I agree, at $299 the lease deal wasn't wooing me... but at $99, I went for it.jgantert said:You know, that math doesn't work out very well when the lease fee is $299 instead of $99. It will take about 6 years to break even.
Didn't you have to trade in your old equipment to get the $99 rate instead of $299. So, you need to add the value of the reciever you traded in to the first year cost.
-John
That's true about the 942 that I upgraded from, however, I leased that also and it's difficult to nail down it's value in my situation. I leased it when I signed up for my first contract with E*, about 9 months ago, and my upfront payment included 2 D500's, a DP311, installation, and I received 6 months of programming credits. Anyway, I felt that it was beyond the scope of the example being made with Comcast there.
Incidentally, I have calculated my total first year costs with E*, including all start-up fees, equipment upgrades, programming and discounts, and have broken it down to a monthly figure... ~$135/month. Had Charlie not decided to goose his programming revenue in February, I would've been a little happier.