The answer depends on how much bread you make. The other part is the cost to make the bread in the machine. Electrical charges per loaf of bread depend on your location. So if you make 100 loaves a bread you get the cost of each loaf down to one dollar before you add in the electrical costs. Your time is also something that has a cost. If you don't take into account the cost of time or electric it could seem like it pays for itself after a few months of use. Of course you could find a better used bread machine than what a Hundred dollars would get in a new machine. You know that you can make bread in a bread pan and see if you even like the much different from the store style of bread you get when it's homemade. You can even purchase frozen unbaked bread in many supermarkets. Then all you need is to thaw it and bake it in your oven.
appeals to logic more than emotion
it costs 5000000
The cost of a commercial ice machine wholly depends on what type of ice machine is required. An under counter machine costs from $1,800, where as a Cube ice machine costs from $2,000.
A cheaper and standard loaf (white bread, machine made, sliced) costs in the Supermarket: 600 gm- 40 Euro cents, 800 gm- 55 Euro cents
Three loaves of bread costs $5.79.
A cheaper and standard loaf (white bread, machine made, sliced) costs in the Supermarket: 600 gm- 40 Euro cents, 800 gm- 55 Euro cents
A bottle capping machine costs about $300 from Quick Capper. This is the cost for an electric machine. A very basic manual bottle capping machine costs much less at around $60.
A loaf of wheat bread normally costs about $1 to $5
70 cents
Marlins Rich which costs £500,000
yes
They are direct costs.