PRO 80
PRO 60
PRO 50
PRO 80
PRO 60
PRO 50
CYL-ST 3-roll Asymmetrical Plate Bending Machine
CYL 3-roll Asymmetrical Plate Bending Machine
When you talk about WOW factor… Here is something to marvel.






Please contact us if you need any of the following manuals:
SOFTWARE:
– ARW User Manual
– FRW User Manual
– LYNX Command Instruction Manual
– MG ArCMeter User Manual
– MG Touch Command EVO Manual
– MG touch Command Manual vol 4.0.2
– MAPERS 2-axis Control
MACHINES:
– AR 40 User and Maintenance Manual
– AR 80 User and Maintenance manual
– AR 140 User and Maintenance Manual
-AR 110 User and Maintenance Manual
– 3-roll Instruction Manual
– 4-roll Instruction Manual
– CB110/3200 Press Brake Manual
– CB88/3200 Press Brake Manual
– Guillotine Shear Operation Manual
– W62K Series Hydraulic Folder Manual
MH632 20′ x 1″ plate roll rolling 3/4″ thick plate to a 1.1 x top roll diameter.
MG3150 rolling 6″ thick test plate to a 4′ radius.
What is the Section 179 Deduction??
Most people think the Section 179 deduction is some arcane or complicated tax code. It really isn’t, as the following will show you.
Essentially, Section 179 of the IRS tax code allows businesses to deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment purchased or financed during the tax year. That means that if you buy (or lease) a piece of qualifying equipment, you can deduct the FULL PURCHASE PRICE from your gross income. It’s an incentive created by the U.S. Government to encourage businesses to buy equipment and invest in themselves. It is sometimes referred to as the “SUV Tax Loophole” or the “Hummer Deduction” because many businesses have used this tax code to purchase qualifying vehicles (like SUV’s and Hummers.)
Essentially, Section 179 works like this:
When your business buys certain pieces of equipment, it typically gets to write them off a little at a time through depreciation. In other words, if your company spends $50,000 on a vehicle, it gets to write off (say) $10,000 a year for five years (these numbers are only meant to give you an example.)
Now, while it’s true that this is better than no write off at all, most business owners would really prefer to write off the entire equipment purchase price for the year they buy it.
In fact, if a business could write off the entire amount, they might add more equipment this year instead of waiting. That’s the whole purpose behind Section 179… to motivate the American economy (and your business) to move in a positive direction. For most small businesses (adding total equipment, software, and vehicles totaling less than $500,000 in 2010), the entire cost can be written-off on the 2010 tax return.
For businesses adding even more than $500,000, the write-offs are still substantial. See the following graphic for an example of the savings that is currently available to you after the ‘Small Business Jobs and Credit Act of 2010’ passed in September 2010.
Limits of Section 179 (updated as of Sep 27, 2010)
Section 179 does come with limits – there are caps to the total amount written off ($500,000 in 2010), and limits to the total amount of the equipment purchased ($2,000,000 in 2010.) The deduction begins to phase out dollar-for-dollar after $2 million, so this makes it a true small and medium-sized business deduction.
Click HERE for full details on Section 179.
Click HERE for FAQs on Section 179.
Its name is MG 32520Z and it is the newly-built Italian “monster”.
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MG does it again! Not one but three MG3110T sold in one month!
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Loading completed! On Tuesday March 2nd, the last MG truck left MG Factory.
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