And, lastly, are pumps that accurate that they can measure to the thousandths?
If I buy 10 gallons of gas at $2.299, I expect to pay exactly 22.99.
For that $22.98, I should get 9.996 gallons
and for $23.00, I should get 10.004 gallons
Are they accurate to within a 2 thousands of a gallon?
And, that's after 10 gallons!
If they're off by 2 thousandths of a gallon on each gallon, then after 10 gallons, I may have only 10 gallons minus 10 * 2/1000 or 9.98 gallons.
That's a free 5 cents per customer, just because their meters are off.
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Okay, let me edit this question a bit...
WHY is gas charged as so many dollars, so many cents,AND NINE TENTHS OF A CENT
But, no other item that we purchase outside our homes is charged as a fraction of a cent.
I mean, bread is $.99 There have been plenty of sociological/psychological studies that in fact, people are sometimes more willing to pay for something that's $1.32 than $1.29... some prices are just some way perceived lower (being good in math, I have a hard time fathoming the level of stupidity it takes to find $1.32 more reasonable than $1.29)
Anyway, if the gas stations are going to do it to get 90% of an extra cent from each gallon, why don't grocery stores, etc. do the same? Why isn't bread 99.9 cents?
Why not charge $12.499 for that case of beer? It adds up to some serious cash fast (premise of Office Space). If Wal-Mart sold 100,000 items at one of their locations each day, it would amount to an extra $900 a day in profits.
What prevents stores from using a fraction of a cent, yet doesn't prevent gas stations from the same?
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Everywhere I've seen, the price of gas is so much and 9/10 of a cent...
is it 9/10 of a cent to dupe us into thinking we're paying 1 cent less?
(which is seems to be doing, since everyone says "gas is $2.33" when in reality it's far closer to $2.34)
Or is it a result of some national tax or something?
If I buy 10 gallons of gas at $2.299, I expect to pay exactly 22.99.
For that $22.98, I should get 9.996 gallons
and for $23.00, I should get 10.004 gallons
Are they accurate to within a 2 thousands of a gallon?
And, that's after 10 gallons!
If they're off by 2 thousandths of a gallon on each gallon, then after 10 gallons, I may have only 10 gallons minus 10 * 2/1000 or 9.98 gallons.
That's a free 5 cents per customer, just because their meters are off.
-----------------------------------------------------
Okay, let me edit this question a bit...
WHY is gas charged as so many dollars, so many cents,AND NINE TENTHS OF A CENT
But, no other item that we purchase outside our homes is charged as a fraction of a cent.
I mean, bread is $.99 There have been plenty of sociological/psychological studies that in fact, people are sometimes more willing to pay for something that's $1.32 than $1.29... some prices are just some way perceived lower (being good in math, I have a hard time fathoming the level of stupidity it takes to find $1.32 more reasonable than $1.29)
Anyway, if the gas stations are going to do it to get 90% of an extra cent from each gallon, why don't grocery stores, etc. do the same? Why isn't bread 99.9 cents?
Why not charge $12.499 for that case of beer? It adds up to some serious cash fast (premise of Office Space). If Wal-Mart sold 100,000 items at one of their locations each day, it would amount to an extra $900 a day in profits.
What prevents stores from using a fraction of a cent, yet doesn't prevent gas stations from the same?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Everywhere I've seen, the price of gas is so much and 9/10 of a cent...
is it 9/10 of a cent to dupe us into thinking we're paying 1 cent less?
(which is seems to be doing, since everyone says "gas is $2.33" when in reality it's far closer to $2.34)
Or is it a result of some national tax or something?