his friends will take 20 years to pay off the debt. Annual nominal interest is 6 percent, compounded monthly. It is now February. Joseph and his friends have made all their fall-term payments and have just made the January 31 payment for this year. How much do they still owe? Click the icon to view the table of compound interest factors for discrete compounding periods when i = 0.5%. They will owe $ (Round to the nearest dollar as needed.)
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