Bird:
<font color="blue">Yep, it does make a difference; at least in some cases. I doubt that any one person could completely explain because it's different with different dealers, manufacturers, financing companies, credit card companies, etc., but just for a very limited information: . . . </font>
I realize there are various plus/minus Re: cash vs. credit (as you point out). The cost to a business for credit card rebates (to the issuer) from the seller is steep. Most consumers don't realize the person they are buying from has to pay 2%, 3% or more of the charged amount as a kickback to the credit card issuer - and the seller builds this cost into the price one way or other. Sometimes the dealer may, indeed, make more on certain credit deals. But the consumer ALWAYS pays more in the end, one way or another, even if they are too dim witted to see it. Also, I have noticed that when you borrow, they usually expect you to pay it back.
So when you buy on credit, you are mortgaging your future, You are, in effect, agreeing to labor away in the future for so many hours, days, weeks, years of your life just to get money to pay off something already gone. (Yes, I realize that many things, such as tractors, have decent resale value, but you are, at the least, laboring to pay off the depreciation hit - and, with "easy credit" the consumer will often spend more than he otherwise would if he paid cash). I recall some years ago pointing out to a friend with whom I often had lunch, and we traded who bought lunch, and when it was his turn he used a credit card, that the REALITY of what was happening is that he was taking out a bank loan to purchase an asset (food) that would literally be flushed down the toilet before he even got the bill. The residual value of the asset he borrowed money to buy (ie. the exrement) wasn't even saved for the compost pile.
The only time it seems worthwhile to borrow is when you KNOW where the money is coming from to pay it back, and the SOURCE of that money is from the the item you are going into debt for. In Desertdogs case, if he is, for reasonable certainty, going to be earning more from having the equipment it might be worthwhile to finance IF the yield is HIGHER than the cost. If this is the case, his $17k "budget" could easily be upgraded safely.
JEH