Haha, that's like being confident in your ability to be shit.... Sorry, too harsh?SuziQ said:don't hate me just because I have an opinion and im confident with my abilities in general maths.
Haha, that's like being confident in your ability to be shit.... Sorry, too harsh?SuziQ said:don't hate me just because I have an opinion and im confident with my abilities in general maths.
Use present value formula. Sub in r=0.006825 and n=360 first in the bracket.samali said:did anyone else have touble with question 27 b part i... which then altered the answers of ii and iii. me or none of my class mates could not get the monthly repayment to be $2178.67... did anyone else get it? how???
Julir takes out a $290 000 home loan. the terms of the loan are 8.25% per annum over 30 years with monthly repayments.SuziQ said:you needed to use present value formula. i didnt keep my exam so i cant give you the working, but thats what u needed to do. id be happy to explain if u want to give me the q.
I talked to three people about it, and we all had the same problem. Most of the things we tried got us $2799, or something like that (the exact number has slipped my mind right at this moment). I've got about a page, which is just working that's been crossed out, because i couldn't get an answer. Fortunately, the rest of the question didn't depend on that answer, so I went on, came back at the end of the exam, spent like, another half hour on it, and kept having the same problems over and over again.samali said:did anyone else have touble with question 27 b part i... which then altered the answers of ii and iii. me or none of my class mates could not get the monthly repayment to be $2178.67... did anyone else get it? how???
Yeah, I stuffed that up too. Apparently you had to use the annuities formula. In teh test however, I did not consider this. *shrug*Cerry said:I talked to three people about it, and we all had the same problem. Most of the things we tried got us $2799, or something like that (the exact number has slipped my mind right at this moment). I've got about a page, which is just working that's been crossed out, because i couldn't get an answer. Fortunately, the rest of the question didn't depend on that answer, so I went on, came back at the end of the exam, spent like, another half hour on it, and kept having the same problems over and over again.
Tried all three of those at least twice (because after the first one didn't work, I thought maybe I'd used the wrong one). Tried compound and simple interest. None of them worked. Reset my calculator and tried everything again. Still didn't work.ccc123 said:Yeah, I stuffed that up too. Apparently you had to use the annuities formula. In teh test however, I did not consider this. *shrug*
The height of the box was the radius which was shown as 15 im pretty sure. And I got the arc by cutting off the bottom curve so it was a triangle with two sides of 15 and figure out the bottom side and times that by 4 (or however many cheeses there were in the box).samali said:Also with question 25 (i) dimensions of the rectangular box, did anyone else take into account that the height of the sector wasnt in fact the height of the box and you had to use i think the cosine rule or something (i cant remember what i did) to get the middle height, and the arc in the sector couldnt just be timed by 4 to get the length of the box... you had to use the cosine rule to get the length without the arc. hahahha does anyone else know what im talking about. oh god i hope i didnt go off on an unneccesary tangent!
I had so much trouble with that question! I sat there for ages trying to figure out how to do it, and still never got the answer.. grr!samali said:did anyone else have touble with question 27 b part i... which then altered the answers of ii and iii. me or none of my class mates could not get the monthly repayment to be $2178.67... did anyone else get it? how???
Yeah i dunno...did you keep getting something like 7995 (there was a 7 and more than one 9 at least I remember)Cerry said:Tried all three of those at least twice (because after the first one didn't work, I thought maybe I'd used the wrong one). Tried compound and simple interest. None of them worked. Reset my calculator and tried everything again. Still didn't work.
Apparently, one of the girls in our class did get the answer, but it's beyond me how she did it.
samali said:Julir takes out a $290 000 home loan. the terms of the loan are 8.25% per annum over 30 years with monthly repayments.
(i) show that the minimum monthly repayment is $2178.67, to the nearest cent.
(ii) Determine the total amount paid for the loan over 30 years (I just timed 2178.67 by 360 months hahaha)
(iii) each months julie decides to pay $250 more than the minimum monthly repayment. Would she be able to pay off the loan in 20 years? Justify your answer by showing calculations.
Also with question 25 (i) dimensions of the rectangular box, did anyone else take into account that the height of the sector wasnt in fact the height of the box and you had to use i think the cosine rule or something (i cant remember what i did) to get the middle height, and the arc in the sector couldnt just be timed by 4 to get the length of the box... you had to use the cosine rule to get the length without the arc. hahahha does anyone else know what im talking about. oh god i hope i didnt go off on an unneccesary tangent!
Yes. All three of the other people I asked did as well. We were hoping that it was an actualy mistake, but people seem to have actually managed to prove it somehow.ccc123 said:Yeah i dunno...did you keep getting something like 7995 (there was a 7 and more than one 9 at least I remember)
Did you actually try the second way? Because I swear that's what I did, and I could not get that answer.SuziQ said:(i) Graphics Cal
N = 30 * 12
= 360
I% = 8.25/12
= 0.6875
PV = 290000
PMT = $2178.67
FV = 0
OR
290000/
(((1+0.006875)^360-1)/
(0.006875(1.006875)^360))
= $2178.673152
Cerry said:Yes. All three of the other people I asked did as well. We were hoping that it was an actualy mistake, but people seem to have actually managed to prove it somehow.
Did you actually try the second way? Because I swear that's what I did, and I could not get that answer.
I done it the second way, it may have been the way you typed it into the calculator, like you could of missed a bracket or two perhaps?Cerry said:Yes. All three of the other people I asked did as well. We were hoping that it was an actualy mistake, but people seem to have actually managed to prove it somehow.
Did you actually try the second way? Because I swear that's what I did, and I could not get that answer.
That can't be right because the circumference is curved, so it will be longer than the length of the cheese.SuziQ said:and for the length i got the circumference and multipled by 4.
It's a home loan, so you have to use Present Value annuities thingy.samali said:did anyone else have touble with question 27 b part i... which then altered the answers of ii and iii. me or none of my class mates could not get the monthly repayment to be $2178.67... did anyone else get it? how???