the Life Aquatic wrote:i don't know how old your are, but for me personally, 22 yrs old, to put myself in a position where I will have a liability of $4500 for the next 5 or more years, not including interest is a scary thought. And if you lose your job or source of income, missing payments could screw you over credit wise for life. Not too mention, knowing I have that loan to pay off, anytime I spend money on gear or else where that's not a life necessity it would really pain me.
If you were to sell some gear/ or other personal items, could you lower the cost of the loan?
This convinced me not to do the loan option. I'm going through a huge life change this year, I've been thinking a little too positively about it I think. Or I might have thought about the amount of responsibility I would be taking on in this unstable and uncertain time.
I'm going to go with the piece by piece method. Starting with the preamp, then getting the head, then the cabs (it'll be a little frustrating having the head and no cabs, but I think this way will give me the motivation I need to finish the setup). When I start getting close to finishing my setup, I'll sell everything I can. Hopefully I can get it down to $3000 or less out of pocket once everything settles. If I get really antsy I might take out a small loan to cover part of the head, so I can at least get that out of the way.
Thanks for the solid advice everyone

I'm pretty settled on everything else I've got. Everything does what I want it to (not perfectly, but I think having to work a little to accomplish the sounds is important for creativity): the synth I have is powerful enough that I've never even come close to being limited by it when making sounds, my guitar is simple, sounds great and plays better than any guitar I've owned, and my pedalboard is an upgraded version of one that didn't change much for over a year. So, once I get this amp settled I don't predict that I'll ever need any more gear.
