Thanks JR,
but with my equipment covering the entire table, and a few smaller tables
around it, I don't expect any IRS problems. We eat at the dining room table!
Scout
"JR Gilbreath" wrote in message
. ..
Hey Scout
I hope you are banking a good part of your part-time earnings, You will
need it if you get audited. One of the tests for a home office deduction
is that the space is not used for anything else. I doubt that your
kitchen table would pass that one.
JR
Scout wrote:
"Bob Crantz" wrote
Sounds like you have a good set up.
Don't make a full deduction for the home office, it will raise IRS flags,
especially if you don't have a space solely dedicated to the work.
Another
IRS test is how much of your income, percentage wise, comes from your
home
business? Do deduct for electricity, heat, travel, flowers, food, etc.
Yes, I use a factor of 15% for home and utility costs. Since it's part
time, I don't want to push it too hard.
The best thing about your situation is that you are not involved in the
day
to day soap opera at the office. You do your work, you're done. Office
politics and shennigans can ruin otherwise great work. You don't have to
deal with people's personality disorders 8+ hours a day. Stay at home.
AMEN! I love that and working in my underwear. Of course, asa fills my
need for daily distraction and drama.
Those engineer stamps are a liability firewall, and to a lesser degree,
customer sign offs. Autocad is fine for those type of schematics, you
aren't
fabricating any circuit boards or the like from them.
Yes, there are faster programs out there, but the contractor has supplied
me with AutoCAD 2000 and asked me to use it. Previously, we've used
Drafix, Designer 3.x and 4, AutoCAD Lt, and an MS product whose name has
slipped my mind.
Sounds like you work all the time. What do you do for fun? Does the steam
plant have a Hagan Control board? Like Doug, I once worked in a 1350 psi
steam plant. Two boilers, D type. I spend my spare time fantasizing
aboutr
Katysails.
The boiler room is small. 4 low pressure (100 psig) fire tubes (3
Superiors and 1 Power-Master), each 350 HP; and 2,000 tons in centrifugal
chillers. Nothing fancy. But we take good care of them and they still
look new when we open them up every year (they were built in 1953). Same
year as Katy?
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