I sold my 69 vw bug convertible that I had pulled the engine. I spent two years saving for the engine and the head work guy did an incredible job on it. So I bought a hardtop bug for $200 bucks. The cars interior was crap and the only good thing was the car had no rust. So I gutted the hell out of the car. I went to the hardware store and bought a 3 gallon or so lawn more fuel jug. I drilled a hole on the bottom and about half way up. Then I used fittings from the hardware store for the lines and gasket maker so it wouldn't leak. It worked out because the jug slid in perfectly where the spare tire was suppose to go. Fabbed up a few l-brackets to hold it in place and it was golden. The car probally would have went up in flames if I ever wrecked, but the car wasn't a daily driver and was only used to tangle around town at night. I drove it around for a few months and sold it when I got a good offer.
No shit. I use to take care of the ATM when I use to work for PNC and had to deal with all sorts of fun with ATM deposits/potential card fraud, reloading cash, and contacting the ATM services to figure out what is wrong with it today. Where do you apply at?
I wonder though how much their business employees pay for taxes though? So one person doesn't pay taxes, but if they have created 2,000 jobs that do, then it's still good. I could be wrong, I am just thinking outside the box.