engineer123
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- Mar 21, 2015
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Hi All,
I wasn't sure which board to post this question but I'm assuming all disciplines will have engineering economics on their exam? Anyways I'm studying this topic right now to refresh my memory and I was stuck on the problem/solution below:
Two coatings are under consideration for a liquid chemical storage tank. A tank coating identified as Material A will have a first cost of $50,000 and a 10 year life, if repaired at the end of year five. Material B will cost $20,000 initially and $5,000 per year through its five year life. At an interest rate of 10% per year, the amount that could be spent for repairing Material A that would make the two breakeven is closest to:
Solution:
Equate present worth relations for 10 year service life. Let x = repair cost in year 5 for breakeven.
50,000 + x(P/F, 10%, 5) = 20,000 + 20,000(P/F, 10%, 5) + 5,000(P/A, 10%,10)
50,000 + x(0.6209) = 20,000 + 20,000(0.6209) + 5,000(6.1446)
0.6209x = 13,141
x = $21,164
On the right side of the equation, I don't know where 20,000(P/F, 10%, 5) came from? And for 5,000(P/A, 10%,10) , isn't n supposed to be 5? Also, instead of doing a present worth analysis, could this be solved with an annual worth equation instead?
Also generally speaking, how difficult can engineering economics be on the exam? I hope they are straight forward. Often times, it's the wording of the question that messes up your equation. The math itself is easy though lol.
I wasn't sure which board to post this question but I'm assuming all disciplines will have engineering economics on their exam? Anyways I'm studying this topic right now to refresh my memory and I was stuck on the problem/solution below:
Two coatings are under consideration for a liquid chemical storage tank. A tank coating identified as Material A will have a first cost of $50,000 and a 10 year life, if repaired at the end of year five. Material B will cost $20,000 initially and $5,000 per year through its five year life. At an interest rate of 10% per year, the amount that could be spent for repairing Material A that would make the two breakeven is closest to:
Solution:
Equate present worth relations for 10 year service life. Let x = repair cost in year 5 for breakeven.
50,000 + x(P/F, 10%, 5) = 20,000 + 20,000(P/F, 10%, 5) + 5,000(P/A, 10%,10)
50,000 + x(0.6209) = 20,000 + 20,000(0.6209) + 5,000(6.1446)
0.6209x = 13,141
x = $21,164
On the right side of the equation, I don't know where 20,000(P/F, 10%, 5) came from? And for 5,000(P/A, 10%,10) , isn't n supposed to be 5? Also, instead of doing a present worth analysis, could this be solved with an annual worth equation instead?
Also generally speaking, how difficult can engineering economics be on the exam? I hope they are straight forward. Often times, it's the wording of the question that messes up your equation. The math itself is easy though lol.