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Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
I got kinda bored one day about a month ago and I wanted to make a spreadsheet. I came up with a Mac Depreciation Guide.

Here's some info on it:

The values are from Mac2Sell.net. The prices are from Mac Tracker.


If you'd like me to modify, add, or subtract anything, please, do suggest it.

The spreadsheet is in .numbers format. There is the .numbers for those of you with iWork. There's .pdf for everyone else.

I will make a new post to attach the new files and images.

Thanks for your interest! PS: Check later posts for info on the redesign.

October 4, '09: Updates. Nothing exciting. Attachments below are for October '09. I'm thinking about making a MS Access database of this stuff... But I've got to learn Access first.

October 5, 2009: The attachments didn't upload, apparently. I'm putting a link here in a bit. Ok, a link isn't going to happen, so just go to page 3 for the latest.
 
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Theclamshell

macrumors 68030
Mar 2, 2009
2,741
3
This is very good and helpful for people like me who like to buy and sell macs i bookmarked this.
Thanks!!
 

Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
Thanks very much for your comments.

I thought this would attract more people, though. We'll have to wait and see, I guess.

All the media has gotten 88 views so far. I'll add a .xls version.
 

Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
I tried Excel format and it got turned upside down, so here's a PDF.
 

Attachments

  • Depreciation Guide PDF.pdf
    22.6 KB · Views: 3,855

Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
op, any reason why not just use the mac2sell website over this? i guess i have a hard time seeing the utility of it

You could use Mac2Sell, but it doesn't give you all the information my spreadsheet contains. Mac2Sell also doesn't have anything to help you calculate the value of your Mac in the future.
 

GoCubsGo

macrumors Nehalem
Feb 19, 2005
35,742
155
How do you really forecast depreciation in this case? Are you just trending?
 

Genghis Khan

macrumors 65816
Jun 3, 2007
1,202
0
Melbourne, Australia
nice idea!

although, there's a few things that i reckon could improve it

as the purpose of the spreadsheet seems to be to track depreciation across mac lines, you should measure the depreciation after a set amount of years (e.g. 3). this way it's an even comparison (as depreciation varies over time).

to the same note, this info would be better displayed on a graph...showing 'y' price decreasing, 'x' years after release

good work :)
 

Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
How do you really forecast depreciation in this case? Are you just trending?

I suppose it is trending, for now.

Right now, I enter the price new, the years since purchase, and the value. Then the formula "=Starting Price Mac Pro-Value Mac Pro" finds how much the value has gone down. Next the formula "=Decrease Mac Pro/'How Long (Years)' Mac Pro" finds the decrease in value each year since purchase.

To improve it, I'll check the prices on the newest Macs each month and graph the results to see when the value stops dropping like a stone.

nice idea!

although, there's a few things that i reckon could improve it

as the purpose of the spreadsheet seems to be to track depreciation across mac lines, you should measure the depreciation after a set amount of years (e.g. 3). this way it's an even comparison (as depreciation varies over time).

to the same note, this info would be better displayed on a graph...showing 'y' price decreasing, 'x' years after release

good work :)

Excellent idea.

I'll add the graph and see what I can do with the years.

As of now, the graph would be pretty boring. It would be the same angle for the whole thing. I'll see what I can do with that though. Maybe have a table for each model and have fewer models...
 

Surely

Guest
Oct 27, 2007
15,042
17
Los Angeles, CA
Interesting.

It appears that you're using straight line depreciation. Does that accurately depict a Mac's depreciation? I would think that an accelerated depreciation model would be more accurate, no?
 

Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
Interesting.

It appears that you're using straight line depreciation. Does that accurately depict a Mac's depreciation? I would think that an accelerated depreciation model would be more accurate, no?

No, it isn't too accurate for a new model, but I'm going to give each model still in production a sheet and check the value of it each month to give a more accurate view. After about two years, it should be good at predicting future models' depreciation.

I'm going to totally revamp it and start from the ground up to make it better. Thanks very much for your input.
 

iJesus

macrumors 6502a
Jun 30, 2007
706
1
Reno, Nevada
Just a quick graph of the intel macs using your information. It would be much nicer showing the depreciation every month or year.
 

Attachments

  • Picture 1.png
    Picture 1.png
    845.1 KB · Views: 1,733

Surely

Guest
Oct 27, 2007
15,042
17
Los Angeles, CA
No, it isn't too accurate for a new model, but I'm going to give each model still in production a sheet and check the value of it each month to give a more accurate view. After about two years, it should be good at predicting future models' depreciation.

I'm going to totally revamp it and start from the ground up to make it better. Thanks very much for your input.

Collecting data over two years isn't the most efficient way to create a depreciation schedule. That would be one hell of an effort though- kudos to you if you actually are able to keep doing it for that long.

I would think that Macs would depreciate at a slow rate in the beginning (let's say in the first 6 months), at a faster rate in the next 12-18 months, and then at a slow rate again near the end of it's life until it reaches some sort of salvage value.
 

Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
Collecting data over two years isn't the most efficient way to create a depreciation schedule. That would be one hell of an effort though- kudos to you if you actually are able to keep doing it for that long.

I would think that Macs would depreciate at a slow rate in the beginning (let's say in the first 6 months), at a faster rate in the next 12-18 months, and then at a slow rate again near the end of it's life until it reaches some sort of salvage value.

That's what I think. It would really be interesting to see this stuff for real on a graph.
 

Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
If anyone's interested, I revamped the entire thing. Each model gets a spreadsheet.

Here's the iMac.
 

Attachments

  • Picture 1.png
    Picture 1.png
    326.2 KB · Views: 1,539
  • iMac.pdf
    22.6 KB · Views: 426
  • iMac.numbers.zip
    107.6 KB · Views: 216

Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
I'm going to have to make three posts to fit everything.

Here are the PDFs, .numbers, and the MBP pictures.
 

Attachments

  • MBP3.png
    MBP3.png
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  • MBP2.png
    MBP2.png
    294 KB · Views: 616
  • MBP1.png
    MBP1.png
    271.4 KB · Views: 795
  • PDFs.zip
    106.2 KB · Views: 220
  • Depreciation Guides.zip
    548.6 KB · Views: 301

Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
Here are the Mac Pro and Mac mini and MBA pictures.
 

Attachments

  • Mac Pro1.png
    Mac Pro1.png
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  • Mac Pro2.png
    Mac Pro2.png
    253 KB · Views: 460
  • Mac mini1.png
    Mac mini1.png
    251.8 KB · Views: 498
  • Mac mini2.png
    Mac mini2.png
    252 KB · Views: 451
  • MBA.png
    MBA.png
    287.9 KB · Views: 563

Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
Finally, the iMac.

If I forgot anything, let me know.
 

Attachments

  • iMac1.png
    iMac1.png
    259.5 KB · Views: 536
  • iMac2.png
    iMac2.png
    295.1 KB · Views: 730

Synchromesh

macrumors 6502a
Jul 15, 2009
619
120
SF
This may sound strange but I always thought Craigslist/eBay searches were the best price guides. eBay has a built-in search and Cl has external sites that can search multiple locations, example: craigshelper.com
 

Shake 'n' Bake

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Mar 2, 2009
2,186
2
Albany
This may sound strange but I always thought Craigslist/eBay searches were the best price guides. eBay has a built-in search and Cl has external sites that can search multiple locations, example: craigshelper.com

I agree somewhat with that. There are so many BTOs being sold and sometimes not all the information is there. It is also better to use just one source, rather than many. You want to eliminate all variables except the value.

My guide, at the moment, shows the early- and mid-'09 models. I'm going to check the value once a month. As new models are released, they'll be added and I will keep the ones already there.
 
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