DVI RECEIVABLES CORP VIII
424B5, 2000-11-07
ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The information in this prospectus supplement is not complete and may be
changed. We may not sell these securities until the registration statement filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This prospectus
supplement is not an offer to sell these securities and it is not soliciting an
offer to buy these securities in any state where the offer or sale is not
permitted.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                (Subject to Completion, Issued November 3, 2000)
Prospectus Supplement dated _______, 2000 (to Prospectus dated January 12, 2000)

                           DVI RECEIVABLES XII, L.L.C.
                                    (ISSUER)

                           DVI RECEIVABLES CORP. VIII
                                (OWNER OF ISSUER)

                           DVI FINANCIAL SERVICES INC.
                                   (SERVICER)

         OUR PUBLICLY OFFERED NOTES

We are offering $__________ ____% of class A-1, $__________ ____% of class A-2,
$__________ ____% of class A-3, $__________ ____% of class A-4, $_________ ____%
of class B, $_________ ____% of class C and $_________ ____% of class D
asset-backed notes, Series 2000-2.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSIDER CAREFULLY THE RISK FACTORS BEGINNING ON PAGE S-8 OF THIS PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT AND PAGE 1 OF THE PROSPECTUS.

The notes will represent debt obligations of the issuer only.

This prospectus supplement may be used to offer and sell the publicly offered
notes only if accompanied by the prospectus.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

         THE CREDIT ENHANCEMENT FOR THE NOTES

                  o THE RETAINED INTEREST Each note must receive its full
payment due on each payment date before we receive and retain any funds.

                  o THE SUBORDINATED NOTES We pay neither interest nor principal
on any subordinated note unless and until the interest or the principal,
respectively, on each senior class of notes is paid first.

                  o THE RESERVE ACCOUNT We will fund a reserve fund that can be
used to pay certain shortfalls in payments on all of the notes.

         THE UNDERWRITING FOR THESE NOTES

The underwriters will publicly offer the notes at the following prices:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                               CLASS A-1      CLASS A-2     CLASS A-3      CLASS A-4      CLASS B        CLASS C       CLASS D
                                 NOTES          NOTES         NOTES          NOTES         NOTES          NOTES         NOTES
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                            <C>            <C>           <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>           <C>
Price to public
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Underwriting discount
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proceeds to issuer
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

We will pay $__________ as a commission to all of the underwriters. We will
receive $___________ as our total proceeds before deducting our expenses (that
we estimate to be $500,000).

We will publicly offer the class A-1 notes, the class A-2 notes, the class A-3
notes, the class A-4 notes, the class B notes, the class C notes and class D
notes from time to time. We might sell these notes ourselves or we might have
one or more underwriters or agents sell them for us. If we use underwriters or
agents, we will sell the class A-1 notes, class A-2 notes, class A-3 notes, the
class A-4 notes, class B notes, class C notes and class D notes at prices they
negotiate at the time of sale. You should read "PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION" on page
S-118 of this prospectus supplement for further information.

NEITHER THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION NOR ANY STATE SECURITIES
COMMISSION HAS APPROVED THESE NOTES OR DETERMINED THAT THIS PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT IS ACCURATE OR COMPLETE. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK HAS NOT PASSED ON OR ENDORSED THE
MERITS OF THIS OFFERING. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS UNLAWFUL.

                           ---------------------------




Banc One Capital Markets, Inc.                               Merrill Lynch & Co.

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                                                                               PAGE
                                                                                                                               ----
<S>                                                                                                                            <C>
Summary of Prospectus Supplement................................................................................................S-1

Risk Factors....................................................................................................................S-8

Location of Glossary...........................................................................................................S-18

DVI Financial Services Inc.....................................................................................................S-18
    General....................................................................................................................S-18
    Underwriting Criteria......................................................................................................S-20
    Portfolio Monitoring and Credit Collections................................................................................S-24
    Delinquency Experience-- Domestic Servicing Portfolio......................................................................S-25
    Loss Experience............................................................................................................S-26
    Summary of Significant Accounting Policies.................................................................................S-27

The Servicer...................................................................................................................S-28
    Servicing Obligations and Procedures.......................................................................................S-28
    Servicing Compensation and Payment
        of Expenses............................................................................................................S-31
    Evidence of Compliance by Servicer.........................................................................................S-32
    Other Servicing Procedures.................................................................................................S-33
    Resignation/Removal of the Servicer........................................................................................S-33
    Voluntary Termination of Servicer Duties...................................................................................S-34

DVI Receivables Corp. VIII.....................................................................................................S-34

DVI Receivables Corp. XII......................................................................................................S-35

The Issuer.....................................................................................................................S-35

The Trustee....................................................................................................................S-36

The Contracts..................................................................................................................S-37
    Statistical Information for the Contracts..................................................................................S-41
    Substitute Contracts.......................................................................................................S-55

Description of the Notes and Principal Transaction
    Documents..................................................................................................................S-57
    General Provisions of the Notes............................................................................................S-57
    Conveyance of Trust Property...............................................................................................S-63
    DVI Financial Services Inc. Repurchase
        Obligation for Contract Misrepresentations.............................................................................S-64
    Indemnification............................................................................................................S-65
    Indenture Accounts; Investment of Funds....................................................................................S-66
    Reserve Account............................................................................................................S-67
    Flow of Funds to and from the
        Collection Account.....................................................................................................S-69
    Payment of Amounts from Distribution
        Sub-Accounts...........................................................................................................S-74
    Reports to Noteholders.....................................................................................................S-76
    Optional Redemption........................................................................................................S-77
    Indenture Events of Default and
        Acceleration...........................................................................................................S-78
    Remedies...................................................................................................................S-80
    Servicer Events of Default.................................................................................................S-82
    Termination of the Servicer................................................................................................S-84
    Duties and Immunities of the Trustee.......................................................................................S-85
    Book-Entry Registration of the Notes.......................................................................................S-86

Prepayment and Yield Considerations............................................................................................S-92

Certain Legal Matters Affecting an
    Obligor's Rights and Obligations...........................................................................................S-93
    General....................................................................................................................S-93
    The Equipment..............................................................................................................S-94

Material Federal Income Tax Consequences.......................................................................................S-98

Certain State, Local and Other Tax Considerations.............................................................................S-109

Considerations for Benefit Plan Investors.....................................................................................S-110

Legal Investment..............................................................................................................S-117

Ratings.......................................................................................................................S-117

Use of Proceeds...............................................................................................................S-117

Plan of Distribution..........................................................................................................S-118

Legal Matters.................................................................................................................S-119

Where You Can Find More Information...........................................................................................S-120

Reports to Noteholders........................................................................................................S-120

Glossary......................................................................................................................S-122
</TABLE>



                                      -ii-

<PAGE>




                        SUMMARY OF PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT

        THE FOLLOWING IS JUST A SUMMARY ABOUT OUR PUBLICLY OFFERED NOTES IN THIS
SERIES. YOU NEED TO READ THE DETAILED INFORMATION APPEARING ELSEWHERE IN THIS
SUPPLEMENT FOR A MORE COMPLETE UNDERSTANDING OF THESE CLASSES OF SECURITIES, OUR
TRUST PROPERTY AND OTHER ASPECTS OF PURCHASING ANY OF THESE NOTES.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                               <C>
CLOSING DATE................................      On or about November 16, 2000.

CUT-OFF DATE................................      October 31, 2000.

PAYMENT DATES...............................      The twelfth day of each month.

STATED MATURITY DATE........................      For the class A-1 notes, _____ 12, 200_, for the class
                                                  A-2 notes, _____ 12, 200_, for the class A-3 notes
                                                  _____ 12, 200_ and for all other notes, ________ 12,
                                                  200_.

ISSUER......................................      DVI Receivables XII, L.L.C., a Delaware limited
                                                  liability company.

OWNER OF THE ISSUER.........................      We, DVI Receivables Corp. VIII, a Delaware
                                                  corporation, are the sole owner of the issuer.

CONTRIBUTOR AND SERVICER....................      DVI Financial Services Inc., a Delaware corporation.

TRUSTEE.....................................      U.S. Bank Trust National Association.

TRUST PROPERTY..............................      Non-cancelable contracts (such as leases and loans)
                                                  owned by the issuer, the rights to all payments on
                                                  those contracts that are due after the cut-off date
                                                  and other property related to those contracts, such as
                                                  a security interest in equipment owned, pledged or
                                                  leased under those contracts. For more information
                                                  about the trust property, you should read the sections
                                                  titled "THE CONTRACTS" and "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES
                                                  AND PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- CONVEYANCE OF
                                                  TRUST PROPERTY" on pages S-37 and S-63 of this
                                                  supplement, respectively.

MINIMUM DENOMINATIONS.......................      $500,000.

FORM OF NOTES...............................      All the publicly offered notes will be book-entry.
</TABLE>


                                       S-1

<PAGE>




THE CONTRACTS
We select our contracts from DVI Financial Services Inc.'s portfolio based on
the criteria that we describe in the section of this prospectus supplement
titled "THE CONTRACTS" on page S-37.

THE AGGREGATE DISCOUNTED CONTRACT BALANCE. The aggregate outstanding principal
balances, discounted at a rate of 7.75% per year, of all of the contracts in the
statistical pool described in this prospectus supplement is $272,828,157.80 as
of the initial cut-off date. We discount the outstanding payments to show their
value in present-day dollars.

CONTRACT POOL DATA. As of October 31, 2000,

o     the weighted average remaining term to maturity of the statistical pool of
      contracts existing at that time was approximately 56 months,

o     the final scheduled payment date of the contract in the statistical pool
      with the latest scheduled maturity was September 30, 2007, and

o     the average outstanding principal balance of the contracts in the
      statistical pool discounted at a rate of 7.75% a year on that date was
      approximately $160,581.61.

The section at page S-37 of this supplement titled "THE CONTRACTS" contains much
more data about the contracts in the statistical pool as of October 31, 2000.

POOL A CONTRACTS AND POOL B CONTRACTS. The contracts in the trust property are
divided into two pools. A schedule to the transaction documents identifies each
contract as either a pool A contract or a pool B contract. The servicer's rights
to substitute and to repurchase contracts differ between the pool A contracts
and the pool B contracts. Except for the servicer's rights and our accounting
reports, we treat all of our contracts in the trust property as if they compose
a single collateral pool. If you want to know more about the differences between
pool A contracts and the pool B contracts, read the section titled "THE
CONTRACTS -- SUBSTITUTE CONTRACTS" on page S-55 of this prospectus supplement.

CONTRACT MODIFICATIONS. The person servicing and administrating the contracts,
whom we refer to as the servicer of the contracts, may modify or adjust the
terms of a contract for administrative reasons.


                                       S-2

<PAGE>




DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE OFFERED NOTES.

The trustee will pay to investors:

INTEREST. The trustee will pay you interest on the notes on the twelfth day of
each month unless that day is not a business day. If that day is not a business
day, the trustee will pay you on the next day that is a business day.

The issuer will accumulate the aggregate amount of any monthly interest
collected in between payment dates that was not previously paid to any
noteholders as scheduled. After the issuer deposits those amounts in the
collection account, on the next payment date the trustee will pay them out as
overdue interest payments to the noteholders. The amount may not be sufficient
to pay all overdue interest. Conversely, the trustee will only pay to the
noteholders from these collected funds, to the extent those funds are
sufficient, an amount equal to all interest overdue on that payment date. In
either case, this overdue interest will not itself bear interest.

PRINCIPAL. We pay as principal an amount related to the decline in the aggregate
discounted contract balance during the prior collection period. The term
collection period denotes that period of time during which the issuer collects
and holds contract payments for distribution on the next payment date.



                                       S-3

<PAGE>




PRIORITY OF DISTRIBUTIONS

On each payment date, the trustee will disburse funds deposited in the
collection account as follows:

                               [GRAPHIC OMITTED]
























For a more detailed description of how the trustee distributes funds collected
from the trust property and how payments are prioritized, you should read the
section titled "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS --
FLOW OF FUNDS TO AND FROM THE COLLECTION ACCOUNT" on page S-69 of this
prospectus supplement.


                                       S-4

<PAGE>




CREDIT ENHANCEMENT

We have provided three forms of credit enhancement.

FIRST, we subordinated the issuer's right to receive any amount, which we refer
to as the issuer's retained interest, withdrawn from the collection account to
all other payments on the notes that the trustee will make from those funds.

NEXT, we required that if the amounts deposited by the servicer in the
collection account are insufficient to fully pay all classes of notes, that
funds for notes of each relatively latter-alphabetized class be made available
first to pay the noteholders of each earlier-alphabetized class. We refer to
this concept as the subordination of one class of notes to another. We also
subordinate principal and interest on our privately placed class E notes to all
of the principal and interest, respectively, on our publicly offered classes.

FINALLY, we made amounts in a reserve account available to pay many, but not
all, of the shortfalls that can occur in payments on the notes. For more
information about the reserve account, you should read the section titled
"DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- RESERVE
ACCOUNT" on page S-67 of this prospectus supplement.

REDEMPTION

The issuer may choose to buy back either some or all of the notes in varying
circumstances.

FULL REDEMPTION. The issuer may choose to buy back all, but not some of, the
notes on any payment date. To exercise this option:

      o      the issuer must first pay the redemption price,

      o      the aggregate outstanding discounted contract balance of all of the
             contracts in pool A must be less than 10% of the aggregate
             outstanding discounted contract balance of all of the contracts in
             pool A on the closing date, and

      o      the aggregate outstanding discounted contract balance of all of the
             contracts in pool B must be less than 20% of the aggregate
             outstanding discounted contract balance of all of the contracts in
             pool B on the closing date.


                                       S-5

<PAGE>





PARTIAL REDEMPTION. The issuer may buy back any portion, but not all, of the
notes on a payment date if:

      o      the issuer first pays the partial redemption price, and

      o      the aggregate outstanding discounted contract balance of all of the
             contracts in pool B is less than 20% of the aggregate outstanding
             discounted contract balance of all of the contracts in pool B as of
             the closing date.

For further information about the issuer's rights to buy back the notes, you
should read the section titled "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND PRINCIPAL
TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- OPTIONAL REDEMPTION" on page S-77 of this prospectus
supplement.

LIMITED SUBSTITUTION AND REPURCHASE OBLIGATION

Ninety days after DVI Financial Services Inc. either discovers or receives
notice that a material breach of the contribution and servicing agreement has
occurred and is continuing, DVI Financial Services Inc. must either substitute
for or repurchase the contract causing that breach from the issuer. For more
information about these obligations, you should read the section titled
"DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- DVI FINANCIAL
SERVICES INC. REPURCHASE OBLIGATION FOR CONTRACT MISREPRESENTATIONS" on page
S-64 of this prospectus supplement.

RATINGS

We have asked a few rating agencies that are nationally recognized for their
ability to rate the creditworthiness of securities to rate these notes. The
issuer will not sell any of the notes unless each of the following classes
receive each of the ratings set forth next to that class.



                           MOODY'S
                          INVESTORS         FITCH,
        CLASS           SERVICE, INC.        INC.
        -----           -------------        ----

Class A-1                    P-1             F1+
Class A-2                    Aaa             AAA
Class A-3                    Aaa             AAA
Class A-4                    Aaa             AAA
Class B                      Aa3              AA
Class C                      A2               A
Class D                     Baa2             BBB



                                       S-6

<PAGE>



No rating on a security is a recommendation to buy, sell or hold that security.
Moreover, each rating is subject to the rating agency's revision or even
withdrawal of that rating. For further information about ratings, you should
read the sections of this prospectus supplement entitled "PREPAYMENT AND YIELD
CONSIDERATIONS" on page S-92, and "RATINGS" at page S-117.

PERMITTED PURCHASERS

The class A-1 notes are eligible for purchase by money market funds under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.

TAX CONSEQUENCES

Special tax counsel to the underwriters is of the opinion that under current
law, the federal government will treat the class A-1 notes, the class A-2 notes,
the class A-3 notes, the class A-4 notes, the class B notes, the class C notes
and the class D notes as indebtedness for federal income tax purposes.

If you want to know more about likely tax treatment of the notes, you should
read the section titled "MATERIAL FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES" at page S-98
in this prospectus supplement.

CONSIDERATIONS FOR BENEFIT PLAN INVESTORS

If you are buying notes on behalf of an individual retirement account, Keogh
plan or employee benefit plan, special rules may apply to you. Various
exemptions may be available for investors. You must make certain representations
when you acquire your notes, and you should read "CONSIDERATIONS FOR BENEFIT
PLAN INVESTORS" on page S-110 of this prospectus supplement for a description of
the rules and these exemptions and purchaser representations.



                                       S-7

<PAGE>

                                  RISK FACTORS


                  Prospective noteholders should consider, among other things,
the following factors in connection with the purchase of the notes.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                              <C>
THE RETURN ON YOUR                        Losses on the contracts may occur due to a wide variety of
NOTES MAY BE AFFECTED            causes, including adverse changes in the obligors' financial condition.
BY LOSSES ON THE                 A decline in economic conditions nationally or in the regions where
CONTRACTS, WHICH COULD           the obligors are located may increase such risk of losses.
OCCUR DUE TO A VARIETY
OF CAUSES.


                                    EVENTS THAT DIMINISH THE RETURN ON YOUR NOTE


THE RETURN ON YOUR                       Your investment is secured by your trustee's security interest
NOTE DIMINISHES IF THE           in the trust property, which enables the trustee to foreclose upon the
CONTRACTS ARE                    trust property and to pay you from it if an event of default occurs.
DELIVERED TO SOMEONE             The trustee's security interest in the contracts is shown under law by
OTHER THAN THE                   the trustee's possession of the contracts.  If DVI Financial Services
TRUSTEE.                         Inc., DVI Receivables Corp. XII, the issuer or the servicer sells,
                                 pledges or causes the delivery of a contract in the trust property to
                                 a person other than the trustee, then that other person would probably
                                 acquire an interest in that contract.

                                         The interest of that other person may have priority over the
                                 trustee's security interest. The trustee holds that security interest
                                 in the contracts on your behalf. Any unpaid creditor of the owner of a
                                 contract can foreclose upon and sell the contract. Thus, if a person
                                 delivers a contract in the trust property to someone other than the
                                 trustee, the trustee may not be in control of the decision concerning
                                 whether or not to foreclose on that part of the collateral or the
                                 ability to realize any proceeds from selling it.



                                                  S-8

<PAGE>




                                         In addition, the person with the highest-priority security
                                 interest is the first to receive any payments made under, or any
                                 proceeds of sale of, a contract. Thus, if the person other than the
                                 trustee has a security interest with a higher priority than the
                                 trustee's, that person's security interest in the contract will be
                                 paid before the trustee can collect money for you. In addition, not
                                 only would your trustee have to wait for the higher-priority lienor to
                                 be paid first, but then the trustee only receives money to the extent
                                 that there still are sufficient funds available after the first person
                                 got paid.

YOUR NOTE PAYMENTS                       In addition to the considerations mentioned above, other
MAY BE DIMINISHED IF             factors that can hinder the trustee's ability to realize amounts from
THE TRUSTEE IS IMPEDED           contracts that it foreclosed upon include:
FROM REALIZING THE FULL
AMOUNT DUE FROM A                        o        a failure to file UCC financing statements to perfect a
CONTRACT.                                         security interest,
                                         o        depreciation, obsolescence, damage or loss of any item
                                                  of equipment,
                                         o        the application of Federal and state bankruptcy and
                                                  insolvency laws, and
                                         o        the expense of legal proceedings to enforce a defaulted
                                                  contract.

THE RETURN ON YOUR                       An obligor under one of the contracts in the trust property
NOTES DIMINISHES IF              might assert claims and defenses against DVI Financial Services Inc.,
ENOUGH OBLIGORS                  DVI Receivables Corp. XII, DVI Receivables Corp. VIII, the issuer
ASSERT DEFENSES TO               or the trustee for the contracts or the related equipment.  DVI
THEIR PAYMENT                    Financial Services Inc. warrants that, on the closing date, no such
OBLIGATIONS.                     claims or defenses have been asserted or threatened with respect to
                                 the contracts. However, if enough of these claims are asserted, your
                                 note payments may be interrupted, delayed or even permanently reduced.




                                                  S-9

<PAGE>




YOUR TRUSTEE MAY BE                      When applied to the trust property, federal and state
BARRED FROM RECEIVING            insolvency, bankruptcy or other laws may restrict the trustee's ability
THE ANTICIPATED                  to collect contract payments for you.  State laws impose
CONTRACT PAYMENTS.               requirements and restrictions relating to foreclosure sales of
                                 collateral. Such laws may also restrict the trustee's ability to go to
                                 court and obtain a judgment that the issuer is deficient in the
                                 payments it must make to you following such a foreclosure sale. The
                                 trustee may not realize the full amount due on a contract, or may not
                                 realize the full amount on a timely basis, because of the application
                                 of those requirements and restrictions. The expense of all of the
                                 above legal proceedings will also be deducted from your note payments.

YOUR NOTE PAYMENTS                       The trustee's security interest in the trust property should be
MAY BE DIMINISHED BY             evidenced by filing a financing statement.  If these statements are not
A FAILURE TO FILE                executed in a timely manner by either DVI Financial Services Inc.,
FINANCING STATEMENTS.            DVI Receivables Corp. XII, the issuer or the trustee, the trustee may
                                 not have a first priority security interest in the trust property.
                                 Similarly, the trustee's security interest could be adversely affected
                                 if the servicer or any other person fails to file and maintain any of
                                 the executed financing statements in the appropriate governmental
                                 offices on a timely basis as required by law. If the trustee's
                                 security interest in the trust property is adversely affected by any
                                 of these events, its ability to pay you money from the proceeds of any
                                 foreclosure sale of the collateral may be curtailed or even
                                 terminated. To give you greater comfort that none of these events will
                                 happen, DVI Financial Services Inc., DVI Receivables Corp. XII and the
                                 issuer will agree in the transaction documents to take reasonable
                                 action required to facilitate proper filing and maintenance of
                                 financing statements.




                                                        S-10

<PAGE>




YOUR NOTE PAYMENTS                       If an obligor defaults on a contract, the only source of payment
COULD BE REDUCED BY              for amounts due on the contract will be the income and proceeds
OBSOLESCENCE OF THE              from the related equipment.  However, the market value of our
EQUIPMENT.                       equipment declines with age.  In addition, some of our equipment
                                 may be subject to sudden and significant declines in value because of
                                 technological advances. Because of these factors, if either the
                                 servicer or the trustee forecloses upon and sells the equipment
                                 securing a defaulted contract, the servicer or trustee may not recover
                                 the entire amount due on such contract.


THE RETURN ON YOUR                       One risk of investing in asset-backed securities like the notes is
NOTES MAY BE                     the possibility that there might be concentration of the related
PARTICULARLY SENSITIVE           equipment or contract obligors in one or more geographic regions.
TO CHANGES IN                    Approximately 11.95% of the initial aggregate discounted contract
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS.             balance of the contracts have equipment locations in New York and
                                 approximately 11.95% of the initial aggregate discounted contract
                                 balance of the contracts have equipment locations in Texas. If the
                                 regional economy or healthcare market weakens in New York or Texas, or
                                 in any other region having a significant concentration of obligors
                                 under the contracts, those contracts may experience high rates of loss
                                 and delinquency, resulting in losses to noteholders. A region's
                                 economic condition and healthcare market may be adversely affected by
                                 a variety of events, including natural disasters such as earthquakes,
                                 hurricanes, floods and eruptions, and civil disturbances such as
                                 riots. The economic impact of these events may also be felt in areas
                                 beyond the region immediately affected by the disaster or disturbance.
                                 Concentration may result in greater losses to noteholders than those
                                 generally present for similar asset-backed securities without such
                                 concentration.



                                                        S-11

<PAGE>




                                 RISKS RELATING TO THE STRUCTURE OF THE TRANSACTION

YOUR NOTE PAYMENTS                       DVI Financial Services Inc. believes that the transfer of the
COULD BE INTERRUPTED,            contracts and the security interest in the related equipment to DVI
DELAYED OR TERMINATED            Receivables Corp. XII and the subsequent transfer to the issuer
IF DVI FINANCIAL                 should be treated as an absolute and unconditional transfer-- that is,
SERVICES INC. GOES               as a sale.  However, if DVI Financial Services Inc. goes bankrupt, a
BANKRUPT.                        bankruptcy court could nonetheless attempt to recharacterize those
                                 transfers as a borrowing. Such an attempt, even if unsuccessful, could
                                 result in delays in payments on the notes.

                                         If a bankruptcy court successfully recharacterizes the sale as
                                 a borrowing, the court could then decide to accelerate payment of the
                                 notes and liquidate the contracts. If an acceleration occurs, the
                                 trustee's recovery on behalf of noteholders could be limited to the
                                 then-current value of the contracts or the underlying equipment. In
                                 addition, if the court does recharacterize the sale as a borrowing,
                                 bankruptcy law allows the bankruptcy trustee for the owner of the
                                 contracts to reject leases that it considers to be "true" leases. We
                                 think that some of the contracts in the trust property are "true"
                                 leases. The same law allows the bankruptcy trustee to reject any other
                                 contract if the court believes that any signatory to that contract has
                                 yet to finish performing its duties under the contract. If a contract
                                 is rejected by a bankruptcy trustee for whichever reason, the contract
                                 is terminated. An obligor would not owe any future payments under a
                                 terminated contract. If the trust property contains a contract that is
                                 terminated, you would then lose the right to some future payments of
                                 interest and principal on the notes. If many contracts in the trust
                                 property are terminated, your losses could be sizeable.




                                                        S-12

<PAGE>




YOUR NOTE PAYMENTS                       LEVERAGED LEASE LOANS.  Some contracts represent leveraged
COULD BE ADVERSELY               lease loans from DVI Financial Services Inc. to various lessors.
AFFECTED BY A LESSOR'S           Leveraged lease loans are secured by the lessor's pledge of its rights
DECISION TO REJECT A             in a lease and, usually, the related equipment.  As we explained in the
LEASE IN BANKRUPTCY.             section above, a trustee in bankruptcy can reject a lease, thus
                                 terminating the lessee's duties to pay. Thus, if the lessor goes
                                 bankrupt, even if DVI Financial Services Inc. continues to operate,
                                 the trustee of the lessor's bankruptcy estate could reject the lease.
                                 Depending upon how much of the trust property is rejected leases, you
                                 might then lose the right to some or all future payments of interest
                                 and principal on your notes.

                                         FAIR MARKET VALUE LEASES. Other contracts are "true" leases
                                 from DVI Financial Services Inc. to various lessees. We often call
                                 true leases "fair market value" leases, because they contain an option
                                 for the lessee to purchase the equipment at the end of the lease term
                                 for its fair market value at that time. When DVI Financial Services
                                 Inc. transferred these leases to DVI Receivables Corp. XII, it also
                                 granted a security interest in the leased equipment to DVI Receivables
                                 Corp. XII, which, in turn, assigned the security interest to the
                                 issuer along with a first priority security interest in the lease
                                 between DVI Financial Services Inc. and the lessee. If a lessor under
                                 a fair market value lease were to seek protection under federal
                                 bankruptcy law, then that lessor, as debtor-in-possession (or its
                                 bankruptcy trustee) would have the option of rejecting, assuming or
                                 assigning the underlying lease.



                                                        S-13

<PAGE>




YOUR RISK OF                             If you purchase subordinated notes, then you will not receive
NONPAYMENT INCREASES             distributions of interest or principal on any given payment date until
IF YOUR CLASS OF NOTE IS         after the class A-1 notes and any other classes of notes senior to yours
TO BE PAID AFTER                 receive their respective distributions of interest or principal. Therefore,
ANOTHER CLASS.                   the more subordinated the priority of payment that your class of note is
                                 with respect to other, higher-priority classes of notes, the greater
                                 the risk is that these other notes will consume all funds then
                                 available to be paid, thus leaving insufficient amounts on that
                                 payment date to pay your class of notes. Each class of notes bears
                                 losses and delinquencies in reverse order of its priority. Depending
                                 upon the timing of defaults and severity of losses, investors in
                                 subordinated notes are more likely to realize less on their investment
                                 than they originally anticipated. It may also take longer for
                                 investors holding subordinated notes to earn the expected return on
                                 their investment than it would for investors of relatively senior
                                 classes. For more information about subordinated notes, you should
                                 read the section titled "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND PRINCIPAL
                                 TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS-- FLOW OF FUNDS TO AND FROM THE COLLECTION
                                 ACCOUNT" on page S-69 of this prospectus supplement.




                                                  S-14

<PAGE>




                                                     OTHER RISKS

THE RATE THAT YOU                        The rate of payment of principal on the notes will depend,
RECEIVE ON YOUR NOTE             among other things, on the rate of prepayments on the contracts.  We
PAYMENTS DEPENDS                 do not know when obligors will choose to prepay their contracts, so
UPON THE                         we cannot predict the rate of payment of principal on any notes.
UNPREDICTABLE RATE OF            There are different means of prepaying contracts, as well as different
PREPAYMENTS ON THE               types of prepayments.  Prepayments on the contracts include:
CONTRACTS.
                                         o        partial and full prepayments (to the extent not replaced
                                                  with substitute contracts) by the obligor on the
                                                  contract,
                                         o        payments upon the liquidation of defaulted contracts,
                                         o        payments upon acquisitions by DVI Financial Services
                                                  Inc. of contracts from the related trust property on
                                                  account of a breach of representations and warranties
                                                  in the contribution and servicing agreement, and
                                         o        payments upon an optional acquisition by DVI
                                                  Financial Services Inc. of contracts in the trust
                                                  property.

                                         The rate of early terminations of contracts due to prepayments
                                 and defaults may be influenced by a variety of economic and other
                                 factors which are unknown at this time. You will bear the risk of
                                 reinvesting distributions of the principal of your note that you
                                 receive earlier than you anticipated. No one can assure you as to the
                                 level of prepayments that the contracts will experience.



                                                  S-15

<PAGE>





THE RATE OF YOUR NOTE                    The servicer and the issuer have the right occasionally to
PAYMENTS CAN BE                  replace prepaid or some non-performing contracts. These rights
CHANGED BY THE                   differ as between the pool A contracts and the pool B contracts.
SERVICER'S OR THE                For further information about the servicer's rights of substitution, you
ISSUER'S SUBSTITUTION OF         should read the section titled "THE CONTRACTS -- SUBSTITUTE CONTRACTS" at
CONTRACTS IN THE TRUST           page S-55 of this prospectus supplement. The payment flow on your notes will be
PROPERTY.                        different if the servicer substitutes one contract for another, rather
                                 than if the issuer pays the proceeds of the defaulted or prepaid
                                 contract through to you, because the substituted contract may not have
                                 a payment schedule identical to the removed contracts. The performance
                                 of any substitute contracts could also be different than the
                                 performance of the original contracts.

YOUR NOTE PAYMENTS                       A large amount of delinquent, or late, contract payments will
MAY BE AFFECTED BY AN            affect what the trustee can pay to you on a payment date as a
UNEXPECTED                       payment on your note.  The rate of delinquencies of DVI Financial
DELINQUENCY RATE OF              Services Inc.'s portfolio of contracts is not an assurance of the
CONTRACTS.                       performance of the contracts in the trust property.  We cannot assure
                                 you that the levels of delinquencies and losses experienced in recent
                                 years by DVI Financial Services Inc. on its entire equipment finance
                                 portfolio are indicative of the contracts in the trust property.
                                 Delinquencies and losses on contracts could increase significantly for
                                 various reasons, including changes in the federal income tax law,
                                 changes in the local, regional or national economies or other events.
                                 You should not assume that data from DVI Financial Services Inc.'s
                                 entire portfolio of contracts is or will be indicative of the
                                 performance of the trust property.




                                                        S-16

<PAGE>




YOUR NOTE PAYMENTS                       In recent years, the administration and Congress have
MAY BE AFFECTED IF               considered various changes in federal regulations and reimbursement
CONTRACT OBLIGORS ARE            policies relating to health care delivery in the United States.
IMPAIRED BY POSSIBLE             Legislation adopted this year or thereafter may affect the regulation,
CHANGES IN FEDERAL               the availability, the pricing or the reimbursement of health care
HEALTH CARE                      products and services provided by an obligor and hence the ability of
REGULATIONS.                     obligors to make their contract payments.

                                         Financing services provided by DVI Financial Services Inc. may
                                 also need to change. Such regulations could affect the financial
                                 well-being of several obligors or of DVI Financial Services Inc. No
                                 one can accurately predict the effect, if any, that any such
                                 legislation or regulations will have on the servicer or on the ability
                                 of an obligor to satisfy its payment obligations.

THE RATINGS OF THE                       None of the ratings of the notes by any rating agency are
NOTES ARE NOT                    recommendations to purchase, hold or sell the notes.  Ratings do not
RECOMMENDATIONS AND              comment as to market price or suitability for you. Moreover, the
MAY BE WITHDRAWN AT              rating agencies do not assure that the ratings will remain for any
A LATER DATE.                    given period of time.  Indeed, whenever a rating agency that rates the
                                 notes believes that circumstances justify negative action that rating
                                 agency may lower or withdraw its rating. A rating agency may lower the
                                 rating it assigns to any class of notes at any time. A ratings
                                 downgrade will probably reduce the value of those notes. No one has
                                 any obligation to take any action to maintain the ratings assigned the
                                 notes on the closing date.




                                                        S-17

<PAGE>




                                                   LIQUIDITY RISKS

YOU MAY HAVE TO HOLD                     After the initial issuance of the notes on the closing date, the
YOUR NOTES TO MATURITY           underwriters intend to make a secondary market for the purchase of
IF THEIR MARKETABILITY           the notes. A secondary market is one in which a noteholder sells its
IS LIMITED.                      note to another person.  However, the underwriters have no
                                 obligation to make a secondary market. No one can assure you that such
                                 a secondary market will develop or, if it develops, that it will
                                 continue.

                                         The secondary markets for asset-backed securities have
                                 experienced periods of illiquidity in the past and can be expected to
                                 do so in the future. Illiquidity means that you may not easily find
                                 another investor to buy your note. Consequently, you may not be able
                                 to sell your note readily or at prices that will enable you to realize
                                 the yield that you desire on your note.

                                         The market values of the notes are also likely to fluctuate.
                                 These fluctuations could be significant and result in sizable losses
                                 to you, depending on where or when you resell your note.
</TABLE>


                              LOCATION OF GLOSSARY

         A glossary of the capitalized terms that we use can be found beginning
on page S-122 of this prospectus supplement.

                           DVI FINANCIAL SERVICES INC.

GENERAL

                  DVI Financial Services Inc. is a Delaware corporation with its
national headquarters located at 2500 York Road, Jamison, Pennsylvania 18929.
Its telephone number is (215) 488-


                                      S-18

<PAGE>

5000. DVI Financial Services Inc. comprises the majority of the assets of DVI,
Inc., which owns all the stock of DVI Financial Services Inc. DVI, Inc. is
headquartered in Doylestown, PA, and its stock is traded on the New York Stock
Exchange as symbol "DVI". At September 30, 2000, DVI Financial Services Inc.
handled billing and collection of approximately 13,660 equipment finance
contracts either owned by it or by companies affiliated with it.

                  DVI Financial Services Inc. provides financing for users of
diagnostic imaging, therapeutic and other medical equipment. DVI Financial
Services Inc. focuses primarily on financing technologically advanced medical
equipment such as computerized tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, nuclear
medicine and radiation therapy systems, as well as lower cost medical devices.
DVI Financial Services Inc.'s customer base consists principally of outpatient
healthcare providers, physicians and physician groups, hospitals and shared
service providers.

                  DVI Financial Services Inc. either originates or acquires the
contracts from others in its ordinary course of financing activities. Some or
all of the contracts in the trust property were previously and may have been
indirectly sold by DVI Financial Services Inc. to a special-purpose,
bankruptcy-remote entity that was wholly and directly or indirectly owned by DVI
Financial Services Inc.

                  DVI Financial Services Inc.'s policy is to provide financing
to its customers in transactions which, with very limited exceptions, take the
form of direct financing leases and loans.
Most of DVI Financial Services Inc.'s equipment financing transactions have a
term of approximately 60 months. In most cases, these transactions are so-called
"full payout" transactions that allow DVI Financial Services Inc. to recover all
the costs of acquiring and financing the equipment during the initial
non-cancelable term.

                  DVI Financial Services Inc.'s Equipment Finance Group will
finance equipment ranging in cost from $200,000 to $3,000,000. The DVI Strategic
Partner Group of DVI Financial Services Inc., formerly known as the Vendor
Finance Group, finances small-ticket equipment ranging in cost from $5,000 to
$200,000.




                                      S-19
<PAGE>



UNDERWRITING CRITERIA

                  GENERAL GUIDELINES. DVI Financial Services Inc. has
underwriting guidelines in place to analyze the creditworthiness and investment
desirability of individuals, partnerships, limited liability companies and
corporations. These guidelines identify certain financial performance
requirements and criteria for potential borrowers, which reflect DVI Financial
Services Inc.'s willingness to accept prudent levels of risk. However, these
standards remain flexible and individual credits are evaluated in a manner which
permits mitigating factors to be considered in the overall evaluation process.

                  DVI Financial Services Inc. focuses much of its lending
activity in the out-patient healthcare sector, which is characterized by
emerging companies that have a limited history and lack strong balance sheets
and income performance. This sector requires a rigorous credit analysis and
structuring discipline. Most out-patient diagnostic facilities operate high cost
equipment, such as magnetic resonance imaging systems. They have a high
proportion of fixed costs to total costs and, as a result, are dependent upon a
steady flow of revenues. In these transactions, DVI Financial Services Inc.
places significant reliance on expected future cash flow projections and the
underlying assumptions about the state of the applicant's business upon which
those projections are made. Determining the validity of financial projections
requires a detailed analysis of the expense levels and their reasonableness, as
well as the projected patient volume for the particular types of equipment or
forms of procedures being used. In each case, DVI Financial Services Inc.
management's detailed knowledge of the industry is critical to understanding the
financial projections and their reasonableness.

                  TRANSACTION ANALYSIS STANDARDS. DVI Financial Services Inc.
completes an in-depth analysis of all transactions, including a detailed
write-up outlining the proposed transaction's strengths and weaknesses, which
support a recommendation to approve or decline a transaction.

                  DVI Financial Services Inc. requires a detailed assessment of
financial performance for at least two years plus an interim period for
transactions involving an existing hospital, partnership or corporation. DVI
Financial Services Inc. requires a business plan and a cash flow projection to
determine the capacity of start-ups, individuals, sole proprietorships, and all
physician controlled entities to service their financial obligations. DVI
Financial Services Inc. requires an individual to provide at least two prior
years of tax returns and a current personal financial



                                      S-20
<PAGE>



statement.

                  DVI Financial Services Inc. will conduct a full analysis of
the demographics of an area, the management team that will operate the center,
any contracts that are in place (such as those with a reputable radiology
group), and the adequacy of capitalization for start-ups or relatively new
operations. For transactions with new entities, DVI Financial Services Inc. also
relies heavily upon market surveys which project patient volumes, reference
checks to verify the reputation of the principals, and an evaluation of the
anticipated composition of the receivables, as well as an evaluation of the
billing and collecting capabilities of the borrower.

                  An important part of the due diligence performed on a new
project is the source of referrals. Each applicant, for financing, is required
to submit a list of referral sources. The credit staff and sales staff of DVI
Financial Services Inc. contact these physicians or hospitals to determine that
the referral base is realistic and will provide sufficient cash flow to service
the debt.

                  The general guidelines used by DVI Financial Services Inc. in
evaluating a transaction are:

         o        Cash Flow: Measures cash available from operations to service
                  financial obligations. It must more than adequately meet the
                  additional debt service requirements of the new financial
                  obligation as well as existing liabilities. A benchmark of 1.5
                  times debt service requirements is generally acceptable.

         o        Leverage: Debt to tangible net worth measures ability to
                  withstand adversity. Leverage of 5:1 or lower is usually
                  considered acceptable. This reflects a moderate level of
                  financial obligations to net worth.

        o         Current Ratio: Measures the ability of current assets to meet
                  short-term obligations. A ratio of 1.25 provides an acceptable
                  measure of liquidity.

         o        Balance Sheet and Income Statement Trends: Recent financial
                  performance ideally shows an upward trend in performance, but
                  should at least evidence profitability for the last two years
                  and the most recent interim period. Nominal losses, with
                  reasonable explanation, and which do not affect the "going
                  concern" status of



                                      S-21
<PAGE>



                  business will be considered, given a fundamental strength in
                  other balance sheet and income components and performance
                  measures. Tax returns should reflect similar income and
                  expense figures as the financial statements for the fiscal
                  year. Cash flow derived should support existing short term
                  obligations and new financial obligations.

         o        Individual Tax Returns: Should validate stated sources of
                  income on the personal financial statement and support the
                  ability to service personal financial obligations. For a sole
                  proprietor, cash flow should provide an adequate cushion for
                  living expenses after debt service requirements, including any
                  proposed financial obligations.

         o        Hospital Analysis: If a hospital is the lessee or will be the
                  primary referral for a lessee, a comparative analysis of key
                  hospital operating ratios and other measures should be
                  completed. The hospital's occupancy rate, payor mix and
                  competitive features also should be addressed.

                  In cases where a transaction does not conform to all of the
underwriting criteria, DVI Financial Services Inc. identifies methods to support
the transaction without compromising credit or quality and risk. These methods
include:

         o        use of covenants and restrictions which identify performance
                  goals or limit certain activities which could diminish
                  financial strength and affect repayment ability,

         o        requesting additional collateral to support transactions. This
                  could take the form of cash deposit, letters of credit, other
                  assets of the principal obligor or third parties (subject to
                  appraisal), and guaranties, and

         o        conditioning credit approval on the completion of certain
                  terms, documentation or other events before formal approval is
                  granted.

                  APPROVAL PROCESS. Due to the large size of DVI Financial
Services Inc.'s transactions, DVI Financial Services Inc. analyzes and reviews
each transaction on its own merits. Pursuant to DVI Financial Services Inc.
policy, the Director of Credit has approval authority for all transactions up to
$500,000. The Vice President of Credit has approval authority for all



                                      S-22
<PAGE>



transactions up to $750,000. The Chief Credit Officer -- U.S. has approval
authority up to $1 million. The credit committee, which includes the above
credit managers, the Chief Credit Officer of DVI, Inc. and a member of its board
of directors, has approval authority for all transactions greater than $1
million. If a transaction causes aggregate customer exposure to exceed $3
million, it must receive credit committee approval, regardless of size.

                  DVI STRATEGIC PARTNER GROUP. The underwriting criteria of DVI
Financial Services Inc.'s DVI Strategic Partner Group, where the equipment cost
is below $200,000, are significantly different from those of the rest of DVI
Financial Services Inc. An applicant completes a simple credit application. The
credit applications are analyzed for approval based upon a combination of the
financial condition of the applicant as well as the credit score of the
applicant, which is obtained from a national credit reporting organization. If
the application is approved and the conditions of approval are met, a signed
purchase order is issued.

                  The DVI Strategic Partner Group has established specific
credit guidelines for hospitals, group practices and sole practitioners. These
guidelines include, but are not restricted to, the following benchmarks for the
applicant to meet:

        o         has an established business for a minimum of one year to over
                  two years, depending upon business type,

        o         provides acceptable financial statements, corporate
                  resolutions and appropriate purchase documents,

        o         provides personal guarantees under certain circumstances,

        o         provides proof of professional license, and

        o         meets a certain minimum TRW credit score.




                                      S-23
<PAGE>



PORTFOLIO MONITORING AND CREDIT COLLECTIONS

                  Key members of DVI Financial Services Inc.'s credit, sales,
operations and accounting departments meet regularly to discuss the contract
portfolio delinquency report and the status of delinquent obligors. With
guidance from management, the collection and/or sales departments immediately
contact delinquent obligors. Due to the relatively small number of contracts in
DVI Financial Services Inc.'s portfolio, the management of DVI Financial
Services Inc. possesses a high degree of familiarity with virtually the entire
obligor base. The Director of Portfolio Management personally administers the
collection of large-balance delinquent accounts and severely delinquent
accounts. Once it suspects that an obligor may experience problems in meeting
its obligations, DVI Financial Services Inc. acts quickly to identify a new
operator of the equipment in the event that the obligor defaults. Any
repossessions are handled on an individual basis.

                  The DVI Strategic Partner Group handles collections and other
servicing of contracts which it has originated. Its collection department meets
monthly to review and discuss the status of certain accounts and any trends in
performance. For the accounts that are ten to thirty days past due, the DVI
Strategic Partner Group begins an active collection process. The process is
initiated by telephone contact with the obligor, and a reminder notice is sent
when the contract payment becomes fifteen days past due. When the payments are
thirty-one days past due, the DVI Strategic Partner Group sends a final notice
letter. The DVI Strategic Partner Group sends a demand letter for possession of
the equipment when the payment is sixty-one days past due. Contracts that are
more than ninety-one days past due are included on a watch list which is
reviewed by senior management each month.

DELINQUENCY EXPERIENCE

                  The following table sets forth information with respect to
delinquencies for the contracts originated or acquired by DVI Financial Services
Inc. These assets are of the same type as those being included in this
securitization. The data is derived from total managed domestic net financed
assets, which consist of all contracts held by DVI Financial Services Inc. on
balance sheet and serviced. The delinquency figures represent the entire
outstanding balances of those delinquent contracts. Total delinquencies for the
fiscal years 1996 through 1998 exclude contracts purchased from Affiliated
Capital on September 30, 1998.



                                      S-24
<PAGE>



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                DELINQUENCY EXPERIENCE -- DOMESTIC SERVICING PORTFOLIO


                                                               AS OF JUNE 30,
                      --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                   2000                             1999                            1998
                      ------------------------------- ---------------------------------- -------------------------------

                           AMOUNT       % OF TOTAL         AMOUNT         % OF TOTAL         AMOUNT        % OF TOTAL
                           ------       ----------         ------         ----------         ------        ----------
                                                    (In thousands, except for percentage)
<S>                   <C>               <C>            <C>                <C>              <C>             <C>
MANAGED NET
FINANCED ASSETS       $ 1,447,653                      $ 1,262,298                         $ 932,006


31 - 60 DAYS          $     9,985         0.7%         $    12,208           1.0%          $  15,811           1.7%
61 - 90 DAYS                8,630         0.6%               5,288           0.4%             15,012           1.6%
91 - 120 DAYS               3,848         0.3%               7,763           0.6%              8,259           0.9%
121 - 150 DAYS              8,894         0.6%               5,168           0.4%              9,597           1.0%
151 - 180 DAYS              5,402         0.4%               7,492           0.6%              4,079           0.4%
181 + DAYS                 46,142         3.2%              25,598           2.0%             15,295           1.6%
TOTAL DELINQUENCIES   $    82,901         5.7%         $    63,517           5.0%          $  68,053           7.3%
</TABLE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               AS OF JUNE 30,
                      ------------------------------------------------------------------

                                    1997                             1996
                      ------------------------------------------------------------------


                          AMOUNT         % OF TOTAL         AMOUNT         % OF TOTAL
                          ------         ----------         ------         ----------
                                    (In thousands, except for percentage)
<S>                   <C>                <C>             <C>               <C>
     MANAGED NET
   FINANCED ASSETS    $ 809,090                          $ 601,543


31 - 60 DAYS          $   3,705            0.5%           $ 10,352             1.7%
61 - 90 DAYS             12,133            1.5%              3,614             0.6%
91 - 120 DAYS             1,088            0.1%                755             0.1%
121 - 150 DAYS            2,419            0.3%                707             0.1%
151 - 180 DAYS            1,715            0.2%              1,790             0.3%
181 + DAYS               12,093            1.5%             10,296             1.7%
TOTAL DELINQUENCIES   $  33,153            4.1%           $ 27,514             4.6%
</TABLE>




                                      S-25
<PAGE>



LOSS EXPERIENCE

                  The following table sets forth information with respect to
losses for contracts originated or acquired by DVI Financial Services Inc.,
including those held by DVI Financial Services Inc. on balance sheet and
serviced. These assets are of the same type as those being included in this
securitization. Average managed net financed assets are based on quarterly
period average balances for the entire domestic servicing portfolio.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   Loss Experience
                                                   ---------------
                                               (dollars in thousands)


                                                                  Year Ending June 30
                                   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        2000             1999             1998             1997             1996
                                        ----             ----             ----             ----             ----
<S>                                 <C>              <C>                <C>             <C>              <C>
Average managed net financed
assets............................  $ 1,353,156      $ 1,089,031        $ 846,713       $ 704,676        $ 544,023

Net charge-offs...................  $     6,380      $     5,258        $   1,642       $    436         $   1,475
Net charge-offs as a percentage of
average managed net financed
assets............................         0.47%            0.48%            0.19%          0.06%             0.27%
                                    ===========      ===========        =========       ========         =========
</TABLE>


           The increase in delinquencies at June 30, 2000 was a result of the
growth in managed net financed assets, a bankruptcy of a borrower of $3.6
million from Third Coast Capital (a bankruptcy court order approved payment for
the entire outstanding amount on June 26, 2000), a delinquency of $4.9 million
loan to a psychiatric hospital in California that is secured by all assets
including real estate, and $3.7 million of additional delinquencies at DVI
Capital (DVI Capital discontinued operations in March 2000). All of these loans
and leases are properly collateralized or reserved and no significant losses are
anticipated. The increase in delinquencies in 1998 resulted primarily from a
delinquency of $20.0 million borrower. This delinquency had been reduced to $9.7
million at June 30, 2000, and a $1 million loss was recognized in December,
1999. Net losses increased in the fiscal year ended June 30, 1999 primarily due
to a $2.0 million loss resulting from the bankruptcy filing by Allegheny Health,
Education and Research Foundation and related entities in July 1998. All of the
Allegheny Health, Education and Research Foundation contracts have been paid or
assumed by new parties, and no further losses will be recognized. The low loss
level in 1997 appears to have resulted from normal fluctuations in annual loss
levels for a large ticket equipment finance company rather than from any factors
specific to that year.



                                      S-26
<PAGE>



           DVI Financial Services Inc.'s historical levels of allowances and
delinquencies are not necessarily predictive of future results. Various factors,
including changes in the way obligors are paid for their services, other
developments in the healthcare industry and new technological developments
affecting the resale value of financed equipment, could cause future delinquency
and loss rates to be worse than those experienced historically.

SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

           ALLOWANCE FOR LOSSES ON RECEIVABLES. Management regularly estimates
potential loan and lease receivable losses. An amount based on this estimate is
set aside on the company's books to be available to absorb credit losses in our
managed asset portfolio. We evaluate the allowance each quarter to determine
that it is adequate to cover possible losses. Our evaluation is based on a
continuing assessment of delinquencies, historical loss experience, asset
valuations, assessment of collateral and strength of guarantors, and legal
options to enforce management changes or sustain legal positions. That
evaluation includes estimates that may be significantly affected by changes in
economic conditions or discrete events adversely affecting specific obligors. We
believe that the allowance is adequate to provide for possible credit losses.

           We generally place contracts in a category in which the company has
no further expectation of receiving payments, when they become greater than 90
days delinquent. At that time we consider the range of remedies available to
mitigate a potential loss. Remedies include the pursuit of underlying collateral
and guarantors (including recourse to dealers and manufacturers), draws on
letters of credit, and protecting our investment by taking control of a medical
facility's operations and replacing the existing management. Contracts are
charged-off when a loss is considered probable and all reasonable remedies have
been pursued. The smaller delinquent contracts arising from our vendor programs
are normally charged off when they become greater than 120 days delinquent.





                                      S-27
<PAGE>



                                  THE SERVICER

SERVICING OBLIGATIONS AND PROCEDURES

           DVI Financial Services Inc. will be appointed as servicer under the
contribution and servicing agreement to handle billing and collection of all
contracts constituting trust property for the notes. It will do so in the same
manner as it handles billing and collection for contracts which it owns itself.
DVI Financial Services Inc. will service the trust property consistent with
customary practices of other servicers in the medical equipment finance
industry. In performing its duties as servicer, DVI Financial Services Inc. will
act for the benefit of the transferor, the issuer, the trustee and the holders
of the notes, without regard to any relationship which the servicer or any
Affiliate of the servicer may otherwise have with an obligor under a contract.
The servicer will always act consistently with the provisions of the indenture,
as amended, and each contract, and will comply with all applicable requirements
of law. Except as allowed by the terms of any contract following a default under
that contract, the servicer will not take any action which would result in the
interference with the obligor's right to quiet enjoyment of the equipment during
the term of the contract.

                    The contracts contain provisions which require the obligor
to make the scheduled payment of rent or other payments under that contract on a
periodic basis. These payments may be in arrears or in advance. If an obligor
defaults under its contract, the servicer, on behalf of the trustee, can either
repossess and re-lease or sell the related equipment to cover the remaining
unpaid payments under such contract.

                    Following each monthly determination date for determining
payments on the notes, the servicer will remit a Servicer Advance to the trustee
so that the trustee will have immediately available funds by 11:00 a.m. New York
time on the second business day prior to the next payment date for the notes.
Each Servicer Advance must be sufficient to cover all amounts which were due and
unpaid on any delinquent contract on that determination date. The servicer will
not be obligated to make a Servicer Advance for:

          o         any defaulted contract,
          o         any contract that was finally liquidated on or prior to that
                    determination date, or for



                                      S-28
<PAGE>



           o        any other contract if the servicer, in its good faith
                    judgment, believes that Servicer Advance would be a
                    Nonrecoverable Advance.

If the servicer determines that any Servicer Advance it has made, or is
contemplating making, would be a Nonrecoverable Advance, the servicer will
deliver to the trustee an officer's certificate stating the basis for that
determination. An officer's certificate must be signed by the Chairman, the
President, a Vice President, the Treasurer, an Assistant Treasurer, the
Secretary, or an Assistant Secretary of the relevant entity.

                    The servicer, for the benefit of the noteholders and the
issuer, will be responsible for:

          o         managing, servicing and administering the trust property,
          o         enforcing and making collections on the contracts, and for
          o         enforcing the rights of the noteholders and issuer in any
                    item of equipment.

The servicer will be responsible, among other duties, for:

           o        invoicing each obligor for all contract payments required to
                    be paid by it under the contracts, in the same manner as the
                    servicer does with respect to similar contracts owned by it,

           o        maintaining for each contract, each item of equipment, each
                    payment and each obligor, complete and accurate records in
                    the same manner and to the same extent as the servicer does
                    with respect to similar contracts held for its own account,

          o         on behalf of DVI Receivables Corp. XII, the issuer and the
                    trustee, seeing to it that all tax returns for sales, use,
                    personal property and other taxes, but not corporate income
                    tax returns, are signed and filed, and

           o        on behalf of DVI Receivables Corp. XII, the issuer and the
                    trustee, seeing to it that there are signed and filed any
                    and all reports or licensing applications required to be
                    filed in any jurisdiction for any contract or any item of
                    equipment and UCC financing statements necessary to perfect,
                    or to maintain the perfection of, the



                                      S-29
<PAGE>



                    interest of the trustee in the trust property.

                    The terms of a contract may be modified or adjusted by the
servicer at the request of an obligor. These modifications or adjustments may
include changes to the components of the equipment or corrections of information
that occur when a contract enters the servicer's administrative servicing
system. These modifications and adjustments may result in changes to the amount
of monthly payment under that contract, the monthly payment date of the contract
or changes to the equipment. However, none of these changes will:

          o         extend the stated maturity date of the notes,

          o         extend by more than 24 months the scheduled termination date
                    of the contract,

          o         materially shorten or lengthen the weighted average life of
                    any class of notes,

          o         be done for contracts representing more than twenty percent
                    of the Initial Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance of the
                    contracts,

          o         be done for any contract that is ninety days or more
                    delinquent,

          o         decrease the Discounted Contract Balance of any contract
                    which is modified in this way, unless the issuer deposits an
                    amount equal to that decrease in the collection account,

          o         be inconsistent with the servicing standards set forth in
                    Section 4.01 of the contribution and servicing agreement,

          o         reduce or adversely affect the obligor's obligation to
                    maintain, service, insure and care for the equipment or
                    permit the alteration of any item of equipment in any way
                    which could adversely affect its present or future value, or

          o         otherwise adversely affect, individually or in the
                    aggregate, the interests of any of DVI Receivables Corp.
                    XII, the issuer, the trustee or the noteholders.




                                      S-30
<PAGE>



SERVICING COMPENSATION AND PAYMENT OF EXPENSES

                    As compensation to the servicer for its servicing of the
contracts, the servicer will be entitled to receive on each payment date a
servicing fee from amounts on deposit in the collection account. This fee will
equal the product of (i) one-twelfth, (ii) .45% and (iii) the Aggregate
Discounted Contract Balance of all contracts at the beginning of the preceding
collection period, except that for the first collection period, the servicing
fee shall equal the product of (i) the fraction of which the numerator is the
actual number of days elapsed during the first collection period and the
denominator is 360 days, (ii) .45% and (iii) the Aggregate Discounted Contract
Balance of all contracts at the closing date. The collection period is, for a
particular payment date, the entire calendar month immediately preceding that
payment date. The servicing fee, together with any portion of the servicing fee
that remains unpaid from prior payment dates, will be paid prior to distribution
of any amounts to the noteholders.

                    In addition, the servicer will be entitled to receive
additional compensation in the form of servicing charges, which are:

          o         any late payment fees,
          o         the penalty portion of interest paid on past due amounts,
          o         origination fees,
          o         documentation fees,
          o         other administrative fees or similar charges allowed by
                    applicable law for the contracts, and
          o         other similar fees paid by the obligors.

                    The servicer also is entitled to receive all earnings from
any eligible investments in the collection account. The servicer will allocate
payments by or on behalf of obligors between amounts then payable as scheduled
payments, late fees and other charges in accordance with the servicer's normal
practices and procedures.

                    The servicing fee will compensate the servicer for
performing the functions of a third party servicer of similar types of
contracts, including collecting and posting all payments, responding to
inquiries of obligors on the contracts, investigating delinquencies, sending
payment coupons to obligors, reporting tax information to obligors, paying costs
of collection and



                                      S-31
<PAGE>



disposition of defaults and policing the collateral for that contract. The
servicing fee also will compensate the servicer for administering the contracts,
accounting for collections and furnishing statements to the trustee. The
servicing fee also will reimburse the servicer for taxes, accounting fees,
outside auditor fees, data processing costs and other costs incurred in
connection with administering the contracts.

                    The servicer will bear all costs of servicing the contracts
under the contribution and servicing agreement. The servicer will be entitled to
retain out of amounts recovered by the servicer its actual out-of-pocket
expenses paid to third parties reasonably incurred. These retained amounts will
only come from amounts actually recovered for any contract or the related
equipment. In addition, the servicer is entitled to receive on each payment date
any amounts previously paid by it as Servicer Advances, where the servicer has
not been reimbursed and either the contract has become a defaulted contract or
the amount has been determined to be a Nonrecoverable Advance.

EVIDENCE OF COMPLIANCE BY SERVICER

                    The contribution and servicing agreement requires that with
each set of financial statements delivered under the contribution and servicing
agreement, the servicer will deliver an officer's certificate stating:

          o         that the officer signing the certificate has reviewed the
                    activities of the servicer during the period covered by
                    those financial statements,

           o        that the review has not disclosed the existence of any
                    servicer event of default or, if the servicer defaults under
                    certain sections of the contribution and servicing
                    agreement, describing its nature and what action the
                    servicer has taken and is taking to cure the event, and

           o        that the officer has concluded that during that period the
                    servicer has serviced the contracts in compliance with the
                    required procedures. If not, the officer will state what
                    were the instances of noncompliance.




                                      S-32
<PAGE>



OTHER SERVICING PROCEDURES

                    The third business day immediately preceding each payment
date is called a determination date. On each determination date, the servicer
shall deliver a written report, called the monthly servicer report, to each
rating agency and to the trustee.

                    The issuer, trustee or any noteholder is entitled to notify
the servicer that an obligor is in default under its contract. If it receives
that notice, or if the servicer otherwise learns that the obligor is in default
under its contract, the servicer will take action as is customary to cause the
obligor to cure its default. If the default can not be cured, the servicer will
use its best efforts to sell or re-lease any equipment under the defaulted
contract. It will do so in a timely manner and consistent with the servicer's
procedures for equipment owned by it, in order to maximize the net proceeds from
that equipment, to the extent possible under then prevailing market conditions.
The servicer will act in the same way as it does for its own contracts and
consistent with the customary practices of servicers in the medical equipment
finance industry.

                    The Servicer will grant to the trustee the power, in the
event an indenture or servicer event of default occurs, to act as its
attorney-in-fact, to file Uniform Commercial Code financing statements in the
appropriate offices showing the transfer of the contracts to the issuer and to
do any and all other acts as may be necessary or appropriate. The servicer will
promptly execute any document or instrument deemed necessary by the issuer or
the trustee to effect or to evidence this power of attorney. All costs
associated with such filings or instructions will be paid by the contributor.

RESIGNATION/REMOVAL OF THE SERVICER

                    The contribution and servicing agreement will provide that
the servicer may not resign from its obligations and duties as servicer, except
in connection with an assignment permitted by the contribution and servicing
agreement or upon a determination that the servicer's performance of its duties
is no longer permissible under applicable law. No resignation will become
effective until the trustee or a successor servicer has assumed the servicer's
servicing obligations and duties under the contribution and servicing agreement.
The servicer can only be removed if there has occurred a servicer event of
default. See "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS--
SERVICER EVENTS OF DEFAULT" at page S-82 of this prospectus supplement



                                      S-33
<PAGE>



and "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- TERMINATION
OF THE SERVICER" at page S-84 of this prospectus supplement.

VOLUNTARY TERMINATION OF SERVICER DUTIES

                    At the option of the servicer, on any payment date on which
the Pool A Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance is less than 10% of the Pool A
Initial Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance, and the Pool B Aggregate
Discounted Contract Balance is less than 20% of the Pool B Initial Aggregate
Discounted Contract Balance, the servicer can have the Repurchase Amount
deposited into the collection account for each remaining contract. In this case,
the servicer will have purchased all remaining trust property and the
obligations and responsibilities of the servicer shall terminate.

                    The servicer has the same option to terminate its
obligations and responsibilities for the contracts in Pool B, on any payment
date on which the Pool B Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance is less than 20%
of the Pool B Initial Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance. However, the
servicer must cause the Repurchase Amount to be deposited into the collection
account for each remaining contract in Pool B and the servicer will not have
purchased all remaining trust property.

                           DVI RECEIVABLES CORP. VIII

                    DVI Receivables Corp. VIII is a limited purpose Delaware
corporation formed in December, 1998. DVI Receivables Corp. VIII is the sole
owner of all of the membership units and sole member and managing member of the
issuer.

                    DVI Receivables Corp. VIII is also the sole owner of all of
the membership units and sole member and managing member of DVI Receivables
VIII, L.L.C., DVI Receivables X, L.L.C., and DVI Receivables, XI, L.L.C., each a
limited purpose, limited liability company formed in Delaware. In July 1999, DVI
Receivables VIII, L.L.C. issued its Asset-Backed Series 1999-1 Notes in five
classes, four of which were offered in a public sale and the fifth offered in
reliance upon the Rule 144A exemption permitted under the Securities Act of
1933, as amended. In October 1999, DVI Receivables X, L.L.C. issued its
Asset-Backed Series 1999-2 Notes in five classes, four of which were offered in
a public sale and the fifth offered in reliance upon the Rule



                                      S-34
<PAGE>



144A exemption permitted under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. In May
2000, DVI Receivables XI, L.L.C. issued its Asset-Backed Series 2000 Notes in
seven classes, six of which were offered in a public sale and the seventh
offered in reliance upon the Rule 144A exemption permitted under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended.

                    All of the outstanding capital stock of DVI Receivables
Corp. VIII is owned by DVI Financial Services Inc. DVI Receivables Corp. VIII's
principal executive office is located at 2500 York Road, Jamison, Pennsylvania,
18929. Its telephone number is (215) 488-5000.

                            DVI RECEIVABLES CORP. XII

                    DVI Receivables Corp. XII is a limited purpose Delaware
corporation formed in April, 2000 to facilitate the interim financing of the
contracts by the issuer. All of the outstanding capital stock of DVI Receivables
Corp. XII is owned by DVI Financial Services Inc. DVI Receivables Corp. XII's
principal executive office is located at 2500 York Road, Jamison, Pennsylvania,
18929. Its telephone number is (215) 488-5000. Counsel for the underwriters will
render its opinion that if DVI Financial Services Inc. were to be the subject of
bankruptcy proceedings, the possibility that a court would order the
consolidation of DVI Receivables Corp. XII with DVI Financial Services Inc. is
extremely remote.

                                   THE ISSUER

                    The issuer, DVI Receivables XII, L.L.C., is a limited
purpose limited liability company organized under the laws of the State of
Delaware in April, 2000. DVI Receivables Corp. VIII is the sole member of the
issuer.

                    The issuer will not engage in any business or investment
activities other than acquiring, owning, financing, transferring, receiving or
pledging the assets transferred to the issuer and related activities described
in its organizational documents. The issuer has been organized so that, to the
extent possible, neither it nor the trust property will be involved in any
bankruptcy proceedings. For example:

                   o         the managing member of the issuer, DVI Receivables
                             Corp. VIII, has at least two independent directors
                             who are not affiliated with DVI Financial



                                      S-35
<PAGE>



                             Services Inc. The independent directors are charged
                             with acting in the best interests of shareholders
                             and creditors of DVI Receivables Corp. VIII and the
                             wholly-owned subsidiaries of DVI Receivables Corp.
                             VIII, and the unanimous vote of all directors,
                             including the independent directors, is necessary
                             before DVI Receivables Corp. VIII can commence
                             voluntary proceedings in a bankruptcy action as to
                             either itself or the issuer, or direct the issuer
                             to commence any voluntary bankruptcy proceedings,

                    o        DVI Receivables Corp. VIII, the transferor, the
                             servicer and the trustee all will agree not to
                             file, or join in the filing of, any legal action to
                             force the issuer into bankruptcy proceedings, and

                    o        counsel for the underwriters will render its
                             opinion that if DVI Financial Services Inc. were to
                             be the subject of bankruptcy proceedings, then the
                             issuer and the trust property would not be
                             consolidated in these proceedings.

The issuer owns DVI Financial Services Inc.'s rights under any property
insurance policies relating to the equipment financed under the contracts. The
issuer owns DVI Receivables Corp. XII's rights and remedies under the
contribution and servicing agreement.

                                   THE TRUSTEE

                    The trustee, U.S. Bank Trust National Association, has its
principal corporate trust office at 180 Fifth Street, St. Paul, Minnesota 55101.

                    The trustee's liability in connection with the issuance and
sale of the notes is limited solely to the express obligations of the trustee
listed in the indenture.

                    No resignation or removal of the trustee and no appointment
of a successor trustee will become effective until the successor trustee has
accepted appointment. The trustee may resign at any time by giving written
notice of resignation to the issuer and the noteholders. Any successor trustee
must meet the financial and other standards for qualifying as a successor
trustee under the indenture. The trustee may be removed at any time by written
notice from the holders of notes



                                      S-36
<PAGE>



holding more than 50% of the Voting Rights. The issuer may remove the trustee
under the limited circumstances set forth in Section 7.08 of the indenture.

                    If the trustee resigns or is removed, the issuer, with the
consent of the holders of notes of the majority of the Voting Rights, shall
promptly appoint a successor trustee. If a successor trustee has not been
appointed and accepted appointment within 30 days after notice of resignation or
removal, the trustee or any noteholder may petition any court of competent
jurisdiction for the appointment of a successor trustee.

                                  THE CONTRACTS

                    The contracts consist of non-cancelable finance leases, fair
market value leases, leveraged lease loans, lease receivable purchases and
secured equipment notes. The obligors under the contracts are primarily
hospitals, non-hospital medical facilities, physician groups and physicians,
businesses, institutions, and professionals who utilize the equipment under
those contracts for commercial use throughout the United States. No Affiliates
of DVI Financial Services Inc. are or will be obligors under the contracts. The
equipment is principally non-invasive medical diagnostic and therapeutic
equipment. It is described on the table on page S-47 of this prospectus
supplement. The issuer will acquire most of the contracts, called the initial
contracts, on the closing date. On the closing date, the notes will be secured
by the initial contracts, the other trust property and the amounts on deposit in
the reserve account.

                    The initial contracts will be purchased by the issuer from
DVI Receivables Corp. XII under an amended and restated subsequent contract
transfer agreement, dated as of April 1, 2000, between the issuer and DVI
Receivables Corp. XII. DVI Receivables Corp. XII will have acquired the initial
contracts from DVI Financial Services Inc. under an amended and restated
contribution and servicing agreement, dated as of April 1, 2000, between DVI
Financial Services Inc. and DVI Receivables Corp. XII. The initial contracts
will be selected from all contracts owned by DVI Financial Services Inc. based
on the selection criteria for Eligible Contracts specified in the contribution
and servicing agreement and described in the glossary to this prospectus
supplement.

                    DVI Financial Services Inc. believes that the contracts are
representative of all contracts owned by DVI Financial Services Inc. The
contracts have been selected by DVI Financial Services Inc. and will meet all
the criteria specified in this prospectus supplement.



                                      S-37
<PAGE>



                    DVI Financial Services Inc. shall deliver to the trustee the
original counterpart of each contract as well as copies of documents and
instruments relating to each contract and evidencing the security interest in
the equipment securing each contract. All of these counterparts, documents and
instruments are called the contract file. Each of DVI Receivables Corp. XII and
the issuer will cause its accounting records to be clearly and unambiguously
marked to show that each contract has been transferred by DVI Financial Services
Inc. to DVI Receivables Corp. XII, by DVI Receivables Corp. XII to the issuer
and pledged by the issuer to the trustee for the benefit of the noteholders
pursuant to the indenture.

                    Some of the contracts were originated by third parties known
as brokers and acquired by DVI Financial Services Inc. through purchases in its
usual course of business from various entities to those entities. These
purchases are called brokered transactions. Contracts acquired by DVI Financial
Services Inc. in brokered transactions are purchased by it using the same credit
and equipment criteria that DVI Financial Services Inc. applies to contracts
which it writes in its own name. Contracts acquired from brokers are serviced by
DVI Financial Services Inc. See "DVI FINANCIAL SERVICES INC. -- UNDERWRITING
CRITERIA" at page S-20 of this prospectus supplement and "DVI FINANCIAL SERVICES
INC.'S CREDIT UNDERWRITING AND REVIEW PROCESS" at page 6 of the prospectus, for
a description of DVI Financial Services Inc.'s underwriting and credit and
collection policies. It is the policy of DVI Financial Services Inc. to ensure
that UCC financing statements covering the underlying equipment for contracts
acquired by DVI Financial Services Inc. in brokered transactions are filed
against the applicable obligors to the same extent as those financing statements
would be filed if the contracts were originated by DVI Financial Services Inc.
DVI Financial Services Inc. also arranges for those financing statements to be
assigned to DVI Financial Services Inc. In addition, DVI Financial Services Inc.
files financing statements against the applicable broker, to protect its
interest in the contracts and the other assets transferred to it in brokered
transactions.

                    The contracts, other than the leveraged leased loans, and
the equipment leases pledged as collateral for leveraged leased loans are
exclusively on a "net basis", that is, the obligor is responsible for all
operating expenses, including taxes and insurance premiums; except that some
equipment leases pledged as collateral for leveraged leased loans may require
the lessor to maintain and service the equipment. All obligors are obligated to:

          o         remit all contract payments due,



                                      S-38
<PAGE>



          o         operate the equipment in compliance with the manufacturers'
                    instructions,

          o         except for the contracts described in the immediately
                    preceding sentence, maintain and service the equipment, and

          o         insure the equipment against casualty losses, liability for
                    bodily injury and against property damage.

Contract documentation also typically specifies that the obligor is responsible
for compliance with all applicable laws and regulations applicable to operation
of the equipment. Although in most cases the contracts provide that the obligor
must maintain the equipment, in some transactions the obligor's rental or debt
service payments include fees for supplies and other transaction costs. These
fees are collected by DVI Financial Services Inc. and remitted to the
appropriate broker or service provider. These fees, as well as any other amounts
included in an obligor's payments for which DVI Financial Services Inc. is not
the ultimate beneficiary, such as property taxes, sales taxes, manufacturer's
maintenance costs, insurance premiums and supplies and transaction costs, do not
constitute part of the trust property. Also not included in the trust property
are any purchase option payments and any rights of DVI Financial Services Inc.
in any accounts receivable of the obligor which have been pledged to DVI
Financial Services Inc. as collateral for that obligor's contract.

                    The contracts, other than the leveraged leased loans, and
the equipment leases pledged as collateral for a leveraged lease loan, in most
cases do not provide for a right of the obligor to prepay. However, under the
contribution and servicing agreement, the servicer is permitted to allow
prepayment, in part or in full, in an amount not less than the Prepayment Amount
or Partial Prepayment Amount, as applicable. In addition, in the event that an
obligor requests an upgrade or trade-in of equipment, the servicer, after paying
the Prepayment Amount or substituting an Eligible Contract, may remove the
equipment and related contract from the trust property. The servicer
historically has permitted obligors to terminate contracts early either in
connection with the execution of a new contract of replacement equipment, or
upon payment of a negotiated payoff amount, or both. Any Prepayment Amounts or
Partial Prepayment Amounts paid by the servicer shall be deposited into the
collection account and shall be applied as a prepayment of the notes.




                                      S-39
<PAGE>



                    The servicer may only permit a full prepayment if the
obligor pays an amount at least equal to the sum of:

           (1)      the discounted contract balance of the contract as of the
                    first day of the calendar month immediately preceding such
                    prepayment, together with one month of interest thereon at
                    the actual Discount Rate of _______%;

           (2)      any unreimbursed amounts that the servicer advanced to that
                    obligor for that contract as permitted in the contribution
                    and servicing agreement, as described in"THE CONTRACTS" on
                    page S-37 and "THE SERVICER" on page S-28 of this prospectus
                    supplement; and

           (3)      any payments due and outstanding under the contract that
                    constitute trust property but were not the subject of a
                    Servicer Advance.

           The servicer may only permit an obligor to partially prepay a
contract if the obligor pays an amount equal to the difference between the
following (1) and (2).

           (1)      the difference between (A) the discounted contract balance
                    of the contract on the first day of the collection period
                    before the prepayment is made together with one month's
                    interest thereon at the discount rate and (B) the discounted
                    contract balance of the contract after the prepayment is
                    made, less

           (2)      an amount equal to any of the contract payments actually
                    received by the servicer with respect to the prepaid portion
                    of the contract for the current calendar month on or before
                    the date of the partial prepayment.

                    The servicer will make reasonable efforts to collect all
payments under the contracts. It will use the same collection procedures as the
servicer follows for the particular type of contract it services for itself and
others. Some of these other arrangements may result in the servicer acquiring a
defaulted contract. The servicer may sell the equipment securing a defaulted
contract at a public or private sale, or take any other action permitted by
applicable law.

                    A contract is a defaulted contract when either:



                                      S-40
<PAGE>



          o         any contract payment or portion of contract payment is
                    delinquent for more than 180 days as of the last day of the
                    calendar month,

          o         the servicer has not made a Servicer Advance to cover any
                    delinquent amounts, on the grounds that the advance would
                    not be recoverable,

          o         the contract has been rejected in a bankruptcy proceeding
                    involving the obligor under that contract, or

          o         the lessor for any leveraged lease loan has rejected the
                    related lease in a bankruptcy proceeding involving that
                    lessor.

                    For purposes of determining the length of time that a
contract is delinquent, the delinquency of a contract payment is measured using
the contract payments required to be made during the term of the contract as it
was written on the date that the contract became part of the trust property.
This does not take into account any modifications, waivers or extensions granted
by the servicer after that date, although modifications permitted under Section
4.02 of the contribution and servicing agreement will be taken into account.

                    In contrast with a defaulted contract, a delinquent contract
is, as of any determination date, any contract under which the obligor has not
paid all contract payments which were due at the end of the prior calendar
month. However, a delinquent contract does not include a contract which became a
defaulted contract prior to that determination date. DVI Financial Services Inc.
will have the right, but not the obligation, to repurchase a delinquent contract
in order to more effectively service a delinquent contract and to enforce the
obligations of the obligor under the delinquent contract, but DVI Financial
Services Inc. will not repurchase more than fifteen percent of the Initial
Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance of the contracts.

STATISTICAL INFORMATION FOR THE CONTRACTS

                    The statistical information presented in this prospectus
supplement concerning the contracts is referred to as the statistical contracts.
The information in this prospectus supplement regarding the statistical
contracts has been calculated using an assumed Discount Rate of 7.75% per annum.
The Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance of the statistical contracts as of the
cut-


                                      S-41
<PAGE>




off date is $272,828,157.80 using the assumed Discount Rate. The Aggregate
Discounted Contract Balance of the initial contracts as of the cut-off date is
$__________ using the actual Discount Rate. The composition of the initial
contracts as of the cut-off date will vary somewhat from the composition of the
statistical contracts as presented in this prospectus supplement. DVI Financial
Services Inc. does not expect that any resulting difference will be material. We
did not include purchase option payments or miscellaneous payments in our
calculations of Discounted Contract Balances. For the purposes of future
calculations, except when calculating a repurchase price of a contract, we
assumed that the Discounted Contract Balance of any defaulted contract is zero.
In addition, some statistical contracts included in the statistical information
included in this prospectus supplement may not meet the eligibility requirements
as of the cut-off date and will be removed from the initial contracts. Also,
there may be some initial contracts that are not included as statistical
contracts. As a result, the composition as of the closing date for the final
pool of initial contracts will vary somewhat from the composition as presented
in this prospectus supplement. DVI Financial Services Inc. does not expect that
any resulting variance will be material.

                    Detailed information for the statistical contracts is given
below. References in this prospectus supplement to percentages refer in each
case to the percentage of the Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance calculated
based on the assumed Discount Rate of the statistical contracts as of the
cut-off date. As of the cut-off date, the statistical contracts had remaining
terms to maturity of 2 to 83 months. The final scheduled payment date of the
statistical contract with the latest maturity will be in September 30, 2007. As
of the cut-off date, the Discounted Contract Balances of the statistical
contracts range from $1,887.02 to $5,117,844.60. No more than 2.62% of the
Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance of the statistical contracts is
attributable to any one obligor. The average Discounted Contract Balance of the
statistical contracts is approximately $160,581.61.

                    Information regarding the statistical contracts is given in
the tables below. Figures may not add up exactly to the stated totals because of
rounding. All information has been calculated on the basis of the assumed
Discount Rate.

                    The statistical information in this prospectus supplement
does not reflect any information regarding any contracts that are included in
the trust property but were not included in the statistical contracts. Although
the addition of these contracts may change relative data given in




                                      S-42
<PAGE>



the tables below, all initial contracts must satisfy particular conditions,
including that they are Eligible Contracts. See "THE CONTRACTS--SUBSTITUTE
CONTRACTS" at page S-55 of this prospectus supplement.

                    Any references in the tables below to

          o         "Number of contracts" treat separate equipment schedules to
                    the same master contract as separate contracts,

           o        "Original Equipment Cost" means, with respect to contracts
                    acquired by DVI Financial Services Inc. from others, the
                    amount recorded on DVI Financial Services Inc.'s records as
                    paid by DVI Financial Services Inc. to acquire that contract
                    and the broker's interest in the related equipment, and

           o        "Discounted Contract Balance" means the present value of the
                    statistical contracts, calculated based on an assumed
                    Discount Rate of 7.75%. We believe that the use of the
                    assumed Discount Rate does not materially alter the
                    resulting information in a way that would mislead
                    prospective noteholders.




                                      S-43
<PAGE>



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                   GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF THE STATISTICAL
                       CONTRACT POOL BY EQUIPMENT LOCATION
                       -----------------------------------

                                                                   PERCENTAGE                       PERCENTAGE
                                     PERCENTAGE                   OF AGGREGATE                     OF AGGREGATE
                                    OF AGGREGATE     DISCOUNTED    DISCOUNTED       ORIGINAL         ORIGINAL
                        NUMBER OF    NUMBER OF        CONTRACT      CONTRACT        EQUIPMENT        EQUIPMENT
EQUIPMENT LOCATION      CONTRACTS    CONTRACTS        BALANCE        BALANCE           COST            COST
----------------------- ----------  ------------  --------------- ------------  ---------------    --------------
<S>                      <C>         <C>          <C>              <C>          <C>                 <C>
Alabama ...............    21          1.24%      $4,768,963.73        1.75%    $  6,569,770.65          2.24%
Alaska ................     2          0.12           19,890.50        0.01           18,666.90          0.01
Arizona ...............    28          1.65        8,103,981.08        2.97        8,575,175.70          2.92
Arkansas ..............     6          0.35        1,900,644.65        0.70        3,028,975.55          1.03
California ............   228         13.42       30,160,496.38       11.05       32,474,142.95         11.05
Colorado ..............    37          2.18       10,488,917.24        3.84        9,929,118.50          3.38
Connecticut ...........    24          1.41          882,394.31        0.32          961,208.70          0.33
Delaware ..............     1          0.06           40,140.72        0.01           44,666.00          0.02
District of Columbia ..     4          0.24        1,635,679.73        0.60        1,545,793.19          0.53
Florida ...............   182         10.71       29,112,139.05       10.67       31,541,563.17         10.73
Georgia ...............    50          2.94        7,728,741.11        2.83        7,485,689.20          2.55
Hawaii ................     2          0.12          119,392.24        0.04          152,876.18          0.05
Idaho .................    14          0.82          665,767.30        0.24          773,419.76          0.26
Illinois ..............    73          4.30        7,719,104.34        2.83       10,508,242.91          3.58
Indiana ...............    39          2.30        1,544,319.40        0.57        2,851,898.21          0.97
Iowa ..................    10          0.59          643,369.68        0.24        1,252,190.69          0.43
Kansas ................     8          0.47          120,963.08        0.04          122,150.07          0.04
Kentucky ..............    15          0.88        2,747,176.25        1.01        2,547,138.64          0.87
Louisiana .............    14          0.82          501,474.00        0.18          514,151.52          0.17
Maine .................     5          0.29          201,773.73        0.07          213,939.01          0.07
Maryland ..............    38          2.24        4,678,215.29        1.71        4,695,837.05          1.60
Massachusetts .........    46          2.71        4,367,517.58        1.60        8,392,482.48          2.86
Michigan ..............    55          3.24        5,148,401.90        1.89        5,267,398.77          1.79
Minnesota .............     9          0.53        2,065,080.36        0.76        1,923,351.16          0.65
Mississippi ...........    10          0.59        6,779,590.34        2.48        6,321,996.25          2.15
Missouri ..............    25          1.47        4,077,155.11        1.49        3,979,266.26          1.35
Montana ...............     4          0.24        1,426,430.40        0.52        1,620,264.13          0.55
Nebraska ..............     7          0.41        2,840,210.53        1.04        2,694,751.02          0.92
Nevada ................    10          0.59          520,570.12        0.19          496,777.53          0.17
New Hampshire .........     2          0.12          120,090.05        0.04          116,181.77          0.04
New Jersey ............    71          4.18       10,523,656.75        3.86       10,865,500.82          3.70
New Mexico ............    12          0.71       11,432,320.93        4.19       11,149,575.65          3.79
New York ..............   166          9.77       32,606,112.21       11.95       33,813,006.36         11.50
</TABLE>


                                      S-44

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   PERCENTAGE                       PERCENTAGE
                                     PERCENTAGE                   OF AGGREGATE                     OF AGGREGATE
                                    OF AGGREGATE     DISCOUNTED    DISCOUNTED       ORIGINAL         ORIGINAL
                        NUMBER OF    NUMBER OF        CONTRACT      CONTRACT        EQUIPMENT        EQUIPMENT
EQUIPMENT LOCATION      CONTRACTS    CONTRACTS        BALANCE        BALANCE           COST            COST
----------------------- ----------  ------------  --------------- ------------  ---------------    --------------
<S>                      <C>         <C>          <C>              <C>          <C>                 <C>
North Carolina ........    41          2.41%      $3,761,200.22        1.38%      $3,778,479.65          1.29%
North Dakota ..........     1          0.06            5,294.32        0.00            5,600.00          0.00
Ohio ..................    46          2.71        9,229,577.85        3.38        9,010,578.39          3.07
Oklahoma ..............    10          0.59          425,529.78        0.16          653,395.59          0.22
Oregon ................    13          0.77        1,434,792.62        0.53        1,384,651.40          0.47
Pennsylvania ..........    86          5.06       11,791,897.73        4.32       13,743,839.34          4.68
Puerto Rico ...........    15          0.88          653,178.98        0.24          649,302.40          0.22
Rhode Island ..........     6          0.35          238,855.40        0.09          252,835.48          0.09
South Carolina ........    18          1.06        1,148,213.36        0.42        1,155,132.48          0.39
South Dakota ..........     4          0.24          171,027.37        0.06          182,524.88          0.06
Tennessee .............    19          1.12        1,131,401.88        0.41        1,948,348.09          0.66
Texas .................   127          7.47       32,606,083.63       11.95       33,756,369.70         11.48
Utah ..................    12          0.71          441,981.86        0.16          452,530.56          0.15
Virginia ..............    30          1.77        3,133,636.08        1.15        3,357,616.90          1.14
Washington ............    31          1.82        7,301,926.73        2.68        6,830,006.95          2.32
West Virginia .........     6          0.35          238,405.33        0.09          258,508.21          0.09
Wisconsin .............    13          0.77        1,785,815.71        0.65        1,665,671.09          0.57
Wyoming ...............     3          0.18        1,638,658.86        0.60        2,396,339.07          0.82
                        -----        ------     ---------------      ------     ---------------        ------
Total ................. 1,699        100.00%    $272,828,157.80      100.00%    $293,928,896.93        100.00%
                        =====        ======     ===============      ======     ===============        ======
</TABLE>


Based upon equipment addresses as reflected on the Servicer's records.


                                      S-45

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         DISTRIBUTION OF THE STATISTICAL
                    CONTRACT POOL BY REMAINING CONTRACT TERM
                    ----------------------------------------

                                                                PERCENTAGE                       PERCENTAGE
                                PERCENTAGE                     OF AGGREGATE                     OF AGGREGATE
   RANGE OF                    OF AGGREGATE     DISCOUNTED      DISCOUNTED        ORIGINAL        ORIGINAL
REMAINING TERMS    NUMBER OF     NUMBER OF        CONTRACT       CONTRACT         EQUIPMENT       EQUIPMENT
 (IN MONTHS)       CONTRACTS     CONTRACTS        BALANCE         BALANCE           COST            COST
----------------   ---------   ------------    --------------  ------------   ---------------   ------------
<S>                <C>           <C>           <C>               <C>          <C>                 <C>
 1-12 ..........      66            3.88%      $ 2,801,490.73       1.03%     $ 15,854,476.14        5.39%
13-24 ..........     192           11.30        10,584,702.63       3.88        21,963,820.21        7.47
25-36 ..........     540           31.78        27,315,789.52      10.01        30,580,194.31       10.40
37-48 ..........     176           10.36        23,347,490.36       8.56        25,090,674.61        8.54
49-60 ..........     624           36.73       100,790,967.37      36.94        98,763,447.55       33.60
61-72 ..........      89            5.24        77,829,770.23      28.53        72,683,845.13       24.73
73-84 ..........      12            0.71        30,157,946.96      11.05        28,992,438.98        9.86
                   -----          ------      ---------------     ------      ---------------      ------
Total ..........   1,699          100.00%     $272,828,157.80     100.00%     $293,928,896.93      100.00%
                   =====          ======       ==============     ======       ==============      ======
</TABLE>



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                      DISTRIBUTION OF THE STATISTICAL CONTRACT POOL BY ORIGINAL CONTRACT TERM
                      -----------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                PERCENTAGE                       PERCENTAGE
                               PERCENTAGE                      OF AGGREGATE                     OF AGGREGATE
  RANGE OF                    OF AGGREGATE     DISCOUNTED       DISCOUNTED        ORIGINAL        ORIGINAL
ORIGINAL TERMS    NUMBER OF    NUMBER OF        CONTRACT        CONTRACT         EQUIPMENT        EQUIPMENT
 (IN MONTHS)      CONTRACTS    CONTRACTS        BALANCE         BALANCE             COST            COST
--------------   -----------  ------------   --------------    ------------   --------------    ------------
<S>               <C>          <C>           <C>                <C>            <C>               <C>
 1-12 ........       29           1.71%         $439,971.43        0.16%          $902,179.35       0.31%
13-24 ........      153           9.01         3,785,939.71        1.39          4,263,593.98       1.45
25-36 ........      482          28.37        24,065,786.70        8.82         26,755,622.75       9.10
37-48 ........      227          13.36        18,966,762.50        6.95         20,461,565.47       6.96
49-60 ........      584          34.37        77,910,356.66       28.56         80,349,987.03      27.34
61-72 ........      196          11.54       103,051,327.81       37.77        111,617,876.32      37.97
73-84 ........       22           1.29        34,858,273.80       12.78         37,695,067.60      12.82
85-96 ........        6           0.35         9,749,739.19        3.57         11,883,004.43       4.04
                  -----         ------      ---------------      ------       ---------------     ------
Total ........    1,699         100.00%     $272,828,157.80      100.00%      $293,928,896.93     100.00%
                  =====         ======      ===============      ======       ===============     ======
</TABLE>


                                      S-46

<PAGE>

                         DISTRIBUTION OF THE STATISTICAL
                       CONTRACT POOL BY TYPE OF EQUIPMENT
                       ----------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 PERCENTAGE                       PERCENTAGE
                                               PERCENTAGE                       OF AGGREGATE                     OF AGGREGATE
                                              OF AGGREGATE       DISCOUNTED      DISCOUNTED        ORIGINAL        ORIGINAL
                                  NUMBER OF     NUMBER OF         CONTRACT        CONTRACT         EQUIPMENT       EQUIPMENT
EQUIPMENT TYPE                    CONTRACTS     CONTRACTS          BALANCE         BALANCE            COST           COST
-----------------------------    ----------   ------------   ---------------    ------------    --------------   -------------
<S>                              <C>          <C>            <C>                <C>             <C>              <C>
Computer and Peripherals ....        143          8.42%      $ 12,494,608.81        4.58%       $13,023,492.89       4.43%
Computerized Tomography .....         33          1.94         21,967,541.33        8.05         22,147,087.95       7.53
Dental Equipment ............        133          7.83          1,934,041.51        0.71          2,012,499.36       0.68
Diagnostic Equipment ........         57          3.35          5,179,095.16        1.90          5,134,598.18       1.75
Dialysis ....................          1          0.06            788,840.66        0.29          2,129,133.97       0.72
Facilities ..................        104          6.12         25,011,073.79        9.17         27,693,276.48       9.42
Imaging System ..............         47          2.77         11,729,449.98        4.30         13,157,819.80       4.48
Laboratory ..................         13          0.77          9,547,940.07        3.50          9,251,779.73       3.15
Magnetic Resonance Imaging ..         91          5.36         90,595,572.82       33.21         98,548,382.13      33.53
Mammography .................          9          0.53            648,977.48        0.24            739,457.31       0.25
Medical Devices .............         41          2.41          2,312,458.79        0.85          2,402,573.42       0.82
Medical Equipment ...........        623         36.67         52,954,201.70       19.41         54,244,588.15      18.46
Medical Vehicles ............          8          0.47            856,785.90        0.31          1,294,788.86       0.44
Optometry ...................         41          2.41          3,028,302.93        1.11          2,970,940.46       1.01
Patient Monitoring ..........        102          6.00          2,743,352.15        1.01          2,788,250.44       0.95
Physical Therapy ............         50          2.94          1,553,002.12        0.57          1,629,344.40       0.55
Radiation Therapy ...........          5          0.29          2,026,152.70        0.74          6,405,056.00       2.18
Radiology ...................          7          0.41          2,063,789.90        0.76          1,906,987.20       0.65
Surgical Equipment ..........        110          6.47         15,727,120.86        5.76         16,137,295.12       5.49
Telecommunication ...........         10          0.59          4,155,715.81        1.52          4,838,936.65       1.65
Ultrasound ..................         49          2.88          4,938,422.54        1.81          4,894,608.26       1.67
Urology .....................          5          0.29             99,999.70        0.04             99,837.09       0.03
Veterinary Equipment ........          4          0.24             17,916.79        0.01             23,091.45       0.01
X-Ray .......................         13          0.77            453,794.30        0.17            455,071.63       0.15
                                   -----        ------       ---------------      ------       ---------------     ------
Total .......................      1,699        100.00%      $272,828,157.80      100.00%      $293,928,896.93     100.00%
                                   =====        ======       ===============      ======       ===============     ======
</TABLE>


                                      S-47


<PAGE>


          By way of explanation for some of the equipment types listed on the
table on page S-47:

          o    Magnetic resonance imaging equipment provides high resolution
               images of soft tissues and is particularly useful for diagnosis
               of neurological disorders of the spine, head and neck that would
               otherwise require risky exploratory surgeries. More recently, MRI
               systems have become widely known for the diagnosis of
               musculoskeletal injuries, most notably, knee and shoulder
               problems related to sports injuries. MRI is based on the
               principle that body tissues behave differently in response to the
               application of strong but harmless magnetic fields which produce
               differentiated and contrasting images of healthy versus diseased
               organs and tissues. MRI systems range in selling price from
               $750,000 to $2,200,000.

          o    Medical equipment represents all equipment located in a medical
               facility or laboratory including, but not limited to, hyperbaric
               chambers, IV pumps, teleradiology/telecardiology systems, blood
               gas analyzers, endoscopy systems, and medical beds.

          o    Surgical equipment is patient treatment equipment used in
               surgical procedures. Prices range from $5,000 to $1,000,000.

          o    Facilities are primarily specific improvements used to house MRI,
               computerized tomography and radiation therapy units. The prices
               range from $50,000 to $500,000.

          o    Radiation therapy equipment includes linear accelerators,
               radiation therapy simulators and planning systems. These are used
               to provide radiation for the treatment of patients diagnosed with
               cancer. Prices range from $100,000 to $1,500,000.

          o    Computers and peripherals are hardware and software used in
               practice management, accounting, billing, patient management and
               research and development within



                                      S-48

<PAGE>



               medical facilities. The cost of the computer systems range from
               $5,000 to $2,000,000.

          o    Imaging systems, excluding MRIs and computerized tomography
               systems, are nuclear medicine systems that generate metabolic or
               functional images to determine whether organs or tissues function
               properly. Images are generated through the use of short-lived
               radioactive isotopes which are ingested by or injected into
               patients to study metabolic functions. As the isotopes decay,
               they emit small doses of radioactivity which are detected by the
               nuclear medicine camera to produce two- dimensional images. These
               systems range in selling price from $50,000 to $500,000.

          o    Computerized tomography is used to image tumors and for motion
               sensitive, yet high contrast, diagnostic studies. It produces
               higher contrast images than conventional X-ray. Computerized
               tomography scanners range in selling price from $300,000 to
               $800,000.

          o    Ultrasound is the preferred imaging modality for obstetrics, as
               well as certain vascular and cardiac studies. Ultrasound systems
               emit ultrasonic sound waves which are reflected by body tissues,
               then recorded and processed into images by a computer. Selling
               prices for ultrasound systems range from $50,000 to $750,000.

          o    Physical therapy equipment is used in patient rehabilitation
               including treadmill machines, fitness equipment and therapy
               simulators. Prices range from $5,000 to $400,000.

          o    Mammography equipment is special equipment used in the detection
               of breast cancer. Selling prices range from $30,000 to $500,000.

          o    Radiology equipment is used to determine the functional state of
               organs. Prices range from $50,000 to $500,000.


                                      S-49

<PAGE>




          o    Conventional X-ray equipment uses ionizing radiation to produce
               single-dimension images on a sheet of transparent film. Other
               X-ray systems are used in diagnostic imaging studies such as
               peripheral and coronary angiography. Selling prices range from
               $5,000 to $500,000.



                                      S-50
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          DISTRIBUTION OF THE STATISTICAL
                                    CONTRACT POOL BY DISCOUNTED CONTRACT BALANCE

                                                                               PERCENTAGE                      PERCENTAGE
                                               PERCENTAGE                      OF AGGREGATE                   OF AGGREGATE
                                              OF AGGREGATE      DISCOUNTED      DISCOUNTED       ORIGINAL       ORIGINAL
RANGE OF DISCOUNTED              NUMBER OF      NUMBER OF        CONTRACT       CONTRACT        EQUIPMENT      EQUIPMENT
 CONTRACT BALANCES               CONTRACTS      CONTRACTS         BALANCE        BALANCE            COST          COST
------------------------------   ---------    ------------   ---------------   ------------   --------------  -------------
<S>                               <C>          <C>           <C>                <C>           <C>               <C>
$        0.01-$   25,000.00 ..       816          48.03%     $  9,495,041.28      3.48%       $10,467,379.27      3.56%
$   25,000.01-$   50,000.00 ..       306          18.01        10,992,365.96      4.03         12,144,696.93      4.13
$   50,000.01-$   75,000.00 ..       157           9.24         9,754,174.64      3.58         11,192,245.82      3.81
$   75,000.01-$  100,000.00 ..        81           4.77         7,076,401.96      2.59          7,992,396.97      2.72
$  100,000.01-$  150,000.00 ..        64           3.77         7,717,545.43      2.83         11,203,062.55      3.81
$  150,000.01-$  200,000.00 ..        50           2.94         8,557,551.25      3.14         10,240,558.08      3.48
$  200,000.01-$  250,000.00 ..        23           1.35         5,241,320.46      1.92          9,113,780.44      3.10
$  250,000.01-$  300,000.00 ..        22           1.29         6,009,784.12      2.20         11,847,002.70      4.03
$  300,000.01-$  350,000.00 ..         5           0.29         1,647,658.02      0.60          1,657,299.18      0.56
$  350,000.01-$  400,000.00 ..        15           0.88         5,649,593.32      2.07          5,768,992.95      1.96
$  400,000.01-$  450,000.00 ..        18           1.06         7,687,789.33      2.82          9,183,011.03      3.12
$  450,000.01-$  500,000.00 ..         9           0.53         4,271,711.48      1.57          4,523,655.74      1.54
$  500,000.01-$  750,000.00 ..        36           2.12        22,362,412.42      8.20         24,992,592.98      8.50
$  750,000.01-$1,000,000.00 ..        20           1.18        17,290,926.49      6.34         18,550,766.08      6.31
$1,000,000.01-$2,000,000.00 ..        52           3.06        71,115,490.35     26.07         70,522,192.18     23.99
$2,000,000.01-$3,000,000.00 ..        12           0.71        28,233,633.04     10.35         26,747,325.41      9.10
$3,000,000.01-$4,000,000.00 ..         8           0.47        26,766,626.05      9.81         25,892,900.68      8.81
$4,000,000.01-$5,000,000.00 ..         3           0.18        12,776,338.06      4.68         12,300,846.49      4.18
$5,000,000.01-$6,000,000.00 ..         2           0.12        10,181,794.14      3.73          9,588,191.45      3.26
                                   -----         ------      ---------------    ------       ---------------    ------
Total ........................     1,699         100.00%     $272,828,157.80    100.00%      $293,928,896.93    100.00%
                                   =====         ======      ===============    ======       ===============    ======
</TABLE>


                                      S-51

<PAGE>




<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          DISTRIBUTION OF THE STATISTICAL
                                      CONTRACT POOL BY ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT COST
                                      ----------------------------------------

                                                                              PERCENTAGE                     PERCENTAGE
                                              PERCENTAGE                     OF AGGREGATE                  OF AGGREGATE
                                             OF AGGREGATE     DISCOUNTED      DISCOUNTED      ORIGINAL       ORIGINAL
     RANGE OF ORIGINAL           NUMBER OF    NUMBER OF        CONTRACT        CONTRACT       EQUIPMENT      EQUIPMENT
       EQUIPMENT COST            CONTRACTS    CONTRACTS        BALANCE         BALANCE           COST          COST
-------------------------------- ---------   ------------  ---------------   ------------ ---------------  -------------
<S>                               <C>         <C>          <C>                 <C>        <C>                <C>
$        0.01-$   25,000.00 ....    796         46.85%     $  9,135,985.97        3.35%   $  9,615,266.92       3.27%
$   25,000.01-$   50,000.00 ....    310         18.25        10,851,650.50        3.98      11,351,557.57       3.86
$   50,000.01-$   75,000.00 ....    150          8.83         9,054,020.27        3.32       9,477,542.92       3.22
$   75,000.01-$  100,000.00 ....     82          4.83         6,639,720.93        2.43       7,020,722.91       2.39
$  100,000.01-$  150,000.00 ....     68          4.00         7,938,062.82        2.91       8,180,415.35       2.78
$  150,000.01-$  200,000.00 ....     46          2.71         7,521,649.54        2.76       7,961,154.43       2.71
$  200,000.01-$  250,000.00 ....     25          1.47         5,247,059.95        1.92       5,530,080.94       1.88
$  250,000.01-$  300,000.00 ....     23          1.35         4,702,204.53        1.72       6,245,013.64       2.12
$  300,000.01-$  350,000.00 ....      8          0.47         2,358,159.74        0.86       2,637,633.63       0.90
$  350,000.01-$  400,000.00 ....     21          1.24         7,534,163.52        2.76       7,913,617.76       2.69
$  400,000.01-$  450,000.00 ....      9          0.53         3,780,258.18        1.39       3,842,964.73       1.31
$  450,000.01-$  500,000.00 ....     15          0.88         6,668,457.02        2.44       7,145,066.66       2.43
$  500,000.01-$  750,000.00 ....     36          2.12        21,389,305.07        7.84      21,843,429.90       7.43
$  750,000.01-$1,000,000.00 ....     24          1.41        20,394,425.32        7.48      21,208,023.80       7.22
$1,000,000.01-$2,000,000.00 ....     60          3.53        77,243,802.54       28.31      85,772,256.31      29.18
$2,000,000.01-$3,000,000.00 ....     17          1.00        35,718,448.66       13.09      42,264,454.50      14.38
$3,000,000.01-$4,000,000.00 ....      4          0.24        13,984,975.29        5.13      13,931,532.02       4.74
$4,000,000.01-$5,000,000.00 ....      4          0.24        17,601,858.41        6.45      16,985,375.49       5.78
$5,000,000.01-$6,000,000.00 ....      1          0.06         5,063,949.54        1.86       5,002,787.45       1.70
                                  -----        ------      ---------------      ------    ---------------     ------
Total ..........................  1,699        100.00%     $272,828,157.80      100.00%   $293,928,896.93     100.00%
                                  =====        ======      ===============      ======    ===============     ======
</TABLE>


                                      S-52

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         DISTRIBUTION OF THE STATISTICAL
                      CONTRACT POOL BY TEN LARGEST OBLIGORS
                      -------------------------------------

                                                               PERCENTAGE                       PERCENTAGE
                                PERCENTAGE                    OF AGGREGATE                     OF AGGREGATE
                               OF AGGREGATE     DISCOUNTED     DISCOUNTED         ORIGINAL       ORIGINAL
                   NUMBER OF     NUMBER OF        CONTRACT      CONTRACT          EQUIPMENT      EQUIPMENT
OBLIGOR RANKING    CONTRACTS    CONTRACTS        BALANCE        BALANCE            COST           COST
---------------   ----------   ------------  ---------------  ------------    ---------------  --------------
<S>                <C>         <C>           <C>              <C>             <C>               <C>
1 .............        2            0.12%    $  7,144,661.34     2.62%        $  7,599,125.00       2.59%
2 .............        2            0.12        6,447,246.12       2.36          6,000,000.00       2.04
3 .............        5            0.29        6,246,489.05       2.29          6,005,757.53       2.04
4 .............        8            0.47        6,177,097.20       2.26          6,389,271.97       2.17
5 .............        3            0.18        6,141,669.15       2.25          5,913,821.43       2.01
6 .............        4            0.24        5,554,040.94       2.04          4,926,434.90       1.68
7 .............        1            0.06        5,117,844.60       1.88          4,585,404.00       1.56
8 .............        1            0.06        5,063,949.54       1.86          5,002,787.45       1.70
9 .............        3            0.18        4,689,675.46       1.72          4,216,290.04       1.43
10 ............        1            0.06        4,511,008.27       1.65          4,171,723.91       1.42
Other .........    1,669           98.23      215,734,476.13      79.07        239,118,280.70      81.35
                   -----           -----      --------------      -----        --------------      -----
Total .........    1,699          100.00%    $272,828,157.80     100.00%      $293,928,896.93     100.00%
                   =====          ======     ===============     ======       ===============     ======
</TABLE>




<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
         DISTRIBUTION OF THE STATISTICAL CONTRACT POOL BY CONTRACT TYPE
         --------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                              PERCENTAGE                        PERCENTAGE
                                              PERCENTAGE                     OF AGGREGATE                      OF AGGREGATE
                                             OF AGGREGATE     DISCOUNTED      DISCOUNTED        ORIGINAL         ORIGINAL
                               NUMBER OF       NUMBER OF        CONTRACT       CONTRACT         EQUIPMENT        EQUIPMENT
CONTRACT TYPE                  CONTRACTS      CONTRACTS        BALANCE         BALANCE            COST            COST
----------------------------   ---------     ------------  ---------------   ------------    ---------------  -------------
<S>                             <C>            <C>         <C>                <C>            <C>                <C>
Fair Market Value Leases ...      361           21.25        40,351,098.62      14.79          43,944,758.75      14.95
Finance Leases .............      938           55.21%     $ 83,441,907.84      30.58%        $91,484,755.33      31.12%
Secured Equipment Notes ....      400           23.54       149,035,151.34      54.63         158,499,382.85      53.92
                                -----          ------      ---------------     ------        ---------------     ------
Total ......................    1,699          100.00%     $272,828,157.80     100.00%       $293,928,896.93     100.00%
                                =====          ======      ===============     ======        ===============     ======
</TABLE>


                                      S-53


<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          DISTRIBUTION OF THE STATISTICAL
                                           CONTRACT POOL BY BUSINESS TYPE
                                           ------------------------------

                                                                               PERCENTAGE                      PERCENTAGE
                                              PERCENTAGE                      OF AGGREGATE                    OF AGGREGATE
                                             OF AGGREGATE     DISCOUNTED       DISCOUNTED      ORIGINAL         ORIGINAL
                                NUMBER OF      NUMBER OF        CONTRACT        CONTRACT       EQUIPMENT       EQUIPMENT
BUSINESS TYPE                   CONTRACTS      CONTRACTS        BALANCE          BALANCE          COST            COST
----------------------------    ----------   ------------  ---------------    ------------ ---------------    -------------
<S>                              <C>           <C>         <C>                 <C>         <C>                  <C>
Dental .....................      229           13.48%     $  3,606,802.86       1.32%     $  4,942,382.94        1.68%
Diagnostic Imaging Center ..       14            0.82         9,361,625.75       3.43         8,855,148.79        3.01
Dialysis Center ............        2            0.12            83,995.13       0.03            80,997.09        0.03
Holding Company/Various
     Centers ...............       24            1.41         9,904,395.81       3.63        11,370,829.70        3.87
Home Health Care ...........       22            1.29         1,802,337.10       0.66         1,812,615.21        0.62
Hospital ...................      114            6.71        20,994,825.93       7.70        23,330,940.54        7.94
Hyperbaric Chambers ........        2            0.12           830,508.34       0.30           783,244.29        0.27
M.D. Clinic ................      162            9.54        12,516,181.50       4.59        12,328,351.86        4.19
Mobile MRI .................        8            0.47         2,497,303.01       0.92         4,356,295.74        1.48
MRI Only Center ............       64            3.77        43,408,321.76      15.91        48,824,347.90       16.61
MRI & Other Multiple
     Center ................       57            3.35        34,702,595.29      12.72        33,233,255.50       11.31
Multi-Modality .............       81            4.77        45,664,896.23      16.74        44,992,493.05       15.31
Optical ....................       69            4.06         4,734,787.85       1.74         5,446,400.04        1.85
Outpatient Surgery Center ..       28            1.65        15,490,074.16       5.68        15,397,377.30        5.24
Physician Practices ........      333           19.60        19,877,664.58       7.29        24,505,510.35        8.34
Positron Emission
     Tomography ............        4            0.24         3,513,818.09        1.29        3,188,460.11        1.08
Radiation Therapy Center ...        7            0.41         2,219,253.33        0.81        4,871,635.17        1.66
Skilled Nursing Center .....       42            2.47         1,887,707.42        0.69        1,925,275.87        0.66
Other ......................      437           25.72        39,731,063.66       14.56       43,683,335.48       14.86
                                -----          ------      ---------------     -------     ---------------      ------
Total ......................    1,699          100.00%     $272,828,157.80     100.00%     $293,928,896.93      100.00%
                                =====          ======      ===============     ======      ===============      ======
</TABLE>


                                      S-54

<PAGE>



SUBSTITUTE CONTRACTS

          Under some circumstances, the servicer will have the right, but not
the obligation, at any time to substitute one or more Eligible Contracts and a
security interest in the equipment under that contract for a contract in a pool.
We call this Eligible Contract and related rights a substitute contract. This
right of substitution can be exercised for Pool A contracts if:

          o    (A) any contract payment on a Pool A contract is delinquent for
               at least sixty consecutive days as of the most recent
               determination date; (B) a bankruptcy petition has been filed by
               or against the obligor or, for a leveraged lease loan, the
               related lessor, under any Predecessor Contract; or (C) the Pool A
               contract became a defaulted contract for the first time during
               the related collection period,

          o    other conditions listed in the contribution and servicing
               agreement have been satisfied, and

          o    the sum of (x) the Discounted Contract Balances of all substitute
               contracts substituted as provided for in this sentence and (y)
               amounts deposited by the servicer in the collection account in
               connection with all those substitutions mentioned in this
               sentence does not exceed 10% of the Pool A Aggregate Discounted
               Contract Balance as of the closing date.

          In addition to these rights, the servicer will also have the right,
but not the obligation, at any time to substitute one or more substitute
contracts and a security interest in the related equipment for a Pool A contract
and a security interest in the related equipment. This right of substitution can
be exercised if:

          o    the Pool A contract has been prepaid,

          o    conditions listed in the contribution and servicing agreement
               have been satisfied, and


                                      S-55

<PAGE>



          o    the sum of (x) the Discounted Contract Balance of all substitute
               contracts substituted as provided for in this sentence and those
               made under section 4.02 of the contribution and servicing
               agreement and (y) amounts deposited by the servicer in the
               collection account in connection with all substitutions mentioned
               in this sentence and those substitutions made under section 4.02
               of the contribution and servicing agreement does not exceed 10%
               of the Pool A Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance as of the
               closing date.

          Under some circumstances, the servicer will have the right, but not
the obligation, to substitute one or more Eligible Contracts and a security
interest in the related equipment for a Pool B contract. This right of
substitution can be exercised if:

          o    conditions listed in the contribution and servicing agreement
               have been satisfied, and

          o    the sum of (x) the Discounted Contract Balances of all substitute
               contracts substituted under this sentence and (y) amounts
               deposited by the servicer in the collection account in connection
               with all substitutions under this sentence does not exceed 10% of
               the Pool B Aggregate Discounted Balance as of the closing date.

          In addition, the servicer will have the right, but not the obligation,
at any time in connection with the exercise by DVI Receivables Corp. XII of its
substitution rights, to substitute one or more substitute contracts and a
security interest in the related equipment for a Pool B contract and a security
interest in the related equipment. This right of substitution can be exercised
if:

          o    the Pool B contract has been prepaid,

          o    conditions listed in the contribution and servicing agreement
               have been satisfied, and


                                      S-56

<PAGE>



          o    the sum of (x) the Discounted Contract Balance of all substitute
               contracts substituted as provided for in this sentence and those
               made under section 4.02 of the contribution and servicing
               agreement and (y) amounts deposited by the servicer in the
               collection account in connection with all substitutions mentioned
               in this sentence and those substitutions made under section 4.02
               of the contribution and servicing agreement does not exceed 10%
               of the Pool B Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance as of the
               closing date. Unless each rating agency has given its prior
               consent, the sum of clauses (x) and (y) in this paragraph may not
               exceed 10% of the Pool B Aggregate Discounted Balance as of the
               closing date.

          To become a substitute contract, a contract must meet all the criteria
of an Eligible Contract described in the glossary.

          DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS

          The notes are described on the cover page of this prospectus
supplement and will be issued under the amended and restated indenture, dated as
of April 1, 2000, entered into between the issuer and the trustee. The following
summary describes some provisions of the notes, that indenture and the
contribution and servicing agreement. However, it is not complete and
prospective investors should read those agreements in their entirety.

GENERAL PROVISIONS OF THE NOTES

          The notes are limited recourse obligations of the issuer only, with no
recourse to DVI Financial Services Inc., the trustee or any other person. The
issuer's liability is limited to the income and proceeds from the trust
property. The issuer will agree in the indenture and in the notes to pay each
class of noteholders the amounts of principal and interest on the dates shown in
the indenture. Each payment of principal is required to equal the sum of:

          o    Monthly Principal for that class, and


                                      S-57

<PAGE>



          o    Overdue Principal, if any, for that class.

Each payment of interest is required to equal the sum of:

          o    the Monthly Interest for that class, and

          o    the Overdue Interest, if any, for that class.

          Interest accrues on the class A-1 notes based on the actual number of
days elapsed from a payment date (or, in the case of the first payment date, the
closing date) to the following payment date, and, on the other notes, based on a
thirty day calendar month, from the twelfth calendar day of the month (or, in
the case of the first payment date, the closing date) to the eleventh calendar
day of the following month, and is payable, along with required principal, on
the twelfth day of each month, or if the day is not a business day, the
immediately following business day.

          Notes that are subordinated in priority of payment to other classes of
notes have a lesser likelihood of receiving the regular distributions as
outlined in the "FLOW OF FUNDS TO AND FROM THE COLLECTION ACCOUNT" section on
page S-69 of this prospectus supplement. Similarly, if the trustee should ever
foreclose upon the trust property, each superior class of notes has a greater
protection against realizing losses than do notes that are subordinated.

          The following note payments are subordinated as shown below.



                                      S-58

<PAGE>




Note payment               Subordinated to the full payment of:
------------               ------------------------------------

Class A interest           Interest on the class A notes is not subordinated
                           to any other note payments.

Class A principal          All interest due and overdue on all classes of notes.

Class B interest           All interest due and overdue on the class A notes.


Class B principal          If NO Amortization Event is happening:

                                 o        all interest due and overdue on all
                                          classes of notes, and

                                 o        all principal due and overdue on the
                                          class A notes.

                           If an Amortization Event is happening:

                                 o        all interest due and overdue on all
                                          classes of the notes, and

                                 o        the entire outstanding principal
                                          amount due on the class A notes.

Class C interest           All interest due and overdue on the class A notes and
                           the class B notes.




                                      S-59

<PAGE>




Class C principal          If NO Amortization Event is happening:

                                 o        all interest due and overdue on all
                                          classes of the notes, and

                                 o        all principal due and overdue on the
                                          class A notes and the class B notes.

                           If an Amortization Event IS happening:

                                 o        all interest due and overdue on all
                                          classes of the notes, and

                                 o        the entire outstanding principal
                                          amount due on the class A notes and
                                          the class B notes.

Class D interest           All interest due and overdue on the class A notes,
                           the class B notes and the class C notes.

Class D principal          If NO Amortization Event is happening:

                                 o        all interest due and overdue on all
                                          classes of the notes, and

                                 o        all principal due and overdue on the
                                          class A notes, the class B notes, and
                                          the class C notes.




                                      S-60

<PAGE>




                           If an Amortization Event is happening:

                                 o        all interest due and overdue on all
                                          classes of the notes, and

                                 o        the entire outstanding principal
                                          amount due on the class A, class B
                                          and class C notes.

Class E interest           All interest due and overdue on the class A notes,
                           the class B notes, the class C notes and the class D
                           notes.

Class E principal          If NO Amortization Event is happening:

                                 o        all interest due and overdue on all
                                          classes of the notes, and

                                 o        all principal due and overdue on the
                                          class A notes, the class B notes,
                                          the class C notes and the class D
                                          notes.

                           If an Amortization Event IS happening:

                                 o        all interest due and overdue on all
                                          classes of the notes, and

                                 o        the entire outstanding principal
                                          amount due on the class A, class
                                          B, class C and class D notes.



                                      S-61

<PAGE>

          The notes will be issued, maintained and transferred on the book-entry
records of The Depository Trust Company and its participants. Each note will be
initially issued as a fully registered note in minimum denominations of $500,000
and integral multiples of $1,000 above that amount. One note of each class may
be issued in a different amount as may be necessary so that the notes of that
class evidence the full initial principal balance of that note. The notes will
be represented by one or more certificates registered in the name of "Cede &
Co.", the nominee of The Depository Trust Company; notes so registered are
called book-entry securities. A person acquiring an interest in the notes is
called a beneficial owner. A beneficial owner will be entitled to receive a
certificate representing that person's interest, called a definitive note.
Please read "BOOK- ENTRY REGISTRATION OF THE NOTES -- DEFINITIVE SECURITIES" at
page S-86 for exceptions to this rule. Unless and until definitive securities
are issued for the notes under the limited circumstances described in this
prospectus supplement, all references to actions by noteholders for the notes
shall refer to actions taken by The Depository Trust Company upon instructions
from its participants. Also, unless and until definitive securities are issued
for the notes as described in this prospectus supplement, all references in this
prospectus supplement to distributions, notices, reports and statements to
noteholders for the notes shall refer to distributions, notices, reports and
statements to The Depository Trust Company or Cede, as the registered holder of
the notes, for distribution to beneficial owners by The Depository Trust Company
in accordance with The Depository Trust Company procedures.

          Payments on the notes are required to be made by the trustee on each
payment date, to persons in whose names notes are registered on the record date
for that payment date. The first payment date with respect to interest on any
note is December 12, 2000. The first payment date with respect to principal for
the class A-1 notes, class B notes, class C notes and class D notes will be
December 12, 2000. We expect the first payment date with respect to principal
for the class A-2 notes, to be July 12, 2001, for the class A-3 notes, to be
March 12, 2002 and for the class A-4 notes, to be August 12, 2003. Payments are
required to be made by the trustee by wire transfer of immediately available
funds, to the registered holders of the notes, initially, Cede & Co., appearing
in the note register on the record date. If no account is specified for a
noteholder, the trustee will mail a check to the address for that noteholder
appearing in the note register on that record date. A


                                      S-62

<PAGE>



note register is a register kept by the trustee in the Corporate Trust Office in
which the trustee shall provide for the registration of Notes and the transfer
of notes. A participant is a participating organization of The Depository Trust
Company.

CONVEYANCE OF TRUST PROPERTY

          On or before the closing date, DVI Financial Services Inc. will convey
to DVI Receivables Corp. XII, DVI Receivables Corp. XII will transfer to the
issuer, and the issuer will pledge to the trustee, all of its right, title and
interest in and to the trust property. The trust property does not include some
amounts included in the obligor's payments to which DVI Financial Services Inc.
is not entitled, such as property taxes, sales, taxes, manufacturer's
maintenance costs, insurance premiums and supplies and transaction costs. Also
not included in the trust property are:

     o    any purchase option payments,

     o    ownership of any equipment, although the trust property includes a
          security interest in that equipment, or

     o    any rights of DVI Financial Services Inc. in any accounts receivable
          of the obligor which have been pledged to DVI Financial Services Inc.
          as collateral for that obligor's contract.

          In general, a purchase option payment is any payment made by the
obligor under the contract to purchase the equipment covered under the contract.
A purchase option payment would include any funds received in respect of any of
the following:

     o    an end of term purchase option for $1,

     o    an end of term option to purchase the equipment at a stated percentage
          of the original cost of the equipment,



                                      S-63

<PAGE>



     o    an option to purchase the equipment at the fair market value of the
          equipment determined at the end of the contract term, or

     o    an end of term option to extend the term of the lease for one or more
          immediately succeeding twelve month periods.

          On the closing date, the issuer will have delivered a copy of the
contract schedule to the trustee for the initial contracts. The contract
schedule will include for each contract:

     o    a number identifying the contract,
     o    the obligor's name and address,
     o    the original maturity of each contract,
     o    the type of equipment subject to each contract, each contract's
          location and, if available, original equipment cost,
     o    the remaining maturity of each contract,
     o    the Discounted Contract Balance as of the cut-off date,
     o    the type of contract and pool,
     o    the amount and scheduled due date of each contract payment due under
          each of the contracts, and
     o    the commencement date of each contract.

          DVI Financial Services Inc. also will deliver to the trustee the
contract file for each contract. DVI Financial Services Inc., DVI Receivables
Corp. XII and the issuer each will mark its accounting records to show that each
contract has been conveyed by DVI Financial Services Inc. to DVI Receivables
Corp. XII, and by DVI Receivables Corp. XII to the issuer, and pledged by the
issuer to the trustee for the benefit of the noteholders.

DVI FINANCIAL SERVICES INC. REPURCHASE OBLIGATION FOR CONTRACT
MISREPRESENTATIONS

          DVI Financial Services Inc. will make representations and warranties
in the contribution and servicing agreement regarding the contracts and the
equipment for the benefit of


                                      S-64

<PAGE>



the trustee, the noteholders, the issuer and DVI Receivables Corp. XII. DVI
Financial Services Inc. will be obligated to repurchase or provide a substitute
contract for any contract where any misrepresentation or breach of warranty
materially and adversely affects the interest of the noteholders in that
contract and the breach has not been cured by DVI Financial Services Inc. or
waived by the noteholders holding a majority of the Voting Rights within ninety
days after DVI Financial Services Inc. learns of the breach. The trustee will be
granted the right to enforce these representations and warranties directly
against DVI Financial Services Inc.

INDEMNIFICATION

          The contribution and servicing agreement provides that DVI Financial
Services Inc., as contributor and servicer, will defend and indemnify itself,
the servicer, the trustee, DVI Receivables Corp. XII, the issuer and the
noteholders against any and all losses, claims, damages and liabilities suffered
by any of those parties by reason of a breach by DVI Financial Services Inc. of
its obligations under the contribution and servicing agreement.

          Neither the servicer nor any of the directors, officers, employees or
agents of the servicer shall incur any liability to DVI Receivables Corp. XII,
the issuer, the trustee or the noteholders, for any action taken or not taken in
good faith under the contribution and servicing agreement relating to any
contract. This includes any defaulted contract, or the equipment under that
contract. This exception from liability does not apply to either:

     o    any breach of warranties or representations made by the servicer in
          the contribution and servicing agreement or in any certificate
          delivered in conjunction with the purchase of the notes, or

     o    for any liability which would otherwise be imposed by reason of
          willful misfeasance or negligence in the performance of the servicer's
          duties under the contribution and servicing agreement or by reason of
          reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under that agreement.



                                      S-65

<PAGE>



INDENTURE ACCOUNTS; INVESTMENT OF FUNDS

          The servicer will establish one or more bank accounts, each called a
lockbox account, in the name of the trustee for the benefit of the noteholders.
Each lockbox account will be a segregated account initially established and
maintained with a lockbox bank selected by the servicer. Not only will the
servicer give the trustee prior written notice of any change in the location of
any lockbox account, but the servicer will also give at least 10 days' prior
written notice of the new location to each obligor.

          The trustee, under the indenture, is required to establish and
maintain the collection account, the distribution account and the reserve
account, each in the name of the trustee and for the benefit of the noteholders
and the issuer to the extent of their interest in those accounts. Each account
will be one or more segregated trust accounts held by the trustee. In addition,
the trustee will establish and maintain sub-accounts of the distribution account
for each class of notes as needed.

          The indenture permits the servicer to instruct how amounts in the
collection account and the reserve account will be invested in certain types of
highly rated investments, which are called eligible investments. All amounts
invested in eligible investments and all investments made with those amounts,
including all income and other gain from the investments, will be held by the
trustee in the accounts as part of the trust property as provided in the
indenture. Any net loss of principal, determined on a month-by-month basis,
resulting from the investment of the amounts in the collection account and
reserve accounts will be charged to the issuer. The issuer shall reimburse that
account within three business days of being notified of a net loss of principal
by the trustee. The trustee shall not in any way be held liable because of any
insufficiency in the collection account and distribution accounts resulting from
losses on investments made in accordance with the indenture unless the trustee
is the obligor under an eligible investment. The trustee shall not be liable for
any investment made by it in accordance with the indenture on grounds that it
could have made a more favorable investment.

          All payments and proceeds of the contracts collected in the lockbox
account,


                                      S-66

<PAGE>



including any investment earnings, will be deposited into the collection
account. The servicer is required to deposit the amounts into the collection
account within two business days of receipt. If rating agency conditions are
satisfied, however, the deposit of collections for a particular collection
period will be made by the servicer within two business days prior to the
related payment date. Pending deposit into the collection account, collections
may be invested by the servicer at its own risk and for its own benefit, and
will not be segregated from funds of the servicer.

RESERVE ACCOUNT

          The reserve account is a segregated trust account in the name of the
trustee and will be funded by deposit of the Reserve Account Deposit Amount from
amounts otherwise able to be distributed to the issuer on the closing date or
any payment date. If there exists a shortfall between the Available Funds and
interest or principal due on the payment date for any of the notes, regardless
of whether an Amortization Event has occurred and is continuing, amounts on
deposit in the reserve account will be available to make payments of interest
to:

     o    first, the class A noteholders,

     o    then, the class B noteholders,

     o    then, the class C noteholders,

     o    then, the class D noteholders,

     o    then, the class E noteholders, and

then, under most circumstances, to pay principal on,

     o    first, the class A notes,

     o    then, the class B notes,


                                      S-67

<PAGE>



     o    then, to the class C notes,

     o    then, to the class D notes, and

     o    then, to the class E notes.

          If an Amortization Event has occurred and is continuing, the principal
due on each class shall be the entire Note Balance for that class of notes. If
no Amortization Event has occurred or is continuing, amounts on deposit in the
reserve account may be paid to the issuer, if, and only to the extent that, the
amounts in the reserve account exceed the Reserve Account Required Amount.

          The trustee will have to deposit amounts into the reserve account only
from monies then in the collection account after payment of claims given a
higher priority than the Reserve Account Deposit Amount under Section 3.04(b) of
the indenture. The trustee shall not have any responsibility to determine the
amount or adequacy of funds on deposit in the reserve account, or the amount of
any deposits to or withdrawals from the reserve account. The issuer will agree
to treat assets in the reserve account and all earnings on those assets as its
assets and earnings for federal, state and local tax purposes and not to sell,
transfer or otherwise dispose of its interest in those assets.

          On each payment date, the trustee shall, on the basis of the monthly
servicer report, deposit in the reserve account an amount equal to the Reserve
Account Deposit Amount. If on any payment date, Available Funds are less than
the Priority Payments, the trustee shall withdraw from the reserve account the
amount of that shortfall, until the reserve account is depleted. On each payment
date, if the balance in the reserve account is greater than the Reserve Account
Required Amount, the trustee, if instructed by the servicer, shall pay the
amount of the excess to the issuer. The amount of the excess paid to the issuer
is a reserve account withdrawal. Amounts properly paid to the issuer, either
directly from the distribution account without deposit in the reserve account or
from the reserve account, shall be deemed released from the trust property. The
issuer shall not be required to refund any amounts properly paid to it.


                                      S-68

<PAGE>



          For amounts in the reserve account, the issuer and the trustee agree
that any reserve account property that is held in deposit accounts shall be held
solely in the name of the trustee, on behalf of the noteholders. Each deposit
account must be held by the trustee or by another FDIC- insured depository
approved by the rating agencies. The trustee shall have sole signature authority
for those deposit accounts.

          Any amounts on deposit in the reserve account, after payment of
amounts due to the noteholders and termination of the indenture, shall be paid
to DVI Receivables Corp. VIII, as managing member of the issuer, upon DVI
Receivable Corp. VIII's written request to the trustee.

FLOW OF FUNDS TO AND FROM THE COLLECTION ACCOUNT

          The servicer shall remit to the collection account all amounts
received by it for the trust property not later than the second business day
after receipt. The servicer also shall cause monies in each lockbox account to
be paid to the collection account in the same time frame. However, if permitted
by the rating agencies, the servicer will only pay those monies to the
collection account on or before the second business day prior to each payment
date. The indenture instructs the trustee about which and how to deposit all
other amounts received by it.

          Unless the notes have been declared due and payable under the
indenture and monies collected by the trustee are being applied accordingly, the
trustee on each payment date will withdraw and pay or cause to be paid the
following claims from the Available Funds. The Available Funds will be applied
in the following order of priority:

     (1) to the servicer, the servicing fee due to the servicer on that payment
     date (including, if that servicer is not DVI Financial Services Inc., any
     additional amount agreed upon in good faith and commercially reasonable
     judgment between such servicer and the trustee to cover the costs of
     transferring the servicer operations to such successor servicer);

     (2) to the servicer, any unreimbursed Nonrecoverable Advances or Servicer
     Advances previously made for delinquent contracts;


                                      S-69

<PAGE>



     (3)  FIRST, to the Class A Distribution Sub-Account, in the following order
     of priority, the sum of :

               (A)      the Class A-1 Monthly Interest; and
               (B)      the Class A-1 Overdue Interest, if any;

               SECOND, to the Class A Distribution Sub-Account, in the following
     order of priority, the sum of:

               (A)      the Class A-2 Monthly Interest; and
               (B)      the Class A-2 Overdue Interest, if any;

               THIRD, to the Class A Distribution Sub-Account, in the following
     order of priority, the sum of:

               (A)      the Class A-3 Monthly Interest; and
               (B)      the Class A-3 Overdue Interest, if any;

               FOURTH, to the Class A Distribution Sub-Account, in the following
     order of priority, the sum of:

               (A)      the Class A-4 Monthly Interest; and
               (B)      the Class A-4 Overdue Interest, if any;

     (4)     to the Class B Distribution Sub-Account, in the following order of
     priority, in the sum of the Class B Monthly Interest and any Class B
     Overdue Interest;

     (5)     to the Class C Distribution Sub-Account, in the following order of
     priority, the sum of the Class C Monthly Interest and any Class C Overdue
     Interest;

     (6)     to the Class D Distribution Sub-Account, in the following order of
     priority, in the sum of the Class D Monthly Interest and any Class D
     Overdue Interest;


                                      S-70

<PAGE>



     (7)    to the Class E Distribution Sub-Account, in the following order of
     priority, the sum of the Class E Monthly Interest and any Class E Overdue
     Interest;

     (8)    as long as no Amortization Event shall have occurred and be
     continuing, to the Class A Distribution Sub-Account, in the following order
     of priority, the sum of:

               (A)  the Class A-1 Overdue Principal, if any;
               (B)  the Class A-1 Monthly Principal;
               (C)  the Class A-2 Overdue Principal, if any;
               (D)  the Class A-2 Monthly Principal;
               (E)  the Class A-3 Overdue Principal, if any;
               (F)  the Class A-3 Monthly Principal;
               (G)  the Class A-4 Overdue Principal, if any; and
               (H)  the Class A-4 Monthly Principal;

     (9)    as long as no Amortization Event shall have occurred and be
     continuing, to the Class B Distribution Sub-Account, in the following order
     of priority, the sum of:

               (A)      any Class B Overdue Principal, if any; and
               (B)      the Class B Monthly Principal; then,

     (10)   as long as no Amortization Event shall have occurred and be
     continuing, to the Class C Distribution Sub-Account, in the following order
     of priority, the sum of:

               (A)      any Class C Overdue Principal; and
               (B)      the Class C Monthly Principal; then,

     (11)    as long as no Amortization Event shall have occurred and be
     continuing, to the Class D Distribution Sub-Account, in the following order
     of priority, the sum of:

               (A)      any Class D Overdue Principal; and


                                      S-71

<PAGE>



               (B)      the Class D Monthly Principal; then,

     (12)    as long as no Amortization Event shall have occurred and be
     continuing, to the Class E Distribution Sub-Account, in the following order
     of priority, the sum of:

               (A)      any Class E Overdue Principal; and
               (B)      the Class E Monthly Principal;

     (13)    as long as no Amortization Event shall have occurred and be
     continuing, to the reserve account, the Reserve Account Deposit Amount;

     (14)    if an Amortization Event shall have occurred and be continuing and
     has not been waived by noteholders with at least 662/3% of the Voting
     Rights, in the following order of priority:

                       FIRST, to the Class A Distribution Sub-Account the amount
               necessary to reduce the Class A-1 Note Balance to zero;
                       THEN, to the Class A Distribution Sub-Account, the amount
               necessary to reduce the Class A-2 Note Balance to zero;
                       THEN, to the Class A Distribution Sub-Account, the amount
               necessary to reduce the Class A-3 Note Balance to zero; and
                       THEN, to the Class A Distribution Sub-Account, the amount
               necessary to reduce the Class A-4 Note Balance to zero;
                       PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that upon the occurrence of a
               Subordination Deficiency Event, after the Class A-1 Note Balance
               has been reduced to zero, and the Class A-2 Note Balance has been
               reduced to zero, then the Class A-3 Note Balance and the Class
               A-4 Note Balance will be paid proportionately without preference
               or priority; and

                       SECOND, to the Class B Distribution Sub-Account the
               amount necessary to pay the class B notes in full; and


                                      S-72

<PAGE>



                       THIRD, to the Class C Distribution Sub-Account the amount
               necessary to pay the class C notes in full;

                       FOURTH, to the Class D Distribution Sub-Account the
               amount necessary to pay the class D notes in full; and

                       FIFTH, to the Class E Distribution Sub-Account the amount
               necessary to pay the class E notes in full; and then

     (15)    any remaining Available Funds on deposit in the collection account
     will be paid to the issuer.

          If on any payment date the Available Funds on deposit in the
collection account are less than the sum necessary to make the Priority Payments
required under clauses (3) through and including (12) and clause (14), each as
applicable, then the trustee shall withdraw from the reserve account, to the
extent that such funds are on deposit in the reserve account and after taking
into account payments to be made under clauses (1) and (2) above, and deposit
into the distribution accounts in the priority described above for payment on
that payment date, funds equal to the Available Reserve Account Funds. Unless a
sizeable part of the trust property is then held by a bankruptcy court's
application of the automatic stay pursuant to Section 362 of the federal
Bankruptcy Code, the trustee will use the Available Reserve Account Funds for
payment in accordance with clauses (3) through and including (12), as
applicable. On any payment date occurring during a period in which a bankruptcy
court has applied such an automatic stay to a material portion of the trust
property, then the Available Reserve Account Funds will be used only for payment
of clauses (3) through and including (7).

          Noteholders evidencing 662/3% or more of the Voting Rights shall have
the ability to waive or defer any Amortization Event. Upon the occurrence of any
Amortization Event, noteholders evidencing 662/3% or more of the Voting Rights
shall have the right to replace DVI Financial Services Inc. as servicer with a
successor servicer as permitted under the contribution and servicing agreement.


                                      S-73

<PAGE>



PAYMENT OF AMOUNTS FROM DISTRIBUTION SUB-ACCOUNTS

          1. On each payment date, the trustee shall pay to the class A
noteholders the amounts then on deposit in the Class A Distribution Sub-Account
and allocated as set forth in the "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND PRINCIPAL
TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- FLOW OF FUNDS TO AND FROM THE COLLECTION ACCOUNT"
section of this prospectus supplement. Such payments are to be made, first to
the class A noteholders, proportionately, in the following order of priority:

            (i)    to the class A-1 noteholders, the Class A-1 Monthly Interest;
            (ii)   to the class A-1 noteholders, the Class A-1 Overdue Interest,
                   if any;
            (iii)  to the class A-2 noteholders, the Class A-2 Monthly Interest;
            (iv)   to the class A-2 noteholders, the Class A-2 Overdue Interest,
                   if any;
            (v)    to the class A-3 noteholders, the Class A-3 Monthly Interest;
            (vi)   to the class A-3 noteholders, the Class A-3 Overdue Interest,
                   if any;
            (vii)  to the class A-4 noteholders, the Class A-4 Monthly Interest;
            (viii) to the class A-4 noteholders, the Class A-4 Overdue Interest,
                   if any; and

          second, to the class A noteholders, proportionately, in the following
order of priority:

            (i)      the Class A-1 Overdue Principal, if any;
            (ii)     the Class A-1 Monthly Principal;
            (iii)    any additional class A-1 principal payable under the
                     indenture;
            (iv)     the Class A-2 Overdue Principal, if any;
            (v)      the Class A-2 Monthly Principal;
            (vi)     any additional class A-2 principal payable under the
                     indenture;
            (vii)    the Class A-3 Overdue Principal, if any;
            (viii)   the Class A-3 Monthly Principal; and
            (ix)     any additional class A-3 principal payable under the
                     indenture;


                                      S-74

<PAGE>



             (x)      the Class A-4 Overdue Principal, if any;
             (xi)     the Class A-4 Monthly Principal; and
             (xi)     any additional class A-4 principal payable under the
                      indenture;

PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that in the event that a Subordination Deficiency Event has
occurred and is continuing, after the Class A-1 Note Balance and the Class A-2
Note Balance have been reduced to zero, the Class A-3 Note Balance and the Class
A-4 Note Balance will be paid on a PRO RATA, PARI PASSU basis.

          2. On each payment date the trustee shall pay to the class B
noteholders PRO RATA the amount then on deposit in the Class B Distribution
Sub-Account and all allocated as set forth in the "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND
PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- FLOW OF FUNDS TO AND FROM THE COLLECTION
ACCOUNT" section of this prospectus supplement. Payments to the class B
noteholders shall be made in the following order of priority:

             (A)  the Class B Monthly Interest;
             (B)  the Class B Overdue Interest, if any;
             (C)  the Class B Overdue Principal, if any;
             (D)  the Class B Monthly Principal; and
             (E)  additional principal payable under the indenture.

          3. On each payment date the trustee shall pay to the class C
noteholders PRO RATA the amount then on deposit in the Class C Distribution
Sub-Account and allocated as set forth in the "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND
PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- FLOW OF FUNDS TO AND FROM THE COLLECTION
ACCOUNT" section of this prospectus supplement. Payments to the class C
noteholders shall be made in the following order of priority:

             (A) the  Class C Monthly Interest;
             (B) the Class C Overdue Interest, if any;
             (C) the Class C Overdue Principal, if any;


                                      S-75

<PAGE>




             (D) the Class C Monthly Principal; and
             (E) additional principal payable under the indenture.

          4. On each payment date the trustee shall pay to the class D
noteholders PRO RATA the amount then on deposit in the Class D Distribution
Sub-Account and allocated as set forth in the "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND
PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- FLOW OF FUNDS TO AND FROM THE COLLECTION
ACCOUNT" section of this prospectus supplement. Payments to the class D
noteholders shall be made in the following order of priority:

             (A) the Class D Monthly Interest;
             (B) the Class D Overdue Interest, if any;
             (C) the Class D Overdue Principal, if any;
             (D) the Class D Monthly Principal; and
             (E) additional principal payable under the indenture.

          5. On each payment date the trustee shall pay to the class E
noteholders PRO RATA the amount then on deposit in the Class E Distribution
Sub-Account and allocated as set forth in the "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND
PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- FLOW OF FUNDS TO AND FROM THE COLLECTION
ACCOUNT" section of this prospectus supplement. Payments to the class E
noteholders shall be made in the following order of priority:

             (A) the Class E Monthly Interest;
             (B) the Class E Overdue Interest, if any;
             (C) the Class E Overdue Principal, if any;
             (D) the Class E Monthly Principal; and
             (E) additional principal payable under the indenture.

REPORTS TO NOTEHOLDERS

                  Following each payment to the noteholders, the trustee shall
mail to the issuer, Cede & Co., the rating agencies and make available to each
noteholder the monthly servicer report



                                      S-76
<PAGE>



furnished to the trustee by the servicer on the related determination date. If
the report has not been received, the trustee must provide a written statement
including similar information to the monthly servicer report. The trustee will
deliver to the servicer, and within two business days after the request of the
issuer, deliver to the issuer, a written statement setting forth the amounts on
deposit in the collection account and the reserve account as of the payment
date. In each case, the trustee will deliver the report after giving effect to
all of the withdrawals and applications or transfers required on the payment
date under the indenture.

OPTIONAL REDEMPTION

                  The notes may be redeemed by the issuer, in whole but not in
part, at the redemption price on any payment date on which the Pool A Aggregate
Discounted Contract Balance is less than 10% of the Pool A Aggregate Discounted
Contract Balance on the closing date and the Pool B Aggregate Discounted
Contract Balance is less than 20% of the Pool B Aggregate Discounted Contract
Balance on the closing date. In the event that the notes are redeemed in full,
an amount equal to the sum of:

         o        the entire outstanding principal balance of the notes, and

         o        accrued interest on the outstanding principal balance of each
                  class of notes, at the Class A-1 Note Rate, Class A-2 Note
                  Rate, Class A-3 Note Rate, Class A-4 Note Rate, Class B Note
                  Rate, Class C Note Rate, Class D Note Rate and Class E Note
                  Rate, as applicable, will be required to be paid to the
                  noteholders of each class.

                  The notes may be redeemed in part by the issuer at the Partial
Redemption Price on any payment date on which the Pool B Aggregate Discounted
Contract Balance is less than 20% of the Pool B Aggregate Discounted Contract
Balance of the contracts in Pool B as of the closing date. In the event that the
notes are redeemed in part, an amount equal to the sum of (i) the product of (A)
the quotient of (x) the Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance of the contracts
in Pool B, divided by (y) the Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance and (B) the
entire outstanding principal balance of the notes, and (ii) accrued interest on
the outstanding principal balance at the



                                      S-77
<PAGE>



Class A Note Rate, Class B Note Rate, Class C Note Rate, Class D Notes Rate or
Class E Note Rate, as applicable, will be required to be paid to the noteholders
of each such class on that payment date.

INDENTURE EVENTS OF DEFAULT AND ACCELERATION

                  An indenture event of default means any one of the following
events:

                           (1) default in the payment of (A) any interest when
                  due on any outstanding class of notes, (B) any principal on
                  the Stated Maturity Date for any outstanding class of notes,
                  or (C) any other payment of principal or interest on any
                  outstanding note when it becomes due and payable and
                  sufficient Available Funds are on deposit in the collection
                  account and sufficient Available Reserve Account Funds are on
                  deposit in the reserve account;

                           (2) default in the performance, or breach, of any
                  covenant of sections 8.04, 8.07(c) or 8.08 of the indenture;

                           (3) default in the performance, or breach, of any
                  other covenant of the issuer in the indenture, the notes or of
                  any party in, the contribution and servicing agreement or the
                  other transaction documents and continuance of that default or
                  breach for a period of thirty days after the earliest of:

                                    (A) any officer of the issuer or transferor
                           first acquiring knowledge of that default or breach;

                                    (B) the trustee's giving written notice of
                           default or breach to the issuer; or

                                    (C) the holder of any note giving written
                           notice of default or breach to the issuer;




                                      S-78
<PAGE>



                           (4) if any representation or warranty of the issuer,
                  DVI Receivables Corp. XII or DVI Financial Services Inc. made
                  in the indenture, the subsequent contract transfer agreement
                  and the contribution and servicing agreement, respectively, or
                  any other writing provided to the noteholders in connection
                  with the foregoing documents shall prove to be incorrect in
                  any material respect as of the time when the representation or
                  warranty is made. However, the breach of any representation or
                  warranty made by DVI Financial Services Inc. in section 2.03
                  or 2.04 of the contribution and servicing agreement for any of
                  the contracts or the security interest in the related
                  equipment shall not constitute an indenture event of default
                  if DVI Financial Services Inc., in accordance with the
                  contribution and servicing agreement, substitutes one or more
                  substitute contracts and the security interest in the related
                  equipment for the affected contract and equipment or
                  repurchases the affected contract and related equipment;

                           (5) a court with proper jurisdiction enters any kind
                  of order granting a so-called "involuntary" petition brought
                  by third parties against the issuer under any applicable
                  federal or state bankruptcy, etc. law and that order remains
                  in effect for a period of ninety consecutive days; or

                           (6) the issuer commences or agrees to any kind of
                  so-called "voluntary" petition for relief under any federal or
                  state bankruptcy, etc. law.

                  If an indenture event of default occurs and is continuing,
then the trustee, with the consent of the holders of the notes evidencing at
least 662/3% of the Voting Rights, may declare the unpaid principal amount of
all the notes to be due and payable immediately, by a notice in writing to the
issuer, and if the trustee makes the declaration, the entire principal amount
shall automatically become immediately due and payable together with all accrued
and unpaid interest on the notes.




                                      S-79
<PAGE>



REMEDIES

                  If an indenture event of default occurs and is continuing, the
trustee will give notice to each noteholder as described in the indenture. The
trustee will then take whatever action, if any, is directed by the holders of
notes evidencing at least 662/3% of the Voting Rights. Following any
acceleration of the notes, the trustee shall have all the rights, powers and
remedies for the trust property as are available to secured parties under the
Uniform Commercial Code or other applicable law.

                  Any money collected by the trustee under the indenture
following an indenture event of default, will be applied at the date or dates
fixed by the trustee and, in case of the distribution of the entire amount due
on account of principal or interest, upon presentation and surrender of the
notes and any moneys that may then be held or thereafter received by the
trustee, shall be applied in the following order:

                  FIRST, to the payment of all costs and expenses of collection
                  incurred by the trustee, including the reasonable fees and
                  expenses of its counsel, and all other amounts due the trustee
                  under the indenture;

                  SECOND, to the payment of all unreimbursed Servicer Advances
                  due to the servicer;

                  THIRD, only in the event that DVI Financial Services Inc. is
                  no longer the servicer, and the servicer has, in its good
                  faith and reasonable business judgment, deemed the servicing
                  fee to be commercially unreasonable, then, to the servicer,
                  the amount agreed upon between the then servicer and the
                  trustee, each in their good faith and commercially reasonable
                  judgment, as necessary to make the servicing fee commercially
                  reasonable and to cover the reasonable costs in transferring
                  the servicing obligations;

                  FOURTH, to pay all accrued and unpaid interest on each
                  outstanding class A note, PRO RATA, without giving any
                  preference or priority to any class A noteholder;




                                      S-80
<PAGE>



                  FIFTH, to pay all accrued and unpaid interest on each
                  outstanding class B note, PRO RATA, without giving any
                  preference or priority to any class B noteholder;

                  SIXTH, to pay all accrued and unpaid interest on each
                  outstanding class C note, PRO RATA, without giving any
                  preference or priority to any class C noteholder;

                  SEVENTH, to pay of all accrued and unpaid interest on each
                  outstanding class D note, PRO RATA, without giving any
                  preference or priority to any class D noteholder;

                  EIGHTH, to pay of all accrued and unpaid interest on each
                  outstanding class E note, PRO RATA, without giving any
                  preference or priority to any class E noteholder;

                  NINTH, to pay the entire outstanding Class A-1 Note Balance,
                  and any other amounts due to the Class A-1 noteholders, PRO
                  RATA, without any preference or priority; then to pay the
                  entire Class A-2 Note Balance, and any other amounts due to
                  the Class A-2 noteholders, PRO RATA, without preference or
                  priority; then to pay the entire Class A-3 Note Balance, and
                  any other amounts due to the Class A-3 noteholders, PRO RATA;
                  and then to pay the entire Class A-4 Note Balance, and any
                  other amounts due to the Class A-4 noteholders, PRO RATA;
                  (PROVIDED that a Subordination Deficiency Event has not
                  occurred and is continuing; if a Subordination Deficiency
                  Event has occurred and is continuing, after the Class A-1 Note
                  Balance has been reduced to zero, and the outstanding Class
                  A-2 Note Balance has been reduced to zero, the outstanding
                  Class A-3 Note Balance, and Class A-4 Note Balance shall be
                  paid PRO RATA among the holders of both of those classes in
                  accordance with their respective Note Balances);

                  TENTH, to pay the entire outstanding Class B Note Balance, and
                  any other amounts due to the Class B noteholders, PRO RATA,
                  without giving preference or priority to any Class B
                  noteholder;

                  ELEVENTH, to pay the entire outstanding Class C Note Balance,
                  and any other amounts due to the Class C noteholders, PRO
                  RATA, without giving preference or



                                      S-81
<PAGE>



                  priority to any Class C noteholder;

                  TWELFTH, to pay the entire outstanding Class D Note Balance,
                  and any other amounts due to the Class D noteholders, PRO
                  RATA, without giving preference or priority to any Class D
                  noteholder;

                  THIRTEENTH, to pay the entire outstanding Class E Note
                  Balance, and any other amounts due to the class E noteholders,
                  PRO RATA, without giving preference or priority to any class E
                  noteholder;

                  FOURTEENTH, to pay all accrued and unpaid interest on any
                  outstanding class F instruments, if any, ratably to each
                  holder of the class F instruments without giving preference or
                  priority to any class F instrumentholder; and then to pay the
                  entire outstanding principal balance of the class F
                  instruments, if any, and any other amounts due to the class F
                  instrumentholders, pro rata, without giving preference or
                  priority to any class F instrumentholders;

                  FIFTEENTH, in the event that DVI Financial Services Inc. is
                  the servicer, to pay all unreimbursed servicing fees due to
                  the servicer; and

                  SIXTEENTH, the payment of the remainder, if any, to, or at the
                  order of, the issuer.

SERVICER EVENTS OF DEFAULT

                  Any of the following acts or occurrences shall constitute a
servicer event of default by the servicer under the contribution and servicing
agreement:

         (1) failure by the servicer, or for so long as DVI Financial Services
         Inc. is the servicer, DVI Receivables Corp. XII, to (A) remit any
         payment to the trustee within the time period required under the
         contribution and servicing agreement or (B) make any Servicer Advance
         which may be required by it;




                                      S-82
<PAGE>



         (2) failure to pay to the trustee on or before the date when due, any
         deposit required to be made by the servicer under section 4.02 of the
         contribution and servicing agreement;

         (3) failure on the part of either the servicer, or for so long as DVI
         Financial Services Inc. is the servicer, DVI Receivables Corp. XII,
         duly to observe or perform in any material respect any other of their
         respective covenants or agreements in the contribution and servicing
         agreement which failure continues for thirty days after the servicer
         becomes aware of the failure. For example, a failure of the servicer to
         deliver a monthly servicer report on the date required or the delivery
         of a monthly servicer report which is materially incorrect, if this
         failure materially and adversely affects the rights of the noteholders
         and continues unremedied for a period of thirty days after the servicer
         becomes aware of that failure or receives written notice of that
         failure;

         (4) if any representation or warranty made by either:

                           (A) the servicer in the contribution and servicing
                           agreement or in any certificate or other document
                           delivered under any transaction documents; or

                           (B) any successor servicer in connection with its
                           assumption of the duties of the servicer

         shall prove to be incorrect in any material respect as of the time when
         it was made;

         (5) a court with proper jurisdiction enters any kind of order granting
         a so-called "involuntary" petition brought by third parties against the
         servicer, or for so long as DVI Financial Services Inc. is the
         servicer, DVI Receivables Corp. XII, under any applicable federal or
         state bankruptcy, etc. law, or if this type of order remains in effect
         for a period of ninety consecutive days;

         (6) the servicer, or for so long as DVI Financial Services Inc. is the
         servicer,



                                      S-83
<PAGE>



         DVI Receivables Corp. XII, commences or agrees to any kind of so-called
         "voluntary" petition for relief under any federal or state bankruptcy,
         etc. law;

         (7) any non-permitted assignment by the servicer, or any non-permitted
         attempt by the servicer to assign its duties or rights under the
         contribution and servicing agreement;

         (8)                        (A) the failure of the servicer to make one
                           or more payments with respect to aggregate recourse
                           indebtedness for borrowed money exceeding two million
                           dollars; or

                                    (B) the occurrence of any other event or the
                           existence of any other condition, the effect of which
                           event or condition is to cause more than two million
                           dollars of aggregate recourse indebtedness for
                           borrowed money of the servicer to become due before
                           its or their stated maturity or before its or their
                           regularly scheduled dates of payment;

         and the failure, event or condition described in either clause (A) or
         (B) shall be continuing and shall not have been waived by the person or
         persons entitled to performance;

         (9) the rendering against the servicer of a final judgment, decree or
         order, all possible appeals having been exhausted, for the payment of
         money in excess of two million dollars which is uninsured, and the
         continuance of this judgment, decree or order unsatisfied and in effect
         for any period of sixty consecutive days without a stay of execution;
         or

         (10) so long as DVI Financial Services Inc. is the servicer, the
         occurrence of an Amortization Event.

TERMINATION OF THE SERVICER

                  If a servicer event of default occurs and is continuing, the
trustee will, upon the request of the holders of notes evidencing more than
662/3% of the Voting Rights, give written notice to the servicer of the
termination of all of the rights and obligations of the servicer under the



                                      S-84
<PAGE>



contribution and servicing agreement. No servicer termination will release DVI
Financial Services Inc. from its obligations as contributor under that
agreement. Once the servicer receives that notice, all of its rights and
obligations under the contribution and servicing agreement will terminate and be
transferred to the trustee under the "back-up servicer" provisions of the
contribution and servicing agreement and the indenture.

                  The servicer agrees to cooperate with the trustee or any other
successor servicer in transferring the responsibilities and rights of the
servicer to the successor servicer, including, transferring to the successor
servicer its records, correspondence and documents relating to the contracts and
other trust property. The trustee must give prompt written notice of this
termination and transfer of servicing to each holder of the notes.

DUTIES AND IMMUNITIES OF THE TRUSTEE

                  The trustee makes no representations as to the validity or
sufficiency of the indenture, the notes or of any contract or related document.
The trustee will not be accountable for the use or application by the issuer or
DVI Financial Services Inc. of any funds paid to DVI Financial Services Inc. in
consideration of the sale of the notes to the investors. The trustee will be
required to perform only those duties specifically required of it under the
indenture.

                  No recourse is available based on any provision of the
indenture, the notes or any contract against the trustee, in its individual
capacity. The trustee has no personal obligation, liability or duty whatsoever
to any noteholder or any other person for any claim, except for any liability as
is determined to have resulted from the trustee's own negligence or willful
misconduct.

                  The servicer agrees:

                           (1) to pay to the trustee from time to time
                  compensation for all services rendered by it under the
                  indenture as the servicer and the trustee have agreed in
                  writing prior to the closing date. This payment is to be made
                  independent of the other payment obligations of the servicer;




                                      S-85
<PAGE>



                           (2) except as otherwise expressly provided in the
                  indenture to reimburse the trustee upon its request for all
                  reasonable expenses, disbursements, and advances incurred or
                  made by the trustee in accordance with any provision of the
                  indenture, including the reasonable compensation and the
                  expenses and disbursements of its agents and counsel, except
                  any expense, disbursement, or advance as may be attributable
                  to the trustee's negligence or bad faith;

                           (3) on the closing date, to pay the trustee its
                  annual administrative fee and fees of counsel, and

                           (4) to pay the reasonable annual administrative fee
                  of each lockbox bank.

BOOK-ENTRY REGISTRATION OF THE NOTES

                  GENERAL. Beneficial owners that are not participants of The
Depository Trust Company or intermediaries but desire to purchase, sell or
otherwise transfer ownership of, or other interests in, the class A notes, class
B notes, class C notes and class D notes may do so only through participants,
either directly or indirectly. The class A notes, class B notes, class C notes
and class D notes are together called the offered notes. In addition, beneficial
owners will receive all distributions of principal of and interest on the
offered notes from the paying agent through The Depository Trust Company and
participants. Accordingly, beneficial owners may experience delays in their
receipt of payments. Until definitive securities are issued for the offered
notes, it is anticipated that the only registered noteholder of the offered
notes will be Cede & Co., as nominee of The Depository Trust Company. Beneficial
owners will not be recognized by the trustee or the servicer as noteholders, as
the term is used in the contribution and servicing agreement. Beneficial owners
will be permitted to receive information furnished to noteholders and to
exercise the rights of noteholders only indirectly through The Depository Trust
Company, its participants and intermediaries.

                  Under the rules, regulations and procedures creating and
affecting The Depository Trust Company and its operations, The Depository Trust
Company is required to make book-entry transfers of offered notes among
participants and to receive and transmit distributions of principal



                                      S-86
<PAGE>



of, and interest on, those offered notes. Participants and intermediaries with
which beneficial owners have accounts relating to the offered notes also are
required to make book-entry transfers and receive and transmit distributions on
behalf of their respective beneficial owners. As a result, although beneficial
owners will not possess physical certificates evidencing their interests in the
offered notes, the rules, regulations and procedures creating and affecting The
Depository Trust Company and its operations provide a mechanism by which
beneficial owners, through their participants and intermediaries, will receive
distributions and will be able to transfer their interests in the offered notes.

                  None of the issuer, the servicer, DVI Receivables Corp. XII,
DVI Receivables Corp. VIII or the trustee will have any liability for any
actions taken by The Depository Trust Company or its nominee or Clearstream
Banking, Luxembourg or Euroclear, including, without limitation, actions for any
aspect of the records relating to or payments made on account of beneficial
ownership interests in the offered notes held by Cede & Co., as nominee for The
Depository Trust Company, or for maintaining, supervising or reviewing any
records relating to the beneficial ownership interests. For additional
information regarding The Depository Trust Company and the offered notes, see
the prospectus.

                  DEFINITIVE SECURITIES. Definitive securities will be issued to
beneficial owners or their nominees, respectively, rather than to The Depository
Trust Company or its nominee, only under the limited conditions listed in the
prospectus.

                  Upon the occurrence of that kind of event, the trustee is
required to notify, through The Depository Trust Company, participants who have
ownership of offered notes as indicated on the records of The Depository Trust
Company of the availability of definitive securities for their offered notes.
Upon surrender by The Depository Trust Company of the definitive certificates
representing the offered notes and upon receipt of instructions from The
Depository Trust Company for re-registration, the trustee will reissue the
offered notes as definitive securities issued in the respective principal
amounts owned by individual beneficial owners. Thereafter, the trustee and the
servicer will recognize the holders of the definitive securities as noteholders
under the contribution and servicing agreement.




                                      S-87
<PAGE>



                  BOOK-ENTRY FACILITIES. Beneficial owners may choose to hold
their interests in the book-entry securities through The Depository Trust
Company in the United States or through Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg or
Euroclear in Europe, if they are participants of those systems, or indirectly
through organizations which are participants in those systems. The book- entry
securities of each class will be issued in one or more certificates which equal
the Outstanding Note Balance of that class and will initially be registered in
the name of Cede & Co., the nominee of The Depository Trust Company. Clearstream
Banking, Luxembourg and Euroclear will hold omnibus positions on behalf of their
participants through customers' securities accounts in Clearstream Banking,
Luxembourg's and Euroclear's names on the books of their respective depositories
which in turn will hold those positions in customers' securities accounts in the
depositories' names on the books of The Depository Trust Company.

                  Because of time zone differences, credits of securities
received in Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg or Euroclear as a result of a
transaction with a participant will be made during subsequent securities
settlement processing and dated the business day following The Depository Trust
Company settlement date. These credits or any transactions in the securities
settled during processing will be reported to the relevant Euroclear
participants or Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg participants on that business
day. Cash received in Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg or Euroclear as a result
of sales of securities by or through a Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg
participant or Euroclear participant to a participant will be received with
value on The Depository Trust Company settlement date but will be available in
the relevant Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg or Euroclear cash account only as
of the business day following settlement in The Depository Trust Company.

                  Transfers between participants will occur in accordance with
The Depository Trust Company rules. Transfers between Clearstream Banking,
Luxembourg participants and Euroclear participants will occur in accordance with
their respective rules and operating procedures.

                  Cross-market transfers between persons holding directly or
indirectly through The Depository Trust Company, on the one hand, and directly
or indirectly through Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg participants or Euroclear
participants, on the other, will be effected in The Depository Trust Company in
accordance with The Depository Trust Company rules on behalf of



                                      S-88
<PAGE>



the relevant European international clearing system by the institution acting as
a depositary for Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg or Euroclear. However, these
cross market transactions will require delivery of instructions to the relevant
European international clearing system by the counterparty in that system in
accordance with its rules and procedures and within its established deadlines in
European time. The relevant European international clearing system will, if the
transaction meets its settlement requirements, deliver instructions to the
relevant depositary to take action to effect final settlement on its behalf by
delivering or receiving securities in The Depository Trust Company, and making
or receiving payment in accordance with normal procedures for same day funds
settlement applicable to The Depository Trust Company. Clearstream Banking,
Luxembourg participants and Euroclear participants may not deliver instructions
directly to the European Depositories.

                  The Depository Trust Company, which is a New York-chartered
limited purpose trust company, performs services for its participants, some of
which, and/or their representatives, own The Depository Trust Company. In
accordance with its normal procedures, The Depository Trust Company is expected
to record the positions held by each Depository Trust Company participant in the
book-entry securities, whether held for its own account or as a nominee for
another person. In general, beneficial ownership of book-entry securities will
be subject to the rules, regulations and procedures governing The Depository
Trust Company and its participants.

                  Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg is incorporated under the laws
of Luxembourg as a professional depository. Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg
holds securities for its participant organizations and facilitates the clearance
and settlement of securities transactions between Clearstream Banking,
Luxembourg participants through electronic book-entry changes in accounts of
Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg participants, eliminating the need for physical
movement of certificates. Transactions may be settled in Clearstream Banking,
Luxembourg in any of 28 currencies, including United States dollars. Clearstream
Banking, Luxembourg provides to its Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg
participants, among other things, services for safekeeping, administration,
clearance and settlement of internationally traded securities and securities
lending and borrowing. Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg interfaces with domestic
markets in several countries. As a professional depository, Clearstream Banking,
Luxembourg is subject to regulation by the Luxembourg Monetary Institute.
Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg participants are



                                      S-89
<PAGE>



recognized financial institutions around the world, including underwriters,
securities brokers and dealers, banks, trust companies, clearing corporations
and other organizations. Indirect access to Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg is
also available to others, such as banks, brokers, dealers and trust companies
that clear through or maintain a custodial relationship with a Clearstream
Banking, Luxembourg participant, either directly or indirectly.

                  Euroclear was created in 1968 to hold securities for
participants of Euroclear and to clear and settle transactions between Euroclear
participants through simultaneous electronic book- entry delivery against
payment, eliminating the need for physical movement of certificates and any risk
from lack of simultaneous transfers of securities and cash. Transactions may now
be settled in any of 32 currencies, including United States dollars. Euroclear
provides various other services, including securities lending and borrowing and
interfaces with domestic markets in several countries generally similar to the
arrangements for cross-market transfers with The Depository Trust Company
described above. Euroclear is operated by the Brussels, Belgium office of Morgan
Guaranty Trust Company of New York under contract with Euroclear Clearance
Systems S.C., a Belgian cooperative corporation. All operations are conducted by
the Brussels, Belgium office of Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of New York, and
all Euroclear securities clearance accounts and Euroclear cash accounts are
accounts with the Brussels, Belgium office of Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of
New York, not Euroclear Clearance Systems S.C. Euroclear Clearance Systems S.C.
establishes policy for Euroclear on behalf of Euroclear participants. Euroclear
participants include banks, including central banks, securities brokers and
dealers and other professional financial intermediaries. Indirect access to
Euroclear is also available to other firms that clear through or maintain a
custodial relationship with a Euroclear participant, either directly or
indirectly.

                  The Brussels, Belgium office of Morgan Guaranty Trust Company
is the Belgian branch of a New York banking corporation which is a member bank
of the Federal Reserve System. As such, it is regulated and examined by the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the New York State Banking
Department, as well as the Belgian Banking Commission.

                  Securities clearance accounts and cash accounts with the
Brussels, Belgium office of Morgan Guaranty Trust Company are governed by the
Terms and Conditions Governing Use of



                                      S-90
<PAGE>



Euroclear and the related Operating Procedures of the Euroclear System and
applicable Belgian law. The terms and conditions govern transfers of securities
and cash within Euroclear, withdrawals of securities and cash from Euroclear,
and receipts of payments for securities in Euroclear. All securities in
Euroclear are held on a fungible basis without attribution of specific
certificates to specific securities clearance accounts. The Brussels, Belgium
office of Morgan Guaranty Trust Company acts under the terms and conditions only
on behalf of Euroclear participants, and has no record of or relationship with
persons holding through Euroclear participants.

                  Distributions on the book-entry securities will be made on
each distribution date by the trustee to The Depository Trust Company. The
Depository Trust Company will be responsible for crediting the amount of those
payments to the accounts of the applicable participants in accordance with The
Depository Trust Company's normal procedures. Each participant will be
responsible for disbursing those payments to the beneficial owners of the
book-entry securities that it represents and to each intermediary for which it
acts as agent. Each intermediary will be responsible for disbursing funds to the
beneficial owners of the book-entry securities that it represents.

                  Under a book-entry format, beneficial owners of the book-entry
securities may experience some delay in their receipt of payments, since those
payments will be forwarded by the trustee to Cede & Co. Since transactions in
the book-entry securities will be effected only through The Depository Trust
Company, participating organizations, indirect participants and some banks, the
ability of a beneficial owner to pledge offered notes to persons or entities
that do not participate in The Depository Trust Company system, or otherwise to
take actions relating to the offered notes, may be limited due to lack of a
physical certificate representing the offered notes. In addition, issuance of
the book-entry securities in book-entry form may reduce the liquidity of the
offered notes in the secondary market since some potential investors may be
unwilling to purchase offered notes for which they cannot obtain physical
certificates.

                  The Depository Trust Company has advised the issuer and the
trustee that, unless and until definitive securities are issued, The Depository
Trust Company will take any action permitted to be taken by the holders of the
book-entry securities under the agreement only at the direction of one or more
participants to whose The Depository Trust Company accounts the book-


                                      S-91
<PAGE>



entry securities are credited, to the extent that those actions are taken on
behalf of intermediaries whose holdings include those book-entry securities. The
Depository Trust Company may take actions, at the direction of the related
participants, for some offered notes which conflict with actions taken for other
offered notes.

                  Although The Depository Trust Company has agreed to the
foregoing procedures in order to facilitate transfers of offered notes among
participants of The Depository Trust Company, it is under no obligation to
perform or continue to perform those procedures and those procedures may be
discontinued at any time.

                       PREPAYMENT AND YIELD CONSIDERATIONS

                  The rate of principal payments on the notes will be directly
related to the scheduled rate of payments on the contracts in the trust
property. If purchased at a price of other than par, the yield to maturity will
also be affected by the rate of contract payments. The extent to which the yield
to maturity of a note is sensitive to the rate of principal payments will
depend, in part, upon the size of any discount or premium. If the purchaser of a
note purchased at a discount from its initial principal balance calculates its
anticipated yield to maturity based on an assumed rate of payment of principal
that is faster than that actually experienced on that note, the actual yield to
maturity will be lower than that so calculated. On the other hand, if the
purchaser of a note purchased at a premium calculates its anticipated yield to
maturity based on an assumed rate of payment of principal that is slower than
that actually experienced on the note, the actual yield to maturity will be
lower than that so calculated.

                  Payments on the contracts may be in the form of scheduled
contract payments or accelerated payments resulting from default, casualty or
prepayment. These accelerated payments will result in payments to noteholders of
amounts earlier than would otherwise have been paid over the remaining term of
the contracts. In most cases, prepayments on the contracts will tend to shorten
the weighted average lives of the notes, whereas delays in payments on the
contracts and modifications extending the maturity of the contract will tend to
lengthen the weighted average lives of the notes. Any changes in weighted
average lives may adversely affect the yield to noteholders. In general, the
rate of payments may be influenced by a number of other factors,



                                      S-92
<PAGE>



including general economic conditions. The rate of payment of principal may also
be affected by any removal of the contracts from the pool and the deposit of the
related Prepayment Amount or Partial Prepayment Amount, as applicable, into the
collection account.

                  The contracts in most cases do not provide for the right of
the obligor to prepay. However, under the contribution and servicing agreement,
the servicer is permitted to allow prepayments in an amount not less than the
Prepayment Amount or Partial Prepayment Amount, as applicable. In addition, in
the event that an obligor requests an upgrade or trade-in of equipment, the
servicer may remove the equipment and related contract from the trust property,
but only upon payment of the Prepayment Amount or Partial Prepayment Amount, as
applicable. In either case, the servicer may also replace the contracts with
substitute contracts. See "THE CONTRACTS -- SUBSTITUTE CONTRACTS" on page S-55
of this prospectus supplement. Any Prepayment Amounts or Partial Prepayment
Amounts paid shall be remitted by the servicer to the trustee or deposited into
the collection account and shall be applied as a prepayment of the notes. The
servicer historically has permitted obligors to terminate contracts early, or,
in case of contracts covering more than one item of equipment, to partially
prepay contracts, either in connection with the execution of a new contract of
replacement equipment, or upon payment of a negotiated premium, or both.

                  The effective yield to noteholders will depend upon, among
other things, the price at which the notes are purchased, the amount of and rate
at which principal, including both scheduled and nonscheduled payments of that
principal, is paid to the noteholders.

                       CERTAIN LEGAL MATTERS AFFECTING AN
                        OBLIGOR'S RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS

GENERAL

                  The contracts are either "accounts," "instruments" or "chattel
paper" as defined in the Uniform Commercial Code in effect in nearly every state
of the United States. Under the Uniform Commercial Code for most purposes, a
sale of accounts or chattel paper is treated in a manner similar to a
transaction creating a security interest in accounts or chattel paper. DVI
Financial Services Inc., DVI Receivables Corp. XII and the issuer will cause the
filing of



                                      S-93
<PAGE>



appropriate UCC-1 financing statements to be made with the appropriate
governmental authorities in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to give notice of:

         o        DVI Financial Services Inc.'s transfer of the contracts to DVI
                  Receivables Corp. XII,

        o         DVI Receivables Corp. XII's transfer of the contracts to the
                  issuer, and

        o         the pledge of the contracts to the trustee.

Under the contribution and servicing agreement, the servicer will be obligated
from time to time to take such actions as are necessary to protect and perfect
the trustee's interests in the contracts and their proceeds.

                  A 1993 decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the
Tenth Circuit states that, among other things, accounts sold by an entity remain
property of that entity's bankruptcy estate in the event of its reorganization
or bankruptcy proceedings subsequent to the sale. Even though that decision
addressed "accounts" rather than "chattel paper" such as the contracts, if a
court in any bankruptcy proceedings of DVI Financial Services Inc. were to adopt
the reasoning of the Tenth Circuit reflected in that 1993 decision, then the
contracts would be included in the bankruptcy estate of DVI Financial Services
Inc. and delays in payment of collections on or in respect of the contracts
could occur. In addition, the court, among other remedies, could elect to
accelerate payment of the notes and liquidate the contracts and the equipment.
The noteholders would only be entitled to the then outstanding Aggregate
Discounted Contract Balance and interest on that balance at the applicable Note
Rate to the date of payment from the proceeds of such liquidation. Thus, the
noteholders could lose the right to future payments of interest and might incur
reinvestment losses.
THE EQUIPMENT

                  DVI Financial Services Inc. will transfer to DVI Receivables
Corp. XII by grant or assignment, a security interest in its interest, if any,
in the equipment. With respect to some contracts, DVI Financial Services Inc.
will also transfer an equity interest in the related equipment



                                      S-94
<PAGE>



to DVI Receivables Corp. XII. DVI Receivables Corp. XII will transfer a security
interest, but not an ownership interest, in all equipment to the issuer, and the
issuer will pledge the security interest to the trustee. In the event of a
default by the obligor under a contract, the servicer on behalf of the trustee
may take action to enforce that defaulted contract and the related security
interest by repossession and resale of the equipment. Under the Uniform
Commercial Code, a creditor such as DVI Financial Services Inc., DVI Receivables
Corp. XII, the issuer or the trustee can, without prior notice to the obligor,
repossess assets securing the obligor's obligations under a defaulted contract
by the obligor's voluntary surrender of such assets or by "self-help"
repossession that does not involve a breach of the peace or by judicial process.
However, for any equipment which constitutes "fixtures" under local law, it may
be necessary to obtain the consent of any landlord or mortgagee of the land and
building where the equipment is located, in order for the trustee to repossess
the equipment. It is the policy of DVI Financial Services Inc. to request that
such a waiver be given before the equipment is delivered to the equipment user,
but there can be no assurance that the waiver will be given in all cases.

                  In the event of a default by the obligor, some jurisdictions
require that the obligor be notified of the default and be given a time period
within which it may cure the default prior to repossession. In most cases, this
right of reinstatement may be exercised on a limited number of occasions in any
one-year period.

                  The Uniform Commercial Code and other state laws place
restrictions on repossession sales. These restrictions include requirements that
the secured party provide the obligor with reasonable notice of the date, time
and place of any public sale and/or the date after which any private sale of the
collateral may be held and that any sale be conducted in a commercially
reasonable manner. The contribution and servicing agreement will require the
servicer to sell promptly any repossessed equipment.

                  Under most state laws, an obligor has the right to redeem any
collateral for its obligations, prior to a foreclosure sale of that property. To
do so it must by pay the secured party the unpaid balance of the obligations
plus interest and the secured party's reasonable expenses for repossession,
holding and preparing the collateral for disposition and arranging for its sale.
In addition, to the extent provided for in the written agreement of the parties,
the obligor must pay



                                      S-95
<PAGE>



reasonable attorneys' fees.

                  In addition, because the market value of the equipment of the
type financed under the contracts generally declines with age and because of
obsolescence, the net disposition proceeds of leased equipment at any time
during the term of the contract may be less than the outstanding balance on the
contract principal balance which it secures. Because of this, and because other
creditors may have rights in the related equipment superior to those of the
trustee, the servicer may not be able to recover the entire amount due on a
defaulted contract in the event that the servicer elects to repossess and sell
the related equipment under those circumstances.

                  Under the Uniform Commercial Code and laws applicable in most
states, a creditor is entitled to obtain a so-called "deficiency judgment" from
an obligor for any shortfall between the unpaid balance of that obligor's
contract and the net proceeds received from any collateral for that contract.
However, some states, including those where some of the obligors may be located,
impose prohibitions or limitations on deficiency judgments. In most
jurisdictions, the courts, in interpreting the Uniform Commercial Code, would
impose upon a creditor an obligation to repossess the equipment in a
commercially reasonable manner and to mitigate and minimize its damages in the
event of an obligor's failure to cure a default. The creditor would be required
to exercise reasonable judgment and follow acceptable commercial practice in
seizing and disposing of the equipment and to offset the net proceeds of
disposition against its claim. In addition, an obligor may successfully invoke
an election of remedies defense to a deficiency claim in the event that the
servicer's repossession and sale of the leased equipment is found to be a
retention discharging the obligor from all further obligations under Section
9-505(2) of the Uniform Commercial Code. If a deficiency judgment were granted,
the judgment would be a personal judgment against the obligor for the shortfall,
but a defaulting obligor may have very little capital or sources of income
available following repossession. Therefore, in many cases, it may not be useful
to seek a deficiency judgment or, if one is obtained, it may be settled at a
significant discount.

                  In the event of the bankruptcy or reorganization of an
obligor, various provisions of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, as amended,
and related laws may delay, interfere with and/or eliminate or reduce the
ability of the trustee to enforce its rights under the contracts. With regard to
any contract not constituting a "true lease," the Bankruptcy Code permits an
obligor to be



                                      S-96
<PAGE>



treated as the owner of the related equipment. If bankruptcy cases or
proceedings were instituted for an obligor, the trustee could be prevented from
continuing to collect payments due from or on behalf of that obligor or
exercising any remedies assigned to the trustee without the approval of the
bankruptcy court. The bankruptcy court could also permit the obligor to use,
sublease, sell or dispose of the equipment and provide the trustee with a lien
on replacement collateral, so long as the replacement collateral constituted
"adequate protection" as defined under the Bankruptcy Code. In the event that,
as a result of the bankruptcy or reorganization of an obligor, the trustee is
prevented from collecting payments with respect to a contract and that contract
becomes a defaulted contract, noteholders could experience delays in the payment
of principal and interest and/or losses on their investment.

                  With regard to any contract constituting a "true lease," the
Bankruptcy Code grants to the bankruptcy trustee for an obligor, or the obligor
as a debtor-in-possession, a right to elect to assume or reject that unexpired
lease. Also, a bankruptcy court may permit an obligor to assign its rights and
obligations under the contract. Any assumption of a contract requires the
obligor to cure any default under that contract, which may mean "adequate
assurance" of prompt cure, and to provide "adequate assurance" of future
performance under that contract, and of compensation for any actual pecuniary
loss incurred by noteholders resulting from the default. Any rejection of the
contract constitutes a breach of that contract, entitling the trustee to return
of the equipment and to a pre-petition unsecured claim for damages for breach of
the contract. The trustee also would be entitled to collect from an obligor's
bankruptcy estate any administrative rent or adequate protection amounts payable
by the obligor as provided under the Bankruptcy Code. Bankruptcy court approval
might be necessary prior to the trustee repossessing the equipment or obtaining
payments on its unsecured pre-petition claims and/or claims against the
obligor's bankruptcy estate.

                  Most states have adopted a version of Article 2A of the
Uniform Commercial Code, which is applicable to "true leases" such as fair
market value leases. Article 2A purports to codify many provisions of existing
common law. Although there is little precedential authority regarding how
Article 2A will be interpreted, it may, among other things, limit enforceability
of any "unconscionable" lease or "unconscionable" provision in a lease, provide
a lessee with remedies, including the right to cancel the lease contract, for
any lessor breach or default, and may add to or modify the terms of "consumer
leases" and leases where the lessee is a "merchant lessee."



                                      S-97
<PAGE>



However, DVI Financial Services Inc. will represent that, to the best of its
knowledge (i) no contract is a "consumer lease;" and (ii) each obligor has
accepted the equipment leased to it and, after reasonable opportunity to inspect
and test, has continued to make scheduled payments under the related contract.
Article 2A, moreover, recognizes typical commercial lease "hell or high water"
rental payment clauses and validates reasonable liquidated damages provisions in
the event of lessor or lessee defaults. Article 2A also recognizes the concept
of freedom of contract and permits the parties in a commercial context a wide
latitude to vary provisions of the law.

                  Certain governmental and quasi-governmental entities, like
municipalities and public hospitals, condition contract payments on the
availability of budgeted funds. If contracts are part of the trust property and
such budgeted funds are not available, the servicer or trustee may be forced to
repossess related equipment and noteholders may experience delays and/or losses
in payment.

                  Title 6 of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1994 established the
National Bankruptcy Review Commission for purposes of analyzing the nation's
bankruptcy laws and making recommendations to Congress for legislative changes
to the bankruptcy laws. A similar commission was involved in developing the
Bankruptcy Code. The final National Bankruptcy Review Commission report has been
issued and may ultimately lead to substantive changes to the existing Bankruptcy
Code which could affect the contracts.

                  These commercial law and bankruptcy provisions, in addition to
the possible decrease in value of a repossessed item of leased equipment, may
limit the amount realized on the sale of the collateral to less than the amount
due on the related contract.

                    MATERIAL FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

                  The following general discussion of the anticipated material
federal income tax consequences of the purchase, ownership and disposition of
the notes is based upon the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended, the Treasury regulations promulgated thereunder, published rulings of
the Internal Revenue Service and judicial decisions, all in effect as of the
date of this prospectus supplement, all of which authorities are subject to
change or differing interpretations, which could apply retroactively. The
discussion below does not purport to deal



                                      S-98
<PAGE>



with the federal income tax consequences applicable to all categories of
investors and is directed solely to class A, class B, class C or class D
noteholders that are institutional investors, hold the notes as capital assets
within the meaning of section 1221 of the Code and acquire such notes for
investment and not as a dealer or for resale. This discussion does not address
every aspect of the federal income tax laws that may be relevant to a class A,
class B, class C or class D noteholder in light of its particular investment
circumstances, nor does it purport to deal with federal income tax consequences
applicable to all categories of class A, class B, class C or class D
noteholders. Some categories of noteholders, such as banks, insurance companies
and foreign investors, among others, may be subject to special rules or
treatment under the federal income tax laws. Further, this discussion does not
address some collateral tax consequences that may result from ownership of the
notes. For purposes of this tax discussion, references to a "noteholder" or a
"holder" are to the beneficial owner of a note.

                  Class A, class B, class C or class D noteholders and preparers
of tax returns should be aware that under applicable Treasury regulations a
provider of advice on specific issues of law is not considered an income tax
return preparer unless the advice is:

                  o        given for events that have occurred at the time the
                           advice is rendered and is not given for the
                           consequences of contemplated actions, and

                  o        is directly relevant to the determination of an entry
                           on a tax return. Accordingly, class A, class B, class
                           C or class D noteholders should consult their own tax
                           advisors and tax return preparers regarding the
                           preparation of any item on a tax return, even where
                           the anticipated tax treatment has been discussed in
                           this prospectus supplement.

                  Prospective investors should be aware that the servicer and
the issuer will not seek any rulings from the IRS regarding any of the tax
consequences discussed in this prospectus supplement. Further, while the issuer
will receive an opinion of counsel, as described below, with respect to the
federal income tax treatment of the notes, that opinion is not binding on the
IRS or the courts, and no assurance can be given that the IRS will not take
contrary positions that may be sustained by a court.



                                      S-99
<PAGE>



                  In addition to the federal income tax consequences described
in this prospectus supplement, potential investors should consider the tax
consequences, if any, of the purchase, ownership and disposition of the notes
under the tax laws of any applicable state, locality or foreign jurisdiction.
See "CERTAIN STATE, LOCAL AND OTHER TAX CONSIDERATIONS" at page S-110 of this
prospectus supplement. The servicer and the issuer make no representations
regarding the tax consequences of purchase, ownership or disposition of the
notes under the tax laws of any state, locality or foreign jurisdiction.
Investors considering an investment in the notes should consult their own tax
advisors regarding such tax consequences. All investors are urged to consult
their own tax advisors in determining the federal, state, local and foreign and
any other tax consequences to them of an investment in the notes and the
purchase, ownership and disposition of the notes.

                  CHARACTERIZATION OF THE CLASS A, CLASS B, CLASS C AND CLASS D
NOTES

                  Thacher Proffitt & Wood, special counsel to the underwriters,
is of the opinion that, under existing law, and assuming compliance in all
material respects with all provisions of the indenture, the contribution and
servicing agreement and the other transaction documents relating to the issuance
of the notes, and based in part on the facts described in this prospectus
supplement and additional information and representations, including financial
calculations relating to the contracts provided or reviewed and verified by DVI
Financial Services Inc. or the underwriters, for federal income tax purposes,
the class A notes, the class B notes, the class C notes and the class D notes
will be treated as indebtedness.

                  Except where indicated to the contrary, the following
discussion describes the consequences that will follow if the class A, class B,
class C and class D notes are treated as indebtedness for federal income tax
purposes.

                  TAXATION OF CLASS A, CLASS B, CLASS C AND CLASS D NOTEHOLDERS

                  PAYMENTS OF INTEREST. The following discussion of federal
income taxation of the notes is based in part upon the rules governing original
issue discount within the meaning of section 1273(a) of the Code, called OID,
that are listed in sections 1271-1273 and 1275 of the Code and in the Treasury
regulations issued under those sections, called the OID Regulations. The OID



                                     S-100
<PAGE>



Regulations do not adequately address some issues relevant to, and in some
instances may not be applicable to, securities such as the notes.

                  It is not anticipated that the class A, class B, class C or
class D notes will be treated as having been issued with OID within the meaning
of section 1273 of the Code. Rather, interest on the notes will be taxable as
ordinary income for federal income tax purposes when received by a class A,
class B, class C or class D noteholder using the cash method of accounting or
when accrued by a class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder using the
accrual method of accounting. Interest received on the Notes also may constitute
"investment income" for purposes of limitations of the Code concerning the
deductibility of investment interest expense by taxpayers other than
corporations.

                  MARKET DISCOUNT. A subsequent holder who purchases a note at a
market discount, in other words, in the case of a note issued without OID, at a
purchase price less than its remaining stated principal amount, or in the case
of a note issued with OID, at a purchase price less than its adjusted issue
price, may be subject to the "market discount" rules of section 1276 of the
Code. These rules provide, in part, for the treatment of gain attributable to
accrued market discount as ordinary income upon the receipt of partial principal
payments or on the sale or other disposition of the note, and for the deferral
of interest deductions for debt incurred to acquire or carry a note purchased
with market discount. In particular, under section 1276 of the Code, a holder
who purchases a note at a discount that exceeds DE MINIMIS market discount
usually will be required to allocate a portion of each partial principal payment
or proceeds of disposition to accrued market discount not previously included in
income, and to recognize ordinary income to that extent. If the provisions of
section 1272(a)(6) of the Code apply to the notes, as described above with
respect to the use of a reasonable prepayment assumption, and adjustments
resulting from actual prepayments, those provisions also would affect the
accrual of any market discount.

                  Any class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder may elect
to include market discount in income currently as it accrues rather than
including it on a deferred basis in accordance with the foregoing discussion. If
made, that election will apply to all market-discount bonds acquired by that
class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder on or after the first day of the
first taxable year to which the election applied. If that election is made, the
interest deferral rule



                                     S-101
<PAGE>



described above will not apply and the adjusted basis of a note will be
increased to reflect market discount included in gross income, thus reducing any
gain, or increasing any loss, on a sale, redemption, or other taxable
disposition. Notwithstanding the above rules, market discount on a note will be
considered to be zero if it is less than a DE MINIMIS amount. In that case, the
actual discount will be required to be allocated amounts the principal payments
to be made on that note, and the portion of discount allocated to each principal
payment will be required to be reported as income as each principal payment is
made, in the same manner as discussed above regarding DE MINIMIS OID.

                  In addition, the OID Regulations permit a class A, class B,
class C or class D noteholder to elect to accrue all interest, discount,
including DE MINIMIS market or original issue discount, and premium in income as
interest, based on a constant yield method. If such an election were made with
respect to a note with market discount, the class A, class B, class C or class D
noteholder would be deemed to have made an election to include market discount
in income currently with respect to all other debt instruments that the
noteholder owns or acquires during the taxable year of the election or
thereafter. Similarly, a class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder that
made this election for a note that is acquired at a premium would be deemed to
have made an election to amortize bond premium for all debt instruments that the
noteholder owns as of the beginning of the taxable year for which the election
is made or later acquires. See "PREMIUM" later in this section. Each of these
elections to accrue interest, discount and premium for a note on a constant
yield method or as interest would be irrevocable.

                  For purposes of the foregoing discussion, market discount for
a note will be considered to be DE MINIMIS for purposes of section 1276 of the
Code if the market discount is less than 0.25% of the stated redemption price of
that note multiplied by the number of complete years to maturity remaining after
the date of its purchase. In interpreting a similar rule with respect to OID on
obligations payable in installments, the OID Regulations refer to the weighted
average maturity of obligations, and it is likely that the same rule will be
applied for market discount.

                  Section 1276(b)(3) of the Code specifically authorizes the
Treasury Department to issue regulations providing for the method for accruing
market discount on debt instruments, the principal of which is payable in more
than one installment. Until regulations are issued by the



                                     S-102
<PAGE>



Treasury Department, rules described in the Conference Committee Report
accompanying the Tax Reform Act of 1986 will apply. The Committee Report
indicates that in each accrual period market discount on notes should accrue, at
the option of the class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder:

                  o        on the basis of a constant yield method,

                  o        in the case of a note issued without OID, in an
                           amount that bears the same ratio to the total
                           remaining market discount as the stated interest paid
                           in the accrual period bears to the total amount of
                           stated interest remaining to be paid on the note as
                           of the beginning of the accrual period, or

                  o        in the case of a note issued with OID, in an amount
                           that bears the same ratio to the total remaining
                           market discount as the OID accrued in the accrual
                           period bears to the total OID remaining on the note
                           at the beginning of the accrual period.

                  Moreover, if the provisions of section 1272(a)(6) of the Code
apply to the notes, as described above for the use of a reasonable prepayment
assumption, the prepayment assumption used in calculating the accrual of OID
also would be used in calculating the accrual of market discount. Because the
regulations referred to in this paragraph have not been issued, it is not
possible to predict what effect such regulations might have on the tax treatment
of a note purchased at a discount in the secondary market. The prepayment
assumption used in calculating the accrual of OID, premium, market discount, if
any, will be equal to a CPR of 7%. We cannot predict whether the contracts will
prepay at that rate or at any other rate.

                  To the extent that notes provide for monthly or other periodic
payments throughout their term, the effect of these rules may be to require
market discount to be includible in income at a rate that is not significantly
slower than the rate at which such discount would accrue if it were OID.
Moreover, in any event, a class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder
generally will be required to treat a portion of any gain on the sale or
exchange of its note as ordinary income to the extent of the market discount
accrued to the date of disposition under one of the foregoing



                                     S-103
<PAGE>



methods, less any accrued market discount previously reported as ordinary
income.

                  PREMIUM. A note that is purchased at a cost, excluding any
portion of that cost attributable to accrued qualified stated interest, greater
than its remaining stated redemption price will be considered to be purchased at
a premium. A class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder may elect under
section 171 of the Code to amortize that premium under the constant yield method
over the life of the note. If made, that election will apply to all debt
instruments having amortizable bond premium that the noteholder owns as of the
beginning of the taxable year for which the election is made or thereafter
acquires. Amortizable premium will be treated as an offset to interest income on
the related debt instrument, with a corresponding reduction in the noteholder's
basis of the instrument, rather than as a separate interest deduction. The OID
Regulations also permit class A, class B, class C and class D noteholders to
elect to include all interest, discount and premium in income based on a
constant yield method, further treating the noteholder as having made the
election to amortize premium generally. See "MARKET DISCOUNT" at page S-101 of
this prospectus supplement. The Committee Report states that the same rules that
apply to accrual of market discount also will apply in amortizing bond premium
under section 171 of the Code. These rules might, as described above, require
use of a prepayment assumption in accruing market discount with respect to notes
without regard to whether those notes have OID. Bond premium on a note held by a
class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder who does not elect to offset the
premium will decrease the gain, or increase the loss, otherwise recognized on
the sale, redemption or other taxable disposition of the note.

                  REALIZED LOSSES. Under section 166 of the Code, both corporate
holders of notes and noncorporate holders of notes that acquire notes in
connection with a trade or business should be allowed to deduct, as ordinary
losses, any losses sustained during a taxable year in which their notes become
wholly or partially worthless as the result of one or more realized losses on
the contracts that are allocable to those notes. However, it appears that a
noncorporate holder that does not acquire a note in connection with its trade or
business will not be entitled to deduct a loss under section 166 of the Code
until that holder's note becomes wholly worthless, in other words, until its
outstanding principal balance has been reduced to zero, and that the loss will
be characterized as a short-term capital loss.




                                     S-104
<PAGE>



                  Each class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder will be
required to accrue OID, if any, and, if that holder uses an accrual method of
accounting for federal income tax purposes, interest for that note, without
giving effect to any reductions in distributions attributable to defaults or
delinquencies on the contracts until it can be established that any reduction of
that kind ultimately will not be recoverable. As a result, the amount of taxable
income reported in any period by the holder of a note could exceed the amount of
economic income actually realized by the holder in that period. Although the
holder of a note eventually will recognize a loss or reduction in income
attributable to previously accrued and included income that as the result of a
realized loss ultimately will not be realized, the law is unclear as to the
timing and character of such loss or reduction in income.

                  SALES OF NOTES. Except as described above for the market
discount rules, and except as provided under section 582(c) of the Code in the
case of banks and other financial institutions, any gain or loss, equal to the
difference between the amount realized on the sale and the adjusted basis of a
note, recognized on the sale or exchange of a note by an investor who holds that
note as a capital asset, will be capital gain or loss. However, a portion of any
gain that might otherwise be capital gain may be treated as ordinary income to
the extent that the note is held as part of a "conversion transaction" within
the meaning of section 1258 of the Code. A conversion transaction usually is one
in which the taxpayer has taken two or more positions in notes or similar
property that reduce or eliminate market risk, if substantially all of the
taxpayer's return is attributable to the time value of the taxpayer's net
investment in that transaction. The amount of gain realized in a conversion
transaction that may be recharacterized as ordinary income usually will not
exceed the amount of interest that would have accrued on the taxpayer's net
investment in such transaction at 120% of the appropriate "applicable Federal
rate," which rate is computed and published monthly by the IRS, subject to
appropriate reduction to reflect prior inclusion of interest or other ordinary
income items from the transaction, but the extent of that kind of reduction
would need to be provided for in regulations which have not yet been issued.

                  In addition, taxpayers other than corporations may elect to
have net capital gain taxed at ordinary income rates rather than capital gains
rates in order to include that net capital gain in total net investment income
for the taxable year, for purposes of the rule that limits the deduction of
interest on indebtedness incurred to purchase or carry property held for
investment to that



                                     S-105
<PAGE>



taxpayer's net investment income.

                  The adjusted basis of a note generally will equal its cost,
increased by any income previously reported, including any OID and market
discount income, by the selling class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder
and reduced, but not below zero, by any deduction previously allowed for losses
and any amortized premium and by any payments previously received for that note.
Principal payments on the note will be treated as amounts received upon a sale
or exchange of the note under the foregoing rules relating to OID.

                  INFORMATION REPORTING. The servicer is required to furnish or
cause to be furnished to each class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder
with each payment a statement setting forth the amount of that payment allocable
to principal on the note and to interest thereon. In addition, the servicer is
required to furnish or cause to be furnished, within a reasonable time after the
end of each calendar year, to each class A, class B, class C or class D
noteholder who was a holder at any time during that year, a report indicating
such other customary factual information as the servicer deems necessary to
enable holders of notes to prepare their tax returns and will furnish comparable
information to the IRS as and when required by law to do so. If the class A,
class B, class C or class D notes are issued with OID, the servicer will provide
or cause to be provided to the IRS and, as applicable, to the class A, class B,
class C or class D noteholder information statements with respect to OID as
required by the Code or as holders of those notes may reasonably request from
time to time. If the notes are issued with OID, those information reports, even
if otherwise accepted as accurate by the IRS, will in any event be accurate only
as to an initial class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder which purchased
its note at the initial offering price used in preparing those reports. Class A,
class B, class C or class D noteholders should consult their own tax advisors to
determine the amount of any OID and market discount includible in income during
a calendar year.

                  As applicable, the note information reports will include a
statement of the adjusted issue price of the notes at the beginning of each
accrual period. In addition, the reports will include information required by
regulations for computing the accrual of any market discount. Because exact
computation of the accrual of market discount on a constant yield method would
require information relating to the noteholder's purchase price that the
servicer will not have, such



                                     S-106
<PAGE>



regulations only require that information pertaining to the appropriate
proportionate method of accruing market discount be provided. See "MARKET
DISCOUNT" at page S-101 above.

                  FOREIGN INVESTORS. Any class A, class B, class C or class D
noteholder that is not a "United States person," as defined below, and is not
holding the note in connection with a United States trade or business generally
will not be subject to United States federal income or 30% withholding tax in
respect of interest, including any accrued OID, paid on a note, PROVIDED that
the class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder complies to the extent
necessary with certain identification requirements, including delivery of a
statement, such as a properly executed IRS Form W-8, signed by the class A,
class B, class C or class D noteholder under penalties of perjury, certifying
that the class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder is not a United States
person and providing the name and address of the class A, class B, class C or
class D noteholder. This exemption does not apply to payments of interest,
including payments in respect of any accrued OID, received by a class A, class
B, class C or class D noteholder that either:

                  o        owns directly or indirectly a 10% or greater interest
                           in the issuer,

                  o        is a bank that is treated as receiving that interest
                           "on an extension of credit made under a loan
                           agreement entered into in the ordinary course of its
                           trade or business,"

                  o        is a person within a foreign country which the IRS
                           has included in a list of countries that do not
                           provide adequate exchange of information with the
                           United States to prevent tax evasion by United States
                           persons, or

                  o        is a "controlled foreign corporation," within the
                           meaning of section 957 of the Code, with respect to
                           which the issuer is a "related person," within the
                           meaning of section 881(c)(3)(C) of the Code.

                  If the class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder does
not qualify for the foregoing exemption from withholding, payments of interest,
including payments relating to any accrued OID, to that class A, class B, class
C or class D noteholder may be subject to withholding



                                     S-107
<PAGE>



tax at a tax rate of 30%, subject to reduction, including exemption, under any
applicable tax treaty, PROVIDED the class A, class B, class C or class D
noteholder supplies at the time of its initial purchase, and at all subsequent
times as are required under the Treasury regulations, a properly executed IRS
Form 1001 to report its eligibility for that reduced rate or exemption.

                  Amounts allocable to interest, including any accrued OID,
received by a class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder that is not a
United States person, which constitute income that is effectively connected with
a United States trade or business carried on by the class A, class B, class C or
class D noteholder, will not be subject to withholding tax, but rather will be
subject to United States income tax at the graduated rates applicable to United
States persons, PROVIDED the class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder
supplies, at the time of its initial purchase, and at those subsequent times
that are required under the Treasury regulations, a written statement, such as a
properly executed IRS Form 4224, that the income is, or is expected to be,
effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business within the United
States of that holder and that this income is includible in the holder's gross
income for the taxable year. This statement must include, among other things,
the name and address of the class A, class B, class C or class D noteholder,
that holder's identifying number and the trade or business with which the income
is, or is expected to be, effectively connected.

                  In addition, the foregoing rules will not apply to exempt a
United States shareholder of a controlled foreign corporation from taxation on
the United States shareholder's allocable portion of the interest income
received by such controlled foreign corporation.

                  For purposes of this discussion, United States person means a
citizen or resident of the United States, a corporation, partnership or any
other entity created or organized in, or under the laws of, the United States or
any political subdivision thereof, except, in the case of a partnership, to the
extent provided in regulations, or an estate whose income is subject to United
States federal income tax regardless of its source, or a trust other than a
"foreign trust" as described in Section 7701(a)(31) of the Code. Class A, class
B, class C or class D noteholders who are not United States persons should
consult their own tax advisors regarding the tax consequences of purchasing,
owning or disposing of a note.




                                     S-108
<PAGE>



                  BACKUP WITHHOLDING. Payments of interest and principal, as
well as payments of proceeds from the sale of notes, may be subject to the
"backup withholding tax" under section 3406 of the Code at a rate of 31% if
recipients of those payments fail to furnish to the payor certain information,
including their taxpayer identification numbers, or otherwise fail to establish
an exemption from such tax. Any amounts deducted and withheld from a
distribution to a recipient would be allowed as a credit against that
recipient's federal income tax liability. Furthermore, certain penalties may be
imposed by the IRS on a recipient of payments that is required to supply
information but that does not do so in the proper manner. Information returns
will be sent annually to the IRS and each class A, class B, class C and class D
noteholder, listing the amount of interest paid on the notes and the amount of
any federal income tax withheld on the notes.

                  NEW WITHHOLDING REGULATIONS. The Treasury Department has
issued new regulations which make some modifications to the withholding and
information reporting rules described above. The new withholding regulations
attempt to unify certification requirements and modify reliance standards. The
new withholding regulations will generally be effective for payments made after
December 31, 2000, subject to some transition rules. Prospective investors are
urged to consult their tax advisors regarding the new withholding regulations.

                CERTAIN STATE, LOCAL AND OTHER TAX CONSIDERATIONS

                  Investors should consult their own tax advisors regarding
whether the purchase of the notes, either alone or in conjunction with an
investor's other activities, may subject an investor to any state or local taxes
based, for example, on an assertion that the investor is either "doing business"
in, or deriving income from a source located in, any state or local
jurisdiction. Additionally, potential investors should consider, and consult
their own tax advisors regarding, the state, local, foreign and other tax
consequences of purchasing, owning or disposing of a note. State, local and
foreign tax laws may differ substantially from the corresponding federal tax
law, and the discussion above does not purport to describe any aspect of the tax
laws of any state, local, foreign or other jurisdiction.

                  THE FEDERAL TAX CONSEQUENCES SET FORTH ABOVE ARE INCLUDED FOR
GENERAL INFORMATION ONLY AND MAY NOT BE APPLICABLE



                                     S-109
<PAGE>



DEPENDING UPON A CLASS A, CLASS B, CLASS C OR CLASS D NOTEHOLDER'S PARTICULAR
TAX SITUATION. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS SHOULD CONSULT THEIR TAX ADVISORS FOR THE
TAX CONSEQUENCES TO THEM OF THE PURCHASE, OWNERSHIP AND DISPOSITION OF THE
NOTES, INCLUDING THE TAX CONSEQUENCES UNDER STATE, LOCAL, FOREIGN AND OTHER TAX
LAWS AND THE POSSIBLE EFFECTS OF CHANGES IN FEDERAL OR OTHER TAX LAWS.

                    CONSIDERATIONS FOR BENEFIT PLAN INVESTORS

INVESTORS AFFECTED

                  A federal law called the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended, or "ERISA," the Code and a variety of state laws may
affect your decision whether to invest in Offered Notes if you are investing
for:

        o         a pension or other employee benefit plan of employers in the
                  private sector that are regulated under ERISA, referred to as
                  an "ERISA plan,"

        o         an individual retirement account or annuity, called an "IRA,"
                  or a pension or other benefit plan for self-employed
                  individuals, called a "Keogh plan,"

        o         a pension and other benefit plan for the employees of state
                  and local governments, called a "government plan," or

        o         an insurance company general or separate account, a bank
                  collective investment fund and other pooled investment vehicle
                  which includes the assets of ERISA plans, IRAs, Keogh plans,
                  and/or government plans.

A summary of the effects of those laws follows.




                                     S-110
<PAGE>



FIDUCIARY STANDARDS FOR ERISA PLANS AND RELATED INVESTMENT VEHICLES

                  ERISA imposes standards of fiduciary conduct on those who are
responsible for operating ERISA plans or investing their assets. These standards
include requirements that fiduciaries act prudently in making investment
decisions and diversify investments so as to avoid large losses unless under the
circumstances it is clearly prudent not to do so. If you are a fiduciary of an
ERISA plan, you are subject to these standards in deciding whether to invest the
plan's assets offered notes. You may find the full text of the applicable
standards of fiduciary conduct in section 404 of ERISA. If you are a fiduciary
of an ERISA Plan, you should consult with your advisors concerning your
investment decision in the context of section 404 of ERISA.

PROHIBITED TRANSACTION ISSUES FOR ERISA PLANS, KEOGH PLANS, IRAS AND RELATED
INVESTMENT VEHICLES

                  GENERAL. Certain transactions involving the assets of an ERISA
plan, a Keogh plan or an IRA, called "prohibited transactions," may result in
the imposition of excise taxes and, in the case of an ERISA plan, civil money
penalties. A prohibited transaction occurs when a person with a pre-existing
relationship to an ERISA plan or IRA, known as a "party in interest" or a
"disqualified person," engages in a transaction involving the assets of the plan
or IRA. You may find the laws applicable to prohibited transactions in section
406 of ERISA and section 4975 of the Code. There are statutory and regulatory
prohibited transaction exemptions, as well as administrative exemptions granted
by the United States Department of Labor. Prohibited transactions exemptions
waive the excise taxes and civil money penalties for some prohibited
transactions which are structured to satisfy prescribed conditions.

                  PURCHASE AND SALE OF OFFERED NOTES. If an ERISA plan, a Keogh
plan, an IRA or a related investment vehicle acquires offered notes from, or
sells offered notes to, a party in interest or a disqualified person, a
prohibited transaction may occur. In that case, the party in interest or
disqualified person might be liable for excise taxes unless a prohibited
transaction exemption is available. Where a prohibited transaction involves an
ERISA plan or related investment vehicle, the fiduciary who causes or permits
the prohibited transaction may also be liable for civil money penalties.



                                     S-111
<PAGE>



                  TRANSACTIONS INCIDENTAL TO THE OPERATION OF THE ISSUER.
Transactions involving the assets of the issuer may also give rise to prohibited
transactions to the extent that an investment in offered notes causes the assets
of the issuer to be considered assets, commonly known as "plan assets," of an
ERISA plan, a Keogh plan, an IRA or a related investment vehicle. Whether an
investment in notes will cause the issuer's assets to be treated as plan assets
depends on whether the offered notes are debt or equity investments for purposes
of ERISA. The United States Department of Labor has issued regulations, commonly
known as the "plan asset regulations," which define debt and equity investments.
The plan asset regulations appear at 29 C.F.R. ss.2510.3-101.

                  Under the plan asset regulations, the issuer's assets will not
be "plan assets" of an ERISA plan, Keogh plan, IRA or related investment vehicle
that purchases offered notes if the offered notes are considered debt. For this
purpose, the offered notes will be debt if they are treated as indebtedness
under applicable local law and do not have any substantial equity features.
The term "substantial equity features" has no definition under the plan asset
regulations. In the absence of such a definition, we cannot assure you that the
offered notes, either when they are issued or at any later date, will have no
substantial equity features. Thus, we cannot assure you that the offered notes
will be treated as debt.

                  To the extent that the offered notes do not constitute debt
for purposes of ERISA, they will constitute equity investments unless:

        o         the issuer is an operating company or a venture capital
                  operating company as defined in the plan asset regulations,

        o         the offered notes are "publicly offered securities" as defined
                  in the plan asset regulations,

        o         "benefit plan investors" as defined in the plan asset
                  regulations do not own 25% or more of the offered notes or any
                  other class of equity security issued by the issuer.


                  In this case, an ERISA plan, Keogh plan, IRA or related
investment vehicle that



                                     S-112
<PAGE>



acquires an offered note would also acquire an undivided interest in each asset
of the issuer. This would cause all of the issuer's assets to be plan assets
under the plan asset regulations. If the offered notes are treated as equity
investment under the plan asset regulations, we cannot assure you that any of
these exceptions will apply.

POSSIBLE EXEMPTIVE RELIEF

                  The United States Department of Labor issued Prohibited
Transaction Class Exemptions, or PTCEs, which conditionally waive the excise
taxes and civil money penalties that might otherwise apply to some types of
transactions. A PTCE's exemptive relief is available to any party to any
transaction which satisfies the conditions of the exemption. A partial listing
of the PTCEs which may be available for investments in offered notes follows.
Each of these exemptions is available only if specified conditions are satisfied
and may provide relief for some, but not all, of the prohibited transactions
that a particular transaction may cause. You should consult with your advisors
regarding the specific scope, terms and conditions of an exemption before
relying on that exemption's availability to you.

                  CLASS EXEMPTIONS FOR PURCHASES AND SALES OF OFFERED NOTES. The
following exemptions may apply to a purchase or sale of offered notes between an
ERISA plan, a Keogh plan, an IRA or related investment vehicle, on the one hand,
and a party in interest or disqualified person, on the other hand:

         o        PTCE 84-14, which exempts particular transactions approved on
                  behalf of the plan by a qualified professional asset manager,
                  or "QPAM."

         o        PTCE 86-128, which exempts certain transactions between a plan
                  and particular broker-dealers.

         o        PTCE 90-1, which exempts particular transactions entered into
                  by insurance company pooled separate accounts in which plans
                  have made investments.

         o        PTCE 91-38, which exempts particular transactions entered into
                  by bank collective



                                     S-113
<PAGE>



                  investment funds in which plans have made investments.

        o         PTCE 96-23, which exempts particular transactions approved on
                  behalf of a plan by an in-house investment manager, or
                  "INHAM."

These exemptions do not expressly address prohibited transactions that might
result from transactions incidental to the operation of the issuer. We cannot
assure you that a purchase or sale of offered notes in reliance on one of these
exemptions will not give rise to indirect prohibited transactions as a result of
the operation of the issuer for which there is no exemption.

                  CLASS EXEMPTION FOR PURCHASES AND SALES OF OFFERED NOTES AND
TRANSACTIONS INCIDENTAL TO THE OPERATION OF THE ISSUER. PTCE 95-60, which
exempts certain transactions involving insurance company general accounts, may
apply to purchases and sales of offered notes. It also provides express
exemptions for prohibited transactions that may result from transactions
incidental to the operation of the issuer. If this exemption applies to your
purchase or sale of offered notes, it will also apply to prohibited transaction
that may result from transactions incident to the operation of the issuer.

                  STATUTORY EXEMPTION FOR INSURANCE COMPANY GENERAL ACCOUNTS. In
addition to the Prohibited Transaction Class Exemptions described above, a
temporary statutory exemption may be available if you are investing on behalf of
an insurance company general account that includes plan assets. This exemption
appears in section 401(c) of ERISA. Under section 401(c) of ERISA, the United
States Department of Labor issued final regulations on January 5, 2000 defining
when an insurance company general account will be deemed to include plan assets
and, as a result, be subject to the ERISA prohibited transaction rules.
Generally, until July 5, 2001 (18 months after the issuance of the regulations),
no person will be subject to liability for prohibited transactions that result
from the inclusion of plan assets in an insurance company general account with
respect to policies issued on or before December 31, 1998. If you are investing
on behalf of an insurance company general account, section 401(c) generally
provides an exemption for your purchases and sales of offered notes, as well as
prohibited transactions resulting from transactions incident to the operation of
the issuer, until July 4, 2001. This will be the case as long as you have not
acted to avoid the regulations or committed a breach of fiduciary
responsibilities which would



                                     S-114
<PAGE>



also constitute a violation of federal or state criminal law. Any assets of an
insurance company general account which support insurance policies issued to a
plan after December 31, 1998 or for which the insurance company does not comply
with the regulations may be treated as plan assets. If you are investing on
behalf of an insurance company general account, we cannot assure that the
purchase or sale of offered notes, the continued holding of offered notes
previously purchased, or transactions incidental to the operation of the issuer,
on or after July 5, 2001, would qualify for further exemptive relief.

GOVERNMENT PLANS

                  Government plans are usually not subject to the fiduciary
standards of ERISA or the prohibited transaction rules of ERISA or the Code.
However, many states have enacted laws which established standards of fiduciary
conduct, legal investment rules, or other requirements for investment
transactions involving the assets of government plans. If you are considering
investing in the offered notes on behalf of a government plan, you should
consult with your advisors regarding the requirements of applicable state law.

REQUIRED REPRESENTATIONS OF INVESTORS

                  We anticipate that, on the date of this prospectus supplement,
the offered notes should be treated as indebtedness without substantial equity
features for purposes of the plan asset regulations. However, even if the
offered notes are treated as indebtedness for such purposes, the acquisition or
holding of offered notes by or on behalf of an ERISA plan, a Keogh plan, an IRA
or related investment vehicle could be considered to give rise to a prohibited
transaction. A prohibited transaction could arise if the issuer, the servicer,
the trustee, an underwriter or any of their respective affiliates is or becomes
a party in interest or disqualified person with respect to such ERISA plan,
Keogh plan, IRA or related investment vehicle, unless certain exemptions from
the prohibited transaction rules were applicable depending on the type and
circumstances of the plan fiduciary making the decision to acquire an offered
note. In addition, if offered notes were treated as an equity interest in the
future, the assets of the trust could be treated as plan assets of a plan for
the purposes of ERISA and the Code. In view of the investor-specific nature of
the conditions on the exemptive relief available under the PTCEs and section
401(c) of ERISA we



                                     S-115
<PAGE>



require each investor to determine whether it is investing plan assets in the
offered notes and, if it is, to determine that appropriate exemptive relief from
ERISA's prohibited transaction provisions is available. The offered notes will
be issued and transferred only in book-entry form through The Depository Trust
Company, whose issuance and transfer procedures do not permit us to secure
written representations from each investor and subsequent transferee. As a
result, by acquiring an offered note, each purchaser will be deemed to represent
that either:

        o         it is not acquiring the offered notes with the assets of an
                  ERISA plan, a Keogh plan, an IRA or related investment
                  vehicle, or

         o        the acquisition and holding of the offered notes will not give
                  rise to a nonexempt prohibited transaction under Section
                  406(a) of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code.

                  If a purchaser invests on behalf of more than one party or
uses more than one source of funds, that purchaser will be deemed to have made
one, but not necessarily the same, of these representations as to each party or
source of funds.

                  If the offered notes are issued as definitive securities, the
transfer of the offered notes to you will not be registered by the trustee
unless you represent to the issuer, the trustee, the servicer and any successor
servicer either one of the first two statements in the bulleted paragraph above
is an accurate representation as to all sources of funds you are using to pay
the purchase price of the offered notes.

                  THIS DISCUSSION IS A GENERAL DISCUSSION OF SOME OF THE RULES
WHICH APPLY TO ERISA PLANS, KEOGH PLANS, IRAS, GOVERNMENT PLANS AND THEIR
RELATED INVESTMENT VEHICLES. PRIOR TO MAKING AN INVESTMENT IN THE OFFERED NOTES,
PROSPECTIVE PLAN INVESTORS SHOULD CONSULT WITH THEIR LEGAL AND OTHER ADVISORS
CONCERNING THE IMPACT OF ERISA AND THE CODE, AND, PARTICULARLY IN THE CASE OF
GOVERNMENT PLANS AND RELATED INVESTMENT VEHICLES, ANY ADDITIONAL STATE LAW
CONSIDERATIONS, AND THE POTENTIAL CONSEQUENCES IN THEIR SPECIFIC CIRCUMSTANCES.



                                     S-116
<PAGE>



                                LEGAL INVESTMENT

                  The class A-1 notes will be eligible securities for purchase
by money market funds under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.

                                     RATINGS

                  As a condition to the issuance of the class A notes, the class
A-1 notes must be rated "F1+" by Fitch, Inc. and "P-1" by Moody's, the class A-2
notes, the class A-3 notes, and the class A-4 notes must be rated "AAA" or
"Aaa," as applicable, by the Rating Agencies, the class B notes must be rated
"AA" or "Aa3," as applicable, by the Rating Agencies, the class C notes must be
rated "A2" or "A," as applicable, by the Rating Agencies, and the class D notes
must be rated "BBB," or "Baa2," as applicable, by the Rating Agencies. A rating
on a security is not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold securities and may be
subject to revision or withdrawal at any time. The ratings assigned to the notes
address the likelihood of the receipt by class A noteholders, class B
noteholders, class C noteholders and class D noteholders of all distributions to
which such noteholders are entitled. The ratings assigned to the notes do not
represent any assessment of the likelihood that principal prepayments might
differ from those originally anticipated or address the possibility that class A
noteholders, class B noteholders, class C noteholders and class D noteholders
might suffer a lower than anticipated yield.

                                 USE OF PROCEEDS

                  The issuer will use the net proceeds from the sale of the
notes for general organizational purposes, to pay the purchase price of the
trust property to DVI Financial Services Inc. or an Affiliate thereof and to
make the required deposits in the reserve account. See "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES
AND PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- RESERVE ACCOUNT" at page S- 67 for a
description of the reserve account.




                                     S-117
<PAGE>



                                                PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

                  Subject to the terms and conditions of an underwriting
agreement the issuer has agreed to sell and the underwriters have severally
agreed to purchase, the class A notes, the class B notes, the class C notes and
the class D notes, in the principal amounts listed opposite their names:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                     PRINCIPAL     PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL
                     AMOUNT OF     AMOUNT OF      AMOUNT OF      AMOUNT OF     PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL
                     CLASS A-1     CLASS A-2      CLASS A-3      CLASS A-4     AMOUNT OF      AMOUNT OF      AMOUNT OF
UNDERWRITER            NOTES         NOTES          NOTES          NOTES     CLASS B NOTES  CLASS C NOTES  CLASS D NOTES
-----------            -----         -----          -----          -----     -------------  -------------  -------------
<S>                  <C>           <C>            <C>            <C>         <C>            <C>            <C>
Banc One Capital
Markets, Inc.

Merrill Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner &
Smith
Incorporated

Total
</TABLE>

                  In the underwriting agreement, the underwriters agree, subject
to the terms and conditions of the underwriting agreement, to purchase all the
class A notes, the class B notes, the class C notes and the class D notes
offered by this prospectus supplement in the amounts listed above if any of such
class A notes, class B notes, class C notes and class D notes are purchased.

                  The issuer has been advised by the underwriters that the
underwriters propose initially to offer the class A notes, class B notes, class
C notes and class D notes to the public at the respective public offering prices
listed on the cover page of this prospectus supplement, and to dealers at such
price less a discount not in excess of 0.105%, 0.135%, 0.240%, 0.255%, 0.240,%
0.240% and 0.270% per class A-1 note, class A-2 note, class A-3 note, class A-4
note, class B note, class C note and class D note, respectively. The
underwriters may allow and the dealers may reallow a discount not in excess of
0.050% per class A-1 note, 0.070% per class A-2 note, 0.120% per class A-3 note,
0.125% per class A-4 note, 0.120% per class B note, 0.120% per class C note and
0.135% per class D note to certain dealers. After the initial public offering,
the prices of the notes, any concessions and any discounts may vary.

                  The issuer has been advised by the underwriters that they
presently intend to make a market in the class A notes, the class B notes, the
class C notes and the class D notes. However, they are not obligated to do so,
any market-making may be discontinued at any time, and there can



                                     S-118
<PAGE>



be no assurance that an active public market for such notes will develop.

                  For further information regarding any offer or sale of the
class A notes, the class B notes, the class C notes and the class D notes under
this prospectus supplement, see "PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION" at page 28 of the
prospectus.

                  The underwriting agreement provides that DVI Financial
Services Inc. and DVI Receivables Corp. XII will indemnify the underwriters
against certain civil liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended, or contribute to payments the underwriters may be
required to make in respect thereof.

                  In connection with this offering and in compliance with
applicable law and industry practice, the underwriters may over-allot or effect
transactions which stabilize, maintain or otherwise affect the market price of
the class A notes, class B notes, class C notes and class D notes at a level
above that which might otherwise prevail in the open market, including
stabilizing bids, effecting syndicate covering transactions or imposing penalty
bids. A stabilizing bid means the placing of any bid or the effecting of any
purchase, for the purpose of pegging, fixing or maintaining the price of a
security. A syndicate covering transaction means the placing of any bid on
behalf of the underwriting syndicate or the effecting of any purchase to reduce
a short position created in connection with the offering. A penalty bid means an
arrangement that permits the underwriters to reclaim a selling concession from a
syndicate member in connection with the offering when the class A notes, class B
notes, class C notes and class D notes originally sold by the syndicate member
are purchased in syndicate covering transactions. The underwriters are not
required to engage in any of these activities. Any such activities, if
commenced, may be discontinued at any time.

                                  LEGAL MATTERS

                  Certain legal matters relating to the issuance of the notes
will be passed upon for the issuer, DVI Receivables Corp. XII and DVI Financial
Services Inc. by the general counsel to such parties, and by Thacher Proffitt &
Wood, New York, New York, special counsel to the underwriters.



                                     S-119
<PAGE>



                       WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT DOES NOT CONTAIN COMPLETE INFORMATION ABOUT THE
OFFERING OF THE NOTES. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION IS CONTAINED IN THE PROSPECTUS AND
PROSPECTIVE INVESTORS ARE URGED TO READ BOTH THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND THE
PROSPECTUS IN FULL. TO THE EXTENT THAT ANY STATEMENTS IN THIS PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT CONTAIN MORE SPECIFIC INFORMATION THAN STATEMENTS IN THE PROSPECTUS,
THE STATEMENTS IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT CONTROL.

                  For all notes offered by this prospectus supplement, there are
incorporated and in the related supplement to the indenture by reference all
documents and reports filed or caused to be filed by the issuer under to Section
13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act, prior to the termination of the
offering of the applicable notes, that relate specifically to the related series
of notes. The issuer will provide or cause to be provided without charge to each
person to whom this Prospectus supplement and the prospectus is delivered in
connection with offering of the notes, upon written or oral request of that
person, a copy of any or all of the reports incorporated in this prospectus
supplement by reference. In each case, information will be incorporated to the
extent those reports relate to one or more of classes of notes. This will not
include the exhibits to those documents, unless those exhibits are specifically
incorporated by reference in those documents. Please direct requests in writing
to the issuer at its address in the summary section of this prospectus
supplement.

                             REPORTS TO NOTEHOLDERS

                  Unless and until definitive securities are issued, periodic
and annual reports containing information concerning the trust property will be
prepared by the servicer and sent on behalf of the issuer only to the trustee
for the noteholders and Cede & Co., as registered holder of the notes and the
nominee of The Depository Trust Company. See "DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES AND
PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS -- BOOK-ENTRY REGISTRATION OF THE NOTES" at page
S-86 of this prospectus supplement, and "DESCRIPTION OF THE SECURITIES --
REPORTS TO SECURITYHOLDERS" at page



                                     S-120
<PAGE>



15 of the attached prospectus. These reports will not be prepared in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles. The issuer will file with the
Securities and Exchange Commission those periodic reports required under the
Exchange Act and as otherwise required by the Commission. Copies of any of these
periodic reports may be obtained from the Public Reference Section of the
Commission at 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., 20549, at prescribed
rates.



                                     S-121
<PAGE>



                                    GLOSSARY

                  When a term in this prospectus supplement begins with a
capital letter, it has the meaning described below:

                  AFFILIATE means, of any specified person, any other person (i)
which directly or indirectly controls, or whose directors or officers directly
or indirectly control, or is controlled by, or is under common control with,
that specified person, (ii) which beneficially owns or holds, or whose directors
or officers beneficially own or hold, 5% or more of any class of the voting
stock (or, in the case of an entity that is not a corporation, 5% of the equity
interest) of that specified person, or (iii) 5% or more of the voting stock (or,
in the case of an entity that is not a corporation, 5% of the equity interest)
of which is owned or held by that specified person. The term "control" means the
possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or cause the
direction of the management and policies of a person, whether through the
ownership of voting securities, by contract, or otherwise.

                  AGGREGATE DISCOUNTED CONTRACT BALANCE means the sum of the
Discounted Contract Balances of all contracts.

                  AMORTIZATION EVENT takes place when any one of the following
events occurs:

         (A)      a court with proper jurisdiction enters any kind of order
                  granting a so-called "involuntary" petition brought by third
                  parties against DVI, Inc. under any applicable federal or
                  state bankruptcy, etc., law and that order remains in effect
                  for a period of 90 consecutive days;

         (B)      DVI, Inc. commences or agrees to any kind of so-called
                  "voluntary" petition for relief under any federal or state
                  bankruptcy, etc., law;

         (C)      as of any determination date, the quotient of (1) divided by
                  (2) exceeds the product of (3) and (4), where (1) equals the
                  sum of the Discounted Contract Balances of all contracts
                  listed as more than 90 days delinquent as of the last day of
                  the three



                                     S-122
<PAGE>



                  immediately preceding calendar months; (2) equals three, (3)
                  equals 0.08 and (4) equals the quotient of (x) the sum of the
                  Aggregate Discounted Contract Balances as of the last day of
                  the three immediately preceding collection periods, divided by
                  (y) three; or

         (D)      as of any determination date, the sum of the Discounted
                  Contract Balances of all contracts that have been classified
                  as defaulted contracts since the closing date exceeds the
                  product of (1) 0.06 and (2) the Aggregate Discounted Contract
                  Balance on the closing date. Discounted Contract Balances will
                  be determined immediately prior to the classification as a
                  defaulted contract.

                  AVAILABLE FUNDS for any payment date, means the excess of all
amounts on deposit in the collection account on the second business day
preceding that payment date over that portion of those amounts representing
contract payments due, or voluntary prepayments deposited in the collection
account, after the end of the collection period preceding the payment date,
including any investment income with respect to monies on deposit in the
collection account.

                  AVAILABLE RESERVE ACCOUNT FUNDS are funds equal to the amount
of the Priority Payments less any deposited Available Funds.

                  CLASS A DISTRIBUTION SUB-ACCOUNT is the sub-account or
sub-accounts by that name established and maintained by the trustee under the
indenture.

                  CLASS A MONTHLY INTEREST means, for any payment date, the sum
of the Class A-1 Monthly Interest, Class A-2 Monthly Interest, Class A-3 Monthly
Interest and the Class A-4 Monthly Interest.

                  CLASS A MONTHLY PRINCIPAL means, for any payment date the sum
of the Class A-1 Monthly Principal, the Class A-2 Monthly Principal, the Class
A-3 Monthly Principal and the Class A-4 Monthly Principal due or payable on that
payment date.

                  CLASS A OVERDUE INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
excess, if any, of:



                                     S-123
<PAGE>




         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class A Monthly Interest payable on
                  all prior payment dates; over
         (B)      the aggregate amount of interest actually paid to the class A
                  noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS A OVERDUE PRINCIPAL means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of:
         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class A Monthly Principal due on the
                  class A notes on all prior payment dates; over
         (B)      the aggregate amount of principal actually paid to the class A
                  noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS A PERCENTAGE means a fraction the numerator of which is
the Class A Note Balance on the closing date and the denominator of which is the
Initial Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance.

                  CLASS A-1 MONTHLY INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
product of:

         (A)      the fraction of which the numerator is the actual number of
                  days elapsed during the related month (or, in the case of the
                  first payment date, the actual number of days elapsed since
                  the closing date) and the denominator of which is 360 days;
         (B)      the class A-1 Note Rate; and
         (C)      the class A-1 Note Balance on the immediately preceding
                  payment date (or, in the case of the first payment date, the
                  closing date) after giving effect to all principal payments on
                  the class A-1 notes on that prior payment date.

                  The Class A-1 Monthly Interest, with respect to each payment
                  date, accrues from and including the prior payment date to but
                  excluding such payment date, and with respect to the initial
                  payment date, accrues from and including the closing date to,
                  but excluding, that payment date.




                                     S-124
<PAGE>



                  CLASS A-1 MONTHLY PRINCIPAL means:
         (A)      for any payment date other than the class A-1 stated maturity
                  date, an amount equal to the product of (a) the Class A
                  Percentage and (b) the Monthly Principal; PROVIDED, HOWEVER,
                  that in no event shall the Class A-1 Monthly Principal exceed
                  the then outstanding Note Balance for the Class A-1 notes as
                  of such payment date and
         (B)      on the class A-1 stated maturity date, the entire amount of
                  the then Outstanding Class A-1 Note Balance.

                  CLASS A-1 NOTE RATE means ____%.

                  CLASS A-1 OVERDUE INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of:
         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class A-1 Monthly Interest payable on
                  all prior payment dates; over
         (B)      the aggregate amount of interest actually paid to the class
                  A-1 noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS A-1 OVERDUE PRINCIPAL means, as for any payment date,
the excess, if any, of:
         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class A-1 Monthly Principal due on the
                  class A-1 notes on all prior payment dates; over
         (B)      the aggregate amount of principal actually paid to the class
                  A-1 noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS A-2 MONTHLY INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         product of:
         (A)      one-twelfth,
         (B)      the Class A-2 Note Rate and
         (C)      the Class A-2 Note Balance on the immediately preceding
                  payment date (or, in the case of the first payment date, the
                  closing date) after giving effect to all principal payments on
                  the class A-2 notes on that prior payment date.

                  The Class A-2 Monthly Interest is calculated on a twelve month
                  year of thirty days in each month, except for the first
                  payment date, for which interest accrues from the



                                     S-125
<PAGE>



                  closing date to, but excluding, that payment date.

                  CLASS A-2 MONTHLY PRINCIPAL means:
         (A)      prior to the payment date upon which the Class A-1 Note
                  Balance is paid in full, zero,
         (B)      on any payment date on and after which the Class A-1 Note
                  Balance has been reduced to zero and until the Class A-2 Note
                  Balance is paid in full, the product of (x) the Class A
                  Percentage and (y) the Monthly Principal, and
         (C)      on the class A-2 stated maturity date, the entire amount of
                  the then outstanding Class A-2 Note Balance.

                  CLASS A-2 NOTE RATE means ____%.

                  CLASS A-2 OVERDUE INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of:
         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class A-2 Monthly Interest payable on
                  all prior payment dates; over
         (B)      the aggregate amount of interest actually paid to the class
                  A-2 noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS A-2 OVERDUE PRINCIPAL means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of:
         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class A-2 Monthly Principal due on the
                  class A-2 notes on all prior payment dates; over
         (B)      the aggregate amount of principal actually paid to the class
                  A-2 noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS A-3 MONTHLY INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         product of:
         (A)      one-twelfth,
         (B)      the Class A-3 Note Rate, and
         (C)      the Class A-3 Note Balance on the immediately preceding
                  payment date (or, in the case of the first payment date, the
                  closing date) after giving effect to all principal payments on
                  the class A-3 notes on that prior payment date.




                                     S-126
<PAGE>



                  The Class A-3 Monthly Interest is calculated based upon a
                  twelve month year of thirty days in each month, except for the
                  first payment date, for which interest accrues from the
                  closing date to, but excluding, that payment date.

                  CLASS A-3 MONTHLY PRINCIPAL means:
         (A)      prior to the payment date upon which the Class A-2 Note
                  Balance is paid in full, zero,
         (B)      on any payment date on and after which the Class A-2 Note
                  Balance has been reduced to zero and until the Class A-3 Note
                  Balance is paid in full, the product of (x) the Class A
                  Percentage and (y) the Monthly Principal, and
         (C)      on the class A-3 stated maturity date, the entire amount of
                  the then outstanding Class A-3 Note Balance.

                  CLASS A-3 NOTE RATE means ____%.

                  CLASS A-3 OVERDUE INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of:
         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class A-3 Monthly Interest payable on
                  all prior payment dates; over
         (B)      the aggregate amount of interest actually paid to the class
                  A-3 noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS A-3 OVERDUE PRINCIPAL means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of:
         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class A-3 Monthly Principal due on the
                  class A-3 notes on all prior payment dates; over
         (B)      the aggregate amount of principal actually paid to the class
                  A-3 noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS A-4 MONTHLY INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         product of:
         (A)      one-twelfth,
         (B)      the Class A-4 Note Rate and
         (C)      the Class A-4 Note Balance on the immediately preceding
                  payment date (or, in the case of the first payment date, the
                  closing date) after giving effect to all principal



                                     S-127
<PAGE>



                  payments on the class A-4 notes on that prior payment date.

                  The Class A-4 Monthly Interest is calculated based upon a
                  twelve month year of thirty days in each month, except for the
                  first payment date, for which interest accrues from the
                  closing date to, but excluding, that payment date.

                  CLASS A-4 MONTHLY PRINCIPAL means:
         (A)      prior to the payment date upon which the Class A-3 Note
                  Balance is paid in full, zero,
         (B)      on any payment date on and after which the Class A-3 Note
                  Balance has been reduced to zero and until the Class A-4 Note
                  Balance is paid in full, the product of (x) the Class A
                  Percentage and (y) the Monthly Principal, and
         (C)      on the Class A-4 stated maturity date, the entire amount of
                  the then outstanding Class A-4 Note Balance.

                  CLASS A-4 NOTE RATE means ____%.

                  CLASS A-4 OVERDUE INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of
         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class A-4 Monthly Interest payable on
                  all prior payment dates over
         (B)      the aggregate amount of interest actually paid to the class
                  A-4 noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS A-4 OVERDUE PRINCIPAL means, for any payment dates, the
         excess, if any, of
         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class A-4 Monthly Principal due on the
                  class A-4 notes on all prior payment dates over
         (B)      the aggregate amount of principal actually paid to the class
                  A-4 noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS B DISTRIBUTION SUB-ACCOUNT is the sub-account or
sub-accounts by that name established and maintained by the trustee under the
indenture.




                                     S-128
<PAGE>



                  CLASS B MONTHLY INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         product of

         (A)      one-twelfth,

         (B)      the Class B Note Rate and

         (C)      the Class B Note Balance on the immediately preceding payment
                  date, or, in the case of the first payment date, the closing
                  date, after giving effect to all principal payments on the
                  class B notes on that prior payment date.

                  The Class B Monthly Interest is calculated based upon a twelve
                  month year of thirty days in each month, except for the first
                  payment date, for which interest shall accrue from the closing
                  date to, but excluding, that payment date.

                  CLASS B MONTHLY PRINCIPAL means:

         (A)      on any payment date other than the Class B stated maturity
                  date, the product of (x) the Class B Percentage and (y) the
                  Monthly Principal, and

         (B)      on the Class B stated maturity date, the entire amount of the
                  then outstanding Class B Note Balance.

                  CLASS B NOTE RATE means ____%.

                  CLASS B OVERDUE INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of

         (A) the aggregate amount of Class B Monthly Interest payable on all
prior payment dates over

         (B) the aggregate amount of interest actually paid to the class B
noteholders on all prior payment dates.




                                     S-129
<PAGE>



                  CLASS B OVERDUE PRINCIPAL means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of

         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class B Monthly Principal due on the
                  class B notes on all prior payment dates over

         (B)      the aggregate amount of principal actually paid to the class B
                  noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS B PERCENTAGE means a fraction the numerator of which is
the Class B Note Balance on the closing date and the denominator of which is the
Initial Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance.

                  CLASS C DISTRIBUTION SUB-ACCOUNT is the sub-account or
sub-accounts by that name established and maintained by the trustee under the
indenture.

                  CLASS C MONTHLY INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         product of

         (A)      one-twelfth,

         (B)      the Class C Note Rate and

         (C)      the Class C Note Balance on the immediately preceding payment
                  date, or, in the case of the first payment date, the closing
                  date, after giving effect to all principal payments on the
                  class C note on that prior payment date.

                  The Class C Monthly Interest shall be calculated based upon a
                  twelve month year of thirty days in each month, except for the
                  first payment date, for which interest shall accrue from the
                  closing date to, but excluding, that payment date.

                  CLASS C MONTHLY PRINCIPAL means:
         (A)      on any payment date other than the Class C stated maturity
                  date, an amount equal to the product of (x) the Class C
                  Percentage and (y) the Monthly Principal, and



                                     S-130
<PAGE>



         (B)      on the class C stated maturity date, the entire amount of the
                  then outstanding Class C Note Balance.

                  CLASS C NOTE RATE means ____%.

                  CLASS C OVERDUE INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of

         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class C Monthly Interest payable on
                  all prior payment dates over

         (B)      the aggregate amount of interest actually paid to the class C
                  noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS C OVERDUE PRINCIPAL means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of

         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class C Monthly Principal due on the
                  class C notes on all prior payment dates over

         (B)      the aggregate amount of principal actually paid to the class C
                  noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS C PERCENTAGE means a fraction the numerator of which is
the Class C Note Balance on the closing date and the denominator of which is the
Initial Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance.

                  CLASS D DISTRIBUTION SUB-ACCOUNT is the sub-account or
sub-accounts by that name established and maintained by the trustee under the
indenture.

                  CLASS D MONTHLY INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         product of

         (A)      one-twelfth,




                                     S-131
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         (B)      the Class D Note Rate, and

         (C)      the Class D Note Balance on the immediately preceding payment
                  date, or in the case of the first payment date, the closing
                  date, after giving effect to all principal payments on the
                  class D notes on that prior payment date.

                  The Class D Monthly Interest shall be calculated based upon a
                  twelve month year of thirty days in each month, except for the
                  first payment date, for which interest shall accrue from the
                  closing date to, but excluding, that payment date.

                  CLASS D MONTHLY PRINCIPAL means:

         (A)      on any payment date other than the class D stated maturity
                  date, the product of (x) the Class D Percentage and (y) the
                  Monthly Principal, and

         (B)      on the Class D stated maturity date, the entire amount of the
                  then outstanding Class D Note Balance.

                  CLASS D NOTE RATE means ____%.

                  CLASS D OVERDUE INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of

         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class D Monthly Interest payable on
                  all prior payment dates over

         (B)      the aggregate amount of interest actually paid to the class D
                  noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS D OVERDUE PRINCIPAL means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of

         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class D Monthly Principal due on the
                  class D notes on all prior payment dates over



                                     S-132
<PAGE>



         (B)      the aggregate amount of principal actually paid to the class D
                  noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS D PERCENTAGE means a fraction the numerator of which is
the Class D Note Balance on the closing date and the denominator of which is the
Initial Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance.

                  CLASS E DISTRIBUTION SUB-ACCOUNT is the sub-account or
sub-accounts by that name established and maintained by the trustee under the
indenture.

                  CLASS E MONTHLY INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         product of

         (A)      one-twelfth,

         (B)      the Class E Note Rate, and

         (C)      the Class E Note Balance on the immediately preceding payment
                  date, or in the case of the first payment date, the closing
                  date, after giving effect to all principal payments on the
                  class E note on that prior payment date.

                  The Class E Monthly Interest shall be calculated based upon a
                  twelve month year of thirty days in each month, except for the
                  first payment date, for which interest shall accrue from the
                  closing date to, but excluding, that payment date.

                  CLASS E MONTHLY PRINCIPAL means:

         (A)      on any payment date other than the class E stated maturity
                  date, an amount equal to the product of (x) the Class E
                  Percentage and (y) the Monthly Principal and

         (B)      on the class E stated maturity date, the entire amount of the
                  then outstanding Class E Note Balance.




                                     S-133
<PAGE>



                  CLASS E NOTE RATE means _____%.

                  CLASS E OVERDUE INTEREST means, for any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of

         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class E Monthly Interest payable on
                  all prior payment dates over

         (B)      the aggregate amount of interest actually paid to the class E
                  noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS E OVERDUE PRINCIPAL means, as of any payment date, the
         excess, if any, of

         (A)      the aggregate amount of Class E Monthly Principal due on the
                  class E notes on all prior payment dates over

         (B)      the aggregate amount of principal actually paid to the class E
                  noteholders on all prior payment dates.

                  CLASS E PERCENTAGE means a fraction the numerator of which is
the Class E Note Balance on the closing date and the denominator of which is the
Initial Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance.

                  DELINQUENCY CONDITION exists on any determination date if (x)
the quotient of (1) the sum of the Discounted Contract Balances of all contracts
listed as more than ninety days delinquent as of the last day of the three
preceding calendar months, divided by (2) three exceeds (y) the product of (1)
0.06 and (2) the quotient of (A) the sum of the Aggregate Discounted Contract
Balance as of the last day of the three preceding collection periods, divided by
(B) three.

                  DISCOUNTED CONTRACT BALANCE means, for any contract for the
particular date on which that balance is determined, an amount equal to the sum
of:

         (A)      the present value of each remaining contract payment remaining
                  due under the



                                     S-134
<PAGE>



                  contract before the last day of the calendar month preceding
                  the stated maturity date, discounted monthly, from the last
                  day of the collection period in which that contract payment is
                  to become due, at a rate equal to one-twelfth, or a larger
                  fraction for the initial payment date, of the Discount Rate,
                  and

         (B)      100% of the unpaid balance, for that particular date of
                  determination, of contract payments remaining due under that
                  contract, but not including any contract payment for which the
                  servicer had to make a Servicer Advance. However, except for
                  purposes of computing the Repurchase Amount or for computing
                  the Discounted Contract Balance of a Predecessor Contract,

                           (1)      on the date a contract becomes a defaulted
                                    contract, the Discounted Contract Balance
                                    for that contract will be zero and

                           (2)      any purchase option payments will not be
                                    included in the Discounted Contract Balance.
                                    For purposes of calculating the Discounted
                                    Contract Balance of a contract, any contract
                                    payment relating to a contract for which DVI
                                    Financial Services Inc. received on or prior
                                    to the cut-off date a security deposit or an
                                    advance payment shall be deemed to be zero.

                  DISCOUNT RATE is a per annum rate that we apply to the then
outstanding scheduled payments due on a contract to calculate the value in
today's dollars of all outstanding scheduled future payments on a contract. When
we use Discount Rate with respect to the charts and statistical contracts in
this prospectus supplement as of the cut-off date, we use an assumed Discount
Rate of 7.75% per annum. Any other time we use Discount Rate, we are using the
actual rate of _______%.

                  ELIGIBLE CONTRACT: means a contract that, on the day that the
issuer acquires that contract, and for the initial contracts taken as a whole,
has the following characteristics:

         (A)      the Discounted Contract Balance of that contract does not
                  include any purchase



                                     S-135
<PAGE>



                  option payment under that contract, or any contract payment
                  for which DVI Financial Services Inc. or anyone else received
                  a security deposit on or before the cut-off date for that
                  contract;

         (B)      no item of equipment under that contract has been repossessed;

         (C)      no contract is a refinancing of any delinquent amounts under a
                  prior lease, security agreement or loan with the same obligor
                  relating to the same equipment;

         (D)      the obligor under each contract has a place of business in, or
                  is organized under, the laws of any state or territory of the
                  United States of America;

         (E)      the rights and obligations of the obligor under that contract
                  will terminate no later than October 31, 2007;

         (F)      the Discounted Contract Balance of all contracts that have a
                  balloon payment, (which means a final contract payment that is
                  significantly larger than the other scheduled payments) is not
                  more than 10.77% of the Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance
                  of all the initial contracts. Any balloon payment must not be
                  more than six and a half times larger than the average
                  contract payment on that contract;

         (G)      the Discounted Contract Balance of all contracts that have
                  non-level payments, excluding contracts that have balloon
                  payments, is not more than 39.33% of the Aggregate Discounted
                  Contract Balance of all the initial contracts;

         (H)      as of the closing date

                  o        the sum of the Discounted Contract Balances of all
                           contracts with equipment located in any one state
                           will not exceed 11.95% of the Aggregate Discounted
                           Contract Balance of all the initial contracts,

                  o        no single obligor will have a Discounted Contract
                           Balance that exceeds



                                     S-136
<PAGE>



                           2.62% of the Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance,

                  o        and the sum of the Discounted Contract Balances of
                           the largest five obligors does not exceed 11.79% of
                           the Aggregate Discounted Principal Contract Balance
                           of all the contracts acquired by the issuer on the
                           closing date;

         (I)      not more than 10% of the Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance
                  of the initial contracts will arise from contracts which
                  constitute loans to manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers;
                  and

         (J)      the obligor under each contract has made at least one contract
                  payment prior to the cut-off date for that contract in
                  addition to any payment made at the time of the signing of the
                  contract. However, we allow contracts representing 7% of the
                  Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance of the initial contracts
                  to provide for the initial contract payment to be due within
                  30 days of the payment date occurring in December, 2000.

                  INITIAL AGGREGATE DISCOUNTED CONTRACT BALANCE means the
Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance, of the initial contracts, on the cut-off
date, calculated based on the assumed Discount Rate of 7.75%.

                  INITIAL RESERVE ACCOUNT REQUIRED AMOUNT is $____________ which
equals 1.5% of the Initial Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance.

                  MONTHLY INTEREST means for any payment date, the sum of

         (A)      the Class A Monthly Interest,

         (B)      the Class B Monthly Interest,

         (C)      the Class C Monthly Interest,




                                     S-137
<PAGE>



         (D)      the Class D Monthly Interest, and

         (E)      the Class E Monthly Interest.

                  MONTHLY PRINCIPAL means, for any payment date, an amount equal
         to the excess of

         (A)      the Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance at the close of
                  business on the last day of the second preceding collection
                  period over

         (B)      the Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance at the close of
                  business on the last day of the immediately preceding
                  collection period.

                  NONRECOVERABLE ADVANCE means any Servicer Advance previously
made for a delinquent contract by the servicer under the terms of the
contribution and servicing agreement, which in the good faith judgment of the
servicer and as certified by an officer of the servicer, will not be ultimately
recoverable by the servicer from payments by the obligor, or disposition of the
equipment, under that contract.

                  NOTE BALANCE means, on the closing date, $___________ for the
class A notes cumulatively (and, with respect to each class of class A notes,
$__________ for the class A-1 notes, $__________ for the class A-2 notes,
$__________ for the class A-3 notes and $__________ for the class A-4 notes),
$_________ for the class B notes, $_________ for the class C notes, $_________
for the class D notes and $_________ for the class E notes and thereafter shall
equal the note balance for each class reduced by all principal payments on that
class of notes.

                  NOTE RATE means the annualized rate of interest on the
relevant class of notes.

                  OUTSTANDING or OUTSTANDING means, when used with reference to
the notes and as of any particular date, any note theretofore and thereupon
being authenticated and delivered except:

         (A)      any note canceled by the trustee at or before said date;



                                     S-138
<PAGE>



         (B)      any note, or portion thereof, for payment of redemption of
                  which monies equal to the principal amount or redemption price
                  thereof, as the case may be, with interest to the date of
                  maturity or redemption, shall have theretofore been
                  irrevocably deposited with the trustee (whether upon or prior
                  to maturity or the redemption date of such note);

         (C)      any note in lieu of or in substitution for which another note
                  shall have been authenticated and delivered; and

         (D)      any note owned by DVI Receivables Corp. XII or any affiliate
                  of DVI Receivables Corp. XII, except that, in determining
                  whether the trustee shall be entitled to rely upon any
                  request, demand, authorization, direction, notice, consent or
                  waiver of noteholders under the indenture, only notes which
                  the trustee knows to be so owned shall be disregarded.

                  OVERDUE INTEREST means, for any payment date, the sum of (i)
the Class A Overdue Interest, (ii) the Class B Overdue Interest, (iii) the Class
C Overdue Interest, (iv) the Class D Overdue Interest and (v) the Class E
Overdue Interest.

                  PARTIAL PREPAYMENT AMOUNT means, for a particular collection
period and a contract for which the obligor wants to make a voluntary partial
prepayment and for which no substitute contract has been provided, an amount
equal to the excess, if any, of:

         (A)      the difference between:

                  (1) the Discounted Contract Balance of that contract as of the
                  first day of the collection period together with one month of
                  interest on that contract at the Discount Rate and

                  (2) the Discounted Contract Balance of that contract as of the
                  first day of the collection period calculated based on the
                  amount of each remaining contract payment payable by the
                  obligor after giving effect to the reduction of the contract



                                     S-139
<PAGE>



                  payment which will result from the partial prepayment, minus

         (B)      any contract payments actually received by the servicer for
                  the prepaid portion of the contract for the current collection
                  period on or before the date of the partial prepayment.

                  PARTIAL REDEMPTION PRICE means, with respect to any note
offered under this prospectus supplement, and as of any date of partial
redemption fixed by the issuer, an amount equal to the sum of (x) the product of
(i) the quotient of (A) the Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance of the
contracts in Pool B as of that date of partial redemption, divided by (B) the
Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance as of that date of partial redemption and
(ii) the outstanding Note Balance of such note offered under this prospectus
supplement and (y) interest accrued on that note to, but not including, such
redemption date at the applicable Note Rate.

                  POOL A means the contracts identified as constituting Pool A
on the contract schedule attached to the contribution and servicing agreement
and the indenture and other trust property related to the contracts.

                  POOL A AGGREGATE DISCOUNTED CONTRACT BALANCE means an interest
in, for any date of determination, the sum of the Discounted Contract Balances
of all contracts in Pool A.

                  POOL B means the contracts identified on the contract schedule
as constituting Pool B, and other trust property related to the contracts.

                  POOL B AGGREGATE DISCOUNTED CONTRACT BALANCE means, for any
date of determination, the sum of the Discounted Contract Balances of all
contracts in Pool B.

                  PREDECESSOR CONTRACT means, for any substitute contract
acquired by DVI Receivables Corp. XII by substitution under Section 7 of the
contribution and servicing agreement, the contract or contracts for which the
substitute contract has been substituted.

                  PREPAYMENT AMOUNT means, for any contract, the sum of



                                     S-140
<PAGE>



         (A)      the Discounted Contract Balance as of the first day of the
                  collection period preceding a prepayment, together with one
                  month of interest on the contract at the Discount Rate;

         (B)      any unreimbursed Servicer Advances for the contract; and

         (C)      any contract payments due and outstanding under a contract
                  that are not the subject of a Servicer Advance.

                  PRIORITY PAYMENTS mean, on any payment date, the sum of all
payments of interest and principal to the class A, class B, class C, class D and
class E noteholders, whether or not an Amortization Event has taken place.

                  REPURCHASE AMOUNT means, for any contract, the sum of:

         (A)      the Discounted Contract Balance as of the first day of the
                  collection period preceding such repurchase, together with one
                  month of interest on the contract at the Discount Rate; and

         (B)      any unreimbursed Servicer Advances for the contract.

                  RESERVE ACCOUNT DEPOSIT AMOUNT means, on any payment date, an
amount equal to the excess of (A) the Reserve Account Required Amount over (B)
the amount on deposit in the reserve account after giving effect to any reserve
account draws on that payment date.

                  RESERVE ACCOUNT REQUIRED AMOUNT means, on the first payment
date, the Initial Reserve Account Acquired Amount; and thereafter the lesser of
either (i) the Initial Reserve Account Required Amount or (ii) the sum of (a)
the Class A Note Balance, (b) the Class B Note Balance, (c) the Class C Note
Balance, (d) the Class D Note Balance and (e) the Class E Note Balance. HOWEVER,
for each payment date while a Restricting Event has occurred and is continuing,
the Reserve Account Required Amount shall be equal to the sum of (i) the Reserve
Account Required Amount on the preceding payment date after any additions to or
withdrawals from the



                                     S-141
<PAGE>



reserve account on that payment date and (ii) all amounts otherwise payable to
the issuer on that payment date.

                  RESTRICTING EVENT means the condition that exists on any
payment date if: (i) a Delinquency Condition exists or (ii) an event of default
pursuant to the indenture has occurred and is continuing.

                  SERVICER ADVANCE means an advance made for a contract by the
servicer in accordance with Section 5.01 of the contribution and servicing
agreement.

                  SUBORDINATION DEFICIENCY EVENT occurs when the Class A Note
Balance is greater than the Aggregate Discounted Contract Balance on the date of
determination.

                  VOTING RIGHTS means, the votes of class A-1 noteholders,
measured by the amount then held by each of them of the Class A-1 Note Balance
outstanding at that time. Once all class A-1 notes are no longer outstanding,
"Voting Rights" means the votes of the class A-2 noteholders, measured by the
amount then held by each of them of the Class A-2 Note Balance outstanding at
that time. Once all class A-2 notes are no longer outstanding, "Voting Rights"
means the votes of the class A-3 noteholders measured by the amount then held by
each of them of the Class A-3 Note Balance outstanding at that time. Once all
class A-3 notes are no longer outstanding, "Voting Rights" means the notes of
the class A-4 noteholders measured by the amount then held by each of them of
the Class A-4 Note Balance outstanding at that time. Once all class A notes are
no longer outstanding, "Voting Rights" means the votes of class B noteholders,
measured by the amount then held by each of them of the Class B Note Balance
outstanding at that time. Once all class B notes are no longer outstanding,
"Voting Rights" means the votes of the class C noteholders, measured by the
amount then held by each of them of the Class C Note Balance outstanding at that
time. Once all class C notes are no longer outstanding, "Voting Rights" means
the votes of the class D noteholders, measured by the amount then held by each
of them of the Class D Note Balance outstanding at that time. Once all class D
notes are no longer outstanding, "Voting Rights" means the votes of the class E
noteholders measured by the amount then held by each of them of the Class E Note
Balance outstanding at that time.




                                     S-142

<PAGE>

PROSPECTUS                                                      January 12, 2000


                   ASSET BACKED SECURITIES ISSUABLE IN SERIES

DVI RECEIVABLES CORP. VIII                           DVI FINANCIAL SERVICES INC.
    [Owner of] Issuer                                         Servicer

                             THE OFFERED SECURITIES

     Our securities will be either notes or certificates issued either by us,
DVI Receivables Corp. VIII, or by one or more subsidiaries that we may create.
We will collateralize our securities with assets that the issuer of those
securities owns. Our securities may be sold from time to time in one or more
series. Each series of our securities may include one or more classes of
securities. You can find information regarding the securities of a series and
any classes of that series in a supplement to this prospectus.

                       THE UNDERWRITING OF THE SECURITIES

     The underwriters described in the "PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION" section in this
prospectus and in a prospectus supplement may use one or more different methods
to offer our securities. These offerings are more fully described under the
"PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION" section in this prospectus and in the related prospectus
supplement.

PROSPECTIVE INVESTORS SHOULD CONSIDER THE FACTORS DESCRIBED UNDER "RISK FACTORS"
               IN THE RELATED PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT ON PAGE S-8.

     THE INFORMATION IN THIS PROSPECTUS IS NOT COMPLETE AND MAY BE CHANGED. WE
MAY NOT SELL THESE SECURITIES UNTIL THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT FILED WITH THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION IS EFFECTIVE. THIS PROSPECTUS IS NOT AN OFFER
TO SELL THESE SECURITIES AND IT IS NOT SOLICITING AN OFFER TO BUY THESE
SECURITIES IN ANY STATE WHERE THE OFFER OR SALE IS NOT PERMITTED.




                                        i

<PAGE>



                                                 TABLE OF CONTENTS

RISK FACTORS...................................................................1

LOCATION OF GLOSSARY...........................................................1

THE SECURITIES.................................................................1

THE TRUST PROPERTY.............................................................2

USE OF PROCEEDS................................................................4

INFORMATION ABOUT THE ISSUERS..................................................4

ABOUT US-- DVI RECEIVABLES CORP. VIII..........................................4

INFORMATION ABOUT OUR PARENT-- DVI FINANCIAL SERVICES INC......................6
    DVI Financial Services Inc.'s Credit Underwriting and Review Process.......6
    Portfolio Monitoring and Credit Collections...............................11

THE TRUSTEE...................................................................11

THE CONTRACTS.................................................................12
    Description of the Pool of Contracts for Each Series of Securities........12
    Delinquencies, Repossessions, and Net Losses..............................12
    Maturity and Prepayment Considerations....................................13

DESCRIPTION OF THE SECURITIES.................................................13
    General  .................................................................13
    General Payment Terms of the Securities...................................14
    Book-Entry Registration; Definitive Securities............................15
    Reports to Securityholders................................................15

DESCRIPTION OF THE PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS............................17
    Transfer of the Contracts under a Contribution and Servicing Agreement,
       a Sale Agreement or a Subsequent Contract Transfer Agreement...........17
    The Transactional Bank Accounts...........................................17
    The Servicing Procedure...................................................20
    Payments by the Servicer..................................................20
    Servicing Compensation....................................................21
    Distributions on the Securities...........................................22
    The Credit Enhancement....................................................22
    Resignation, Liability and Merger of Servicer.............................23
    Servicer Defaults.........................................................23
    Rights upon a Servicer Default............................................24
    Events of Default under the Transaction Documents.........................25
    Amendment of the Transaction Documents....................................25
    Termination of the Transaction Documents..................................26

LEGAL MATTERS AFFECTING AN OBLIGOR'S RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS...................27

MATERIAL FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES......................................28

ERISA CONSIDERATIONS..........................................................28

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION..........................................................28

LEGAL MATTERS.................................................................30



                                       ii

<PAGE>



FINANCIAL INFORMATION ABOUT US................................................30

WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION...........................................30

INCORPORATION OF DOCUMENTS BY REFERENCE.......................................31



                                       iii

<PAGE>



                                  RISK FACTORS

     You should read and consider, among other things, the risks to holders of
our securities described in the "RISK FACTORS" section of the prospectus
supplement for your series of securities.

                              LOCATION OF GLOSSARY

     A glossary of the capitalized terms that we use can be found on the last
page of this prospectus.

                                 THE SECURITIES

     DVI Financial Services Inc., a Delaware corporation, has formed us to help
issue series and classes of securities described in this prospectus and each
prospectus supplement. We or another issuer owned by us may also offer classes
of securities that are not available to the general public. If we or one of our
issuers offers a series of our securities by class, any single class of
securities may:

     o    be either senior or subordinate to the rights of one or more of the
          other classes of securities, and

     o    differ from any other classes in terms of characteristics like timing
          of payments, rights to payment, amount of interest, principal payable,
          priority of payment or interest rate.

     None of the securities issued by us or any one of our issuers represent
interests in or obligations of DVI Financial Services Inc. or any one of our
affiliates (other than that issuer). If an issuer offers notes, those notes
represent debt obligations of that issuer. If the securities are beneficial
ownership certificates in a trust, then those certificates represent an
ownership interest of a portion of that particular trust.

     Either we or, more likely, a special purpose entity that we form will issue
our securities. If there are tax, accounting or other reasons why we are not the
most appropriate entity to issue securities, then we will create a special
purpose entity to issue one or more series of our securities. A special purpose
entity can be a limited liability company, limited liability


                                        1

<PAGE>



partnership, a trust, a partnership, a corporation or any other legal form of
artificial person. We are a special purpose corporation. If we choose to create
a separate entity to issue our securities, we will describe in the related
prospectus supplement what form of special purpose entity that issuer has taken.
If we form a separate entity to issue any securities related to the trust
property for any series of securities, we or an affiliate of ours will transfer
to that issuer all of our or that affiliate's rights in the trust property
related to that series.

                               THE TRUST PROPERTY

     We refer to the property that collateralizes any series of our securities
as the trust property for that series. The prospectus supplement for each series
of securities will describe the trust property for that series. Our trust
property will likely include:

     o    a pool of non-cancelable contracts (mostly leases and loans),

     o    the monies payable under those contracts after a particular date,

     o    our rights in the equipment which is leased, loaned or owned under
          those contracts,

     o    amounts payable to us under any physical damage insurance policies for
          that equipment,

     o    all of our proceeds from any disposition of equipment in which we may
          have a security interest,

     o    all amounts held in one or more of the bank accounts created for each
          series of securities, and

     o    all credit enhancement we arrange for that series of securities.

     Credit enhancement is any arrangement which enhances the likelihood that
you will receive all payments owed to you as a securityholder. Credit
enhancement of a pool of assets or any class of securities may include:



                                        2

<PAGE>



     o    a financial guaranty insurance policy issued by an insurance company,

     o    subordination of one or more classes of securities,

     o    a reserve account,

     o    overcollateralization (the issuer's retained interest),

     o    a letter of credit,

     o    a standby loan commitment from a third party, or

     o    cash deposits, or other arrangements.

     Relative subordination of different classes of a series of securities also
acts to enhance the creditworthiness of a class that gets paid before any other
class of securities. Subordination enhances the creditworthiness of a more
senior class of security because money which would be paid to the subordinate
class is used first to pay the more senior class. If there is not enough money
to fully pay both classes, securityholders of the later-paying, subordinate
class will not receive all amounts owed to them on time. Furthermore, neither we
nor any issuer can receive any money until all of the securityholders have
received their timely payments of interest and principal. We refer to this
subordination of an issuer's retained interest in the trust property as
overcollateralization.

     Issuers affiliated with our parent corporation have tended in the past to
establish a reserve account as credit enhancement. A reserve account is a bank
account that an issuer opens at a financial institution that the issuer finds
creditworthy. The issuer deposits money, either at the closing of the
transaction or afterwards, into that reserve account to cover some or all future
shortfalls on a security.

     No issuer originates contracts in its own name. Instead, a chain of
agreements conveys the trust property to each issuer. First, a contribution and
servicing agreement will be executed for each series. Under each contribution
and servicing agreement, DVI Financial Services Inc. contributes all of its
rights in the trust property to us. If we decide to establish a separate entity
to issue a series of securities, we will then transfer our rights in the trust
property in accordance


                                        3

<PAGE>



with a subsequent contract transfer agreement. If either we or an issuer
acquires some items of trust property from a direct or indirect affiliate of
ours (other than DVI Financial Services Inc.), then either we or that issuer
will execute a sale agreement to acquire those assets. Except for any ownership
rights to the equipment, the trust property will always include all of the
rights in the contracts and the equipment held by the issuer and the entity from
which the issuer acquired the trust property. Finally, each issuer will sign an
indenture, a pooling and trust agreement or some other similar type of contract
in which that issuer will pledge the trust property to a trustee. That trustee
holds that pledge and acts under that document for the benefit of
securityholders.

                                 USE OF PROCEEDS

     Each issuer will apply proceeds from the sale of any series of securities
to acquire the related trust property, including any credit enhancement.

                          INFORMATION ABOUT THE ISSUERS

     No issuer other than ourselves may engage in any activity other than:

     o    acquiring, holding and managing the trust property related to any
          series of securities,

     o    issuing one or more series of securities,

     o    arranging for payments to be made on the series of securities issued
          by it, and

     o    engaging in other activities that are necessary, suitable or
          convenient to accomplish those activities.

                     ABOUT US -- DVI RECEIVABLES CORP. VIII

     DVI Receivables Corp. VIII is a corporation organized under the laws of the
State of Delaware. We were formed in December 1998 by DVI Financial Services
Inc., our parent. DVI Financial Services Inc. owns all of our outstanding stock.
Like the issuers, our principal executive office is located at 500 Hyde Park,
Doylestown, Pennsylvania 18901. You can telephone us at (215) 345-6600.


                                        4

<PAGE>



     We must operate so that the bankruptcy or other insolvency of DVI Financial
Services Inc. will not result in consolidation of either our assets and
liabilities or those of any issuer with the assets and liabilities of DVI
Financial Services Inc. However, we cannot assure you that a court, in a
bankruptcy proceeding, will not order such a consolidation. To protect your
interests by guarding against any such consolidation, each trustee, DVI
Financial Services Inc., DVI Receivables Corp. VIII, each issuer and all
securityholders must agree not to institute any bankruptcy, reorganization or
other proceeding against either us or any issuer.

     The limitations imposed on our business activities may be altered only upon
the unanimous vote of our stockholders and the unanimous affirmative vote of all
of our directors, including each of our independent directors. An independent
director is a person who is not a director, officer or employee of any direct or
ultimate parent or affiliate of DVI Financial Services Inc. However, an
independent director may serve in similar capacities for other special purpose
entities affiliated with DVI Financial Services Inc. We will always have at
least two independent directors. All of our directors must vote affirmatively
before we can:

     o    begin a bankruptcy proceeding,

     o    merge,

     o    assume or incur any special debts, or

     o    endanger the separateness of our legal identity from that of our
          parent.

     DVI Financial Services Inc. warrants in each contribution and servicing
agreement that its transfer of the trust property to us is a valid transfer. In
turn, we agree to take all actions that we need to perfect our ownership
interest in the contracts. Nonetheless, DVI Financial Services Inc. or others
could take the position at a later point in time that the transfer of contracts
to us is a pledge, rather than a contribution of capital from a parent to a
subsidiary. If this position were upheld in court, the result could adversely
affect the trustee's ability to foreclose upon and sell the trust property for
your benefit.


                                        5

<PAGE>



           INFORMATION ABOUT OUR PARENT-- DVI FINANCIAL SERVICES INC.

     DVI Financial Services Inc. is our parent company. It has its principal
office and its servicing operations at 500 Hyde Park, Doylestown, Pennsylvania
18901, and its telephone number is (215) 345-6600. DVI Financial Services Inc.
is a wholly owned direct operating subsidiaries of DVI, Inc. On a consolidated
basis, DVI Financial Services Inc. comprises the bulk of the assets of DVI, Inc.
DVI, Inc. is also headquartered in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, and its stock is
traded on the New York Stock Exchange (symbol "DVI").

     DVI Financial Services Inc. provides financing for users of medical
equipment. It primarily finances technologically advanced medical equipment such
as computerized tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, nuclear medicine and
radiation therapy systems. It also finances lower cost medical devices for a
customer base that consists principally of outpatient healthcare providers,
physicians and physician groups, hospitals and shared service providers.

     DVI Financial Services Inc. provides financing to its customers in
transactions which, with various exceptions, take the form of direct financing
leases and loans. Most of its equipment financing transactions have a term of
approximately sixty months. In most cases, those transactions allow it to
recover all the costs of acquiring and financing equipment during the initial
term of the related contract.

     Two different groups of DVI Financial Services, Inc. finance two different
types of equipment. DVI Financial Services Inc.'s Equipment Finance Group
finances equipment ranging in cost from $200,000 to $3,000,000. DVI Financial
Services Inc. finances smaller-ticket equipment that costs from $5,000 to
$200,000 through its Vendor Finance Group.

DVI FINANCIAL SERVICES INC.'S CREDIT UNDERWRITING AND REVIEW PROCESS

     We refer to the person responsible for making the periodic rental or other
payments as the obligor under any one of our contracts. An individual, a
business or another type of organization may qualify as an obligor.

     DVI Financial Services Inc. has underwriting guidelines in place to analyze
the creditworthiness and investment desirability of obligors. While seeking to
identify financial


                                        6

<PAGE>



performance requirements and criteria for potential obligors that reflect DVI
Financial Services Inc.'s willingness to accept prudent levels of risk, these
underwriting standards also remain flexible and evaluate individual credits in a
manner which permit DVI Financial Services Inc. to consider mitigating factors.

     DVI Financial Services Inc. focuses its financing activity in the
out-patient healthcare sector. This sector has many emerging businesses with a
limited history, weak balance sheets and income performance. Meeting the
challenges presented by lending to this industry requires a rigorous analysis
credit and structuring discipline. Furthermore, most out-patient diagnostic
facilities operate high cost equipment, such as magnetic resonance systems.
These facilities tend to have a high proportion of fixed costs to total costs
and, are thus dependent upon a steady flow of revenues.

     In its financing transactions with businesses in this sector, DVI Financial
Services Inc. places significant reliance on the prospective obligor's expected
future cash flow projections and the related underlying assumptions. Determining
the validity of financial projections requires a detailed analysis of the
business' projected expense levels and their reasonableness, as well as the
anticipated patient volume for the particular modality. In each case, the
detailed knowledge that the management of DVI Financial Services Inc. has of the
industry is critical to understanding the reasonableness of these financial
projections. Armed with that knowledge, DVI Financial Services Inc. also
completes an in-depth analysis that includes a detailed write-up outlining the
strengths and weaknesses of the proposed financing transaction before it either
approves or declines a financing.

     For financing transactions involving an existing hospital, partnership or
corporation, DVI Financial Services Inc. requires a detailed assessment of the
prospective obligor's financial performance for at least two years plus any
interim period. Transactions with start-ups, individuals, sole proprietorships
and all physician controlled entities require the applicant to submit a business
plan and a cash flow projection. DVI Financial Services Inc. then determines the
candidate's capacity to service its financial obligations by reviewing that plan
and the accompanying projection. If the applicant is an individual, DVI
Financial Services Inc. also requires that a prospective obligor provide at
least two prior years of tax returns and a current personal financial statement.



                                        7

<PAGE>



     For start-ups or relatively new operations, DVI Financial Services Inc.
also looks at demographics of the area, the management team that will operate
the center, the contracts that are already in place with other parties (such as
those with a reputable radiology group) and the applicant's capitalization. DVI
Financial Services Inc. believes that transactions with new entities or
individual start-ups require a greater reliance upon market surveys that project
patient volumes, reference checks that verify the reputation of the principals,
analysis of the prospective obligor's anticipated composition of the receivables
and evaluations of the applicant's billing and collecting capabilities.

     DVI Financial Services Inc. looks at the following factors when evaluating
a potential financing transaction:

          o    CASH FLOW. DVI Financial Services Inc. measures the cash
               available from the prospective obligor's operations to service
               that applicant's financial obligations. The cash flow must more
               than adequately meet the additional debt service requirements of
               the new financial obligation as well as any pre-existing
               liabilities. Generally, DVI Financial Services Inc. accepts a
               benchmark of 1.5 times debt service requirements.

          o    LEVERAGE. To measure the prospective obligor's ability to
               withstand adversity, DVI Financial Services Inc. analyzes the
               ratio of the applicant's debt to tangible net worth. DVI
               Financial Services Inc. usually considers a ratio of 5:1 or lower
               indicative of a moderate level of financial obligations to net
               worth.

          o    CURRENT RATIO. The Equipment Finance Group will also measure the
               ability of current assets to meet short-term obligations. DVI
               Financial Services Inc. believes that a ratio of 1.25 provides an
               acceptable measure of liquidity.

          o    BALANCE SHEET AND INCOME STATEMENT TRENDS. Ideally, these factors
               will show an upward trend in the performance of the applicant's
               recent financial performance, but in any case must at least
               evidence profitability for the last two years and the most recent
               interim period. If the applicant shows fundamental strength in
               other areas of its balance sheet, income


                                        8

<PAGE>



               components and performance measurements, DVI Financial Services
               Inc. will consider a candidate that has nominal losses, with
               reasonable explanation, if those losses do not affect the "going
               concern" status of the business. The applicant's tax returns
               should reflect similar income and expense figures on the
               financial statements for the fiscal year. Cash flows should
               support the prospective obligor's existing short-term obligations
               and new financial obligations.

          o    INDIVIDUAL TAX RETURNS. DVI Financial Services Inc. checks the
               tax returns of prospective obligors that are individuals to
               validate that individual's stated sources of income on the
               personal financial statement and verify that person's ability to
               service personal financial obligations. If the applicant is a
               sole proprietor, cash flow should provide an adequate cushion for
               the candidate's living expenses after debt service requirements,
               including any proposed financial obligations.

          o    HOSPITAL ANALYSIS. If a hospital is either the obligor or the
               primary referral for a lessee, DVI Financial Services Inc. will
               perform a comparative analysis of key hospital operating ratios
               and other measures. The analysis examines the hospital's
               occupancy rate, payor mix and competitive features.

     In cases where the proposed financing transaction does not conform to all
of the underwriting criteria, DVI Financial Services Inc. identifies methods to
support that transaction without compromising credit or quality and risk. These
methods include:

          o    using covenants and restrictions which reinforce performance
               goals

          o    limiting some activities that could diminish financial strength
               and affect repayment ability,

          o    requesting additional collateral to support the contemplated
               transactions. This additional collateral could take the form of
               cash deposits, letters of credit, other assets of the principal
               obligor or third parties (subject to appraisal) and guaranties,
               and


                                        9

<PAGE>




          o    conditioning credit approval on the completion of certain terms,
               documentation or other events before formal approval is granted.

     Due to the large size of DVI Financial Services Inc.'s financings with
obligors, each transaction is analyzed and reviewed on its own merits. Pursuant
to DVI Inc.'s policy, its Director of Credit has approval authority for all
transactions up to $500,000. Its Vice President of Credit has approval authority
for all transactions up to $750,000. The Chief Credit Officer -- U.S. has
approval authority up to $1 million. The credit committee, which includes the
above credit managers, the Chief Credit Officer of DVI Inc. and a member of the
DVI Inc.'s board of directors, has approval authority for all transactions
greater than $1 million. If a transaction causes aggregate customer exposure to
exceed $3 million, it must receive credit committee approval, regardless of
size.

     The underwriting criteria for DVI Financial Services Inc.'s Vendor Finance
Group differ from the rest of DVI Financial Services Inc. The Vendor Finance
Group tends to finance contracts related to equipment that have an original cost
of less than $200,000. A simple credit application is completed by an applicant.
The Vendor Finance Group analyzes applications for approval based upon the
financial condition of that applicant as well as the credit score that a
national credit reporting organization gave the applicant.

     The Vendor Finance Group has also established specific credit guidelines
for hospitals, group practices and sole practitioners. Generally these
guidelines require those prospective obligors to:

          o    have been in business for a period of time ranging from a minimum
               of one year to over two years,

          o    provide financial statements, corporate resolutions and
               appropriate purchase documents,

          o    provide proof of medical license,

          o    meet a minimum TRW credit report score requirements, and



                                       10

<PAGE>



          o    provide personal guarantees under certain circumstances.

PORTFOLIO MONITORING AND CREDIT COLLECTIONS

     Key members of DVI Financial Services Inc.'s credit, sales, operations and
accounting departments meet regularly to discuss the contract portfolio
delinquency report and the status of delinquent obligors. With guidance from
management, the collection and/or sales departments immediately contact
delinquent obligors. Due to the relatively small number of contracts in DVI
Financial Services Inc.'s portfolio, the management of DVI Financial Services
Inc. possesses a high degree of familiarity with virtually the entire obligor
base. The Director of Portfolio Management personally administers a collection
of large-balance delinquent accounts and severely delinquent accounts. Once it
suspects that an obligor may experience problems in meeting its obligations, DVI
Financial Services Inc. acts quickly to identify a new operator of the equipment
in the event that the obligor defaults. Any repossessions are handled on an
individual basis.

     The Vendor Finance Group handles collections and other servicing of
contracts which it has originated. Its collection department meets monthly to
review and discuss the status of certain accounts and any trends in performance.
For the accounts that are ten to thirty days past due, the Vendor Finance Group
begins an active collection process. The process is initiated by telephone
contact with the obligor, and a reminder notice is sent when the contract
payment becomes fifteen days past due. When the payments are thirty-one days
past due, the Vendor Finance Group sends a final notice letter. The Vendor
Finance Group sends a demand letter for possession of the equipment when the
payment is sixty-one to ninety days past due. Contracts that are more than
ninety-one days past due are included on a watch list which is reviewed by
senior management each month.


                                   THE TRUSTEE

     We will tell you in each prospectus supplement who the trustee for that
series of securities will be. You should expect, however, that the trustee's
liability for each series will be limited solely to its express obligations in
the related transaction documents. The trustee also often acts as the custodian
of the contracts. Usually the trustee fees are paid from funds in the related
collection account before any payments to securityholders are made.


                                       11

<PAGE>



     We usually require the trustee for any of our securities not to resign or
be removed until its successor has been appointed. A trustee may resign,
however, for cause at any time by giving written notice to you and other
persons. Securityholders may remove the trustee if some number of them agree to
deliver written notice of their decision to the trustee and the related issuer.
An issuer may also remove the trustee. If for any reason there is a vacancy in
the office of trustee, the issuer, acting with the consent of at least a
majority of the Voting Rights must quickly appoint a successor trustee. We
usually require that any successor trustee meet similar financial and other
qualifications as we required for the original trustee under that indenture,
trust agreement or other transaction document. If a potential successor trustee
does not accept our appointment within thirty days after we make it, either the
outgoing trustee or any securityholder of an affected series may petition any
court of competent jurisdiction for the appointment of a successor trustee. We
will give you notice of each resignation and each removal of any trustee related
to your security and each appointment of a successor trustee. Each notice that
we send to you will tell you the name of the successor trustee and the address
of its principal corporate trust office.

                                  THE CONTRACTS

DESCRIPTION OF THE POOL OF CONTRACTS FOR EACH SERIES OF SECURITIES

     Specific information about the contracts in the trust property for each
series of securities may change with respect to each series that we issue. These
changes could relate to, among other things, what kind of document the contracts
are (I.E. leases, or loans or both), the distribution of contracts by equipment
type or the then-current principal balance of the average contract. We can
calculate the value in present day dollars of any contract or pool of contracts
by multiplying each payment by a particular discount rate.

DELINQUENCIES, REPOSSESSIONS, AND NET LOSSES

     We will update the information about our delinquency, repossession and net
loss experience with equipment finance contracts in each prospectus supplement.
This information will likely include our experience with the equipment lease
contracts in DVI Financial Services Inc.'s portfolio during specified periods,
including contracts which may or may not meet the criteria for any trust
property. You should be aware that no one can assure you that the future


                                       12

<PAGE>



delinquency, repossession and net loss experience of any issuer's trust property
will be comparable to the prior experience of DVI Financial Services Inc.'s
total contract portfolio.

MATURITY AND PREPAYMENT CONSIDERATIONS

     Generally, DVI Financial Services Inc. does not own contracts under which
the obligor has the right to prepay or otherwise terminate early its obligations
under the contract. DVI Financial Services Inc. tries to discourage prepayments
because each prepayment received will shorten the weighted average life of our
related securities.

     Nonetheless, despite DVI Financial Services Inc.'s efforts, the rate of
prepayments may be influenced by a variety of future economic, financial and
other factors. In addition, if DVI Financial Services Inc. has the right to
replace a contract which did not conform to the representations or warranties in
the related contribution and servicing agreement but fails to do so, then DVI
Financial Services Inc. must buy back that contract. You alone bear any
reinvestment risks resulting from a faster or slower amortization of your
security that results from prepayments.

                          DESCRIPTION OF THE SECURITIES

GENERAL

     We or an issuer formed by us will issue securities on a series-by-series
basis at various times. We designate securities issued at the same time by the
same issuer as belonging to a particular series. Each series will be issued
under either an indenture, a trust agreement or similar kind of transaction
document. The following summaries, together with additional summaries under
"DESCRIPTION OF THE PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS" below, describe all of the
important terms and material provisions that are common to each series of
securities. The summaries do not include all material information about each
series of the securities. You will only find that information in the prospectus
supplement related to that series of securities.

     The securities offered by this prospectus and the related prospectus
supplements will be rated in one of the four highest rating categories by one or
more organizations that are nationally recognized for their professional ability
to rate the creditworthiness of securities.



                                       13

<PAGE>



     Each series or class of securities offered may have different interest
rates. These rates can either be fixed or adjustable. Each prospectus supplement
specifies the interest rate for each series or class of securities offered by
that prospectus supplement, the initial interest rate and the method for
determining subsequent changes to the interest rate.

GENERAL PAYMENT TERMS OF THE SECURITIES

     Securityholders will be entitled to receive payments on their securities on
the dates specified in the related transaction documents. Dates of payment with
respect to the securities can occur monthly, quarterly or semi-annually. We will
describe the payment dates for each class and series in the prospectus
supplement related to those securities.

     Only securityholders that the trustee believes held securities on the last
business day of the period during which payments from contracts and other trust
property are collected will be entitled to receive payments on the next
succeeding payment date. The payment dates will be the same calendar day in each
month; or, in the case of quarterly-pay securities, the same day in every third
month; or in the case of semiannual-pay securities, the same day in every sixth
month unless, in any of these cases, that day is not a business day. If any
payment date does not fall on a business day, payments will be made on the next
day that is a business day.

     Each payment date on the securities follows a period that we referred to as
a collection period. For example, in the case of securities that have a monthly
payment date, the collection period is usually, but not always, the calendar
month preceding each payment date. For a specified period only, sometimes we
allow an issuer to use some or all of the payments it collects to acquire more
contracts or other trust property. Sometimes securityholders do not, and are not
supposed to, receive any payments during this "ramp-up" period. On other
occasions, we may allow an issuer to forestall the payment of principal for some
specified time. This may result in an interest-only period, also commonly
referred to as a revolving period, which would then probably be followed by a
normal amortization period during which both principal and interest are paid.
Conversely, we might allow an issuer only to pay principal for a while.

     In addition, the trustee may retain all or a portion of collected payments
for a specified period. If the trustee temporarily holds these collections, it
must invest them in securities that mature before that temporary period
terminates. The Trustee's retention and temporary investment of these payments
may be for the purposes of either:


                                       14

<PAGE>



     o    slowing the amortization rate of the related securities relative to
          the underlying contracts' rent payment schedules, or

     o    matching the amortization rate of the related securities to an
          amortization schedule established at the time the securities are
          issued.

     We usually do not guarantee, and we usually do not ask anyone else to
guarantee, the securities of an issuer. Except for some possible forms of credit
enhancement (such as the issuer's retained interest), neither the securities nor
the underlying payments from the trust property will be guaranteed or insured by
any governmental agency, governmental instrumentality, DVI Receivables Corp
VIII, any affiliate of ours, DVI Financial Services Inc., any trustee or any
person servicing, administering and monitoring the trust property. We will
arrange for any credit enhancement on a series-by-series, or even class-by-class
basis.

BOOK-ENTRY REGISTRATION; DEFINITIVE SECURITIES

     A series of securities may either be issued in book entry form or
registered in each securityholder's own name. Registration of your securities in
book-entry form may make it more difficult for you to sell your note to another
investor. In most cases, you will only be able to transfer your security through
The Depository Trust Company or The Depository Trust Company's participants.
Your ability to pledge your note to someone who does not participate in The
Depository Trust Company's system may be limited. Also, because trustees pay
distributions on book entry securities to Cede & Co., as nominee of The
Depository Trust Company, who in turn pays securityholders of record, you could
experience some delays in receipt of your payments on your security.

REPORTS TO SECURITYHOLDERS

     On or prior to the payment date for each series, the servicer responsible
for monitoring, servicing and administrating the trust property and payments
from it will prepare and provide to the trustee of that series a periodic
statement that sets forth certain data about that series's trust property.
Usually, this statement contains data indicating the performance of the related
contract pool as of the preceding collection period. The statement will also
probably contain financial information related to the contracts during that
period. These statements will likely present the following information:


                                       15

<PAGE>



     o    the amount of the total payment for each class of securities on that
          payment date;

     o    the amount of principal payable on that payment date;

     o    the amount of interest payable on that payment date;

     o    the aggregate amount of all outstanding principal for all contracts in
          that pool before and after that payment date;

     o    the amount, if any, of fees owed to the servicer and any other persons
          to be paid from funds deposited in the collection account on a related
          payment date;

     o    the aggregate purchase price for all contracts bought, if any, during
          that collection period;

     o    the amount on deposit in any reserve account or the amount of
          coverage, under any other form of credit enhancement , such as a
          letter of credit or insurance policy, on that payment date; and

     o    any other amounts owed to the servicer.

     Each amount set forth in the first four bullet items with respect to the
securities of any of our series will be expressed as a dollar amount. Each
trustee will probably base its calculations regarding how to distribute money on
each payment date on the information given by the servicer in each periodic
servicer report. The trustee will also promptly forward this statement to each
securityholder.

     Within the prescribed period of time for tax reporting purposes after the
end of each calendar year, the servicer will provide, or cause to be provided,
to the securityholders a statement containing the amounts described in the
second and third bullet items above and paid to securityholders for that
calendar year. The servicer will also deliver any other information required by
applicable tax laws, for the purpose of the securityholders' preparation of
federal income tax returns.




                                       16

<PAGE>



               DESCRIPTION OF THE PRINCIPAL TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS

     The following summary describes the more important provisions of the major
transaction documents for each issuance of our securities. This summary is not
complete, and you should read the prospectus supplement prepared for your series
of securities to get all of the important information about your security. If
you are interested in learning more about what these documents say, we filed
forms of the contribution and servicing agreement, the subsequent contract
transfer agreement, the indenture and the trust agreement as exhibits to this
prospectus with the Securities and Exchange Commission. For more information
about how you can review these filings, please read the "WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE
INFORMATION" section in this prospectus.

TRANSFER OF THE CONTRACTS UNDER A CONTRIBUTION AND SERVICING AGREEMENT, A SALE
AGREEMENT OR A SUBSEQUENT CONTRACT TRANSFER AGREEMENT

     Each contribution and servicing agreement prescribes how DVI Financial
Services Inc. may contribute contracts and other trust property to us. In some
instances, either we or the issuer may receive the contracts from a direct or
indirect affiliate of ours under a sale agreement. Any sale agreement will be
substantially in the form of the contribution and servicing agreement. If we
have received trust property and we are not going to be the issuer related to
that trust property, we will then transfer that trust property that we receive
to the appropriate issuer in accordance with a subsequent contract transfer
agreement. Each issuer will then pledge all of its right, title and interest in
and under that trust property to a trustee under either an indenture, a pooling
and trust agreement or other similar contract. Any trustee acts on behalf of the
securityholders of securities pledged to it. We will describe to you all of the
more important obligations of the parties under the major transaction documents
for each series in the related prospectus supplement.

THE TRANSACTIONAL BANK ACCOUNTS

     Each servicer will establish and maintain one or more bank accounts and
instruct obligors to send their contract payments to those accounts. Each of
these accounts acts as a lock box, preventing money owed to noteholders from
being improperly delivered or diverted. The trustee for each series will
transfer the amounts collected in the lockbox account to the corresponding
collection account every few days. Each series will have its own lockbox
account. The issuer will make sure that each lockbox account will be in the name
of the trustee for that series.


                                       17

<PAGE>



     Each trustee will, if required for its series, also open a reserve account
and a distribution account, in either case for the benefit of securityholders.
Future series may also have additional bank accounts to serve as more credit
enhancement to make the securities more attractive to prospective
securityholders.

     For any series of securities, the related trustee will invest all of the
funds in the collection account, any distribution account, any reserve account
and any other similar kinds of accounts in investments that are rated at least
as high as that series of our securities. Except for funds from a reserve
account, eligible investments must be obligations or securities that mature not
later than the business day immediately preceding the next payment date of that
series. We usually permit funds from any reserve account to be invested in
securities that may not mature before the next payment date. Because reserve
account deposits can be invested in securities that have a longer maturity date,
the amount of cash in a reserve account may at any time may be less than the
balance of that reserve account. If the amount required to be withdrawn from any
reserve account to cover payment shortfalls is more than the cash on deposit in
that reserve account, you may not receive all payments owed you on a payment
date. This delay in payments will also probably increase the life of that series
of securities. Our transactions usually require that the trustee deposit all
investment earnings that matured during each collection period in the related
collection account, net of any losses and investment expenses. On each payment
date the trustee should view these earnings as collections from contracts and
pay them out accordingly.

     Each bank account that is a trust account is opened for use in a
transaction involving the securities will be either:

     o    a segregated account with an institution of a particular quality and
          investment grade creditworthiness,

     o    a segregated trust account with the corporate trust department of a
          United States depository institution or

     o    any domestic branch of a foreign bank that has corporate trust powers
          and is acting as trustee for funds deposited in that account.

     The kind of institution eligible to hold the transaction accounts as
segregated accounts are either:


                                       18

<PAGE>



     o    the corporate trust department of the related trustee for that
          particular series of securities, or

     o    a depository institution organized under the laws of the United
          States, any state or the District of Columbia, or any domestic branch
          of a foreign bank, which has either

          --   a long-term unsecured debt rating acceptable to the rating
               agencies that are rating that series or

          --   a short-term unsecured debt rating or certificate of deposit
               rating acceptable to those rating agencies; or

     o    the parent corporation of that trustee, depository institution or
          branch office has either:

          --   a long-term unsecured debt rating acceptable to the rating
               agencies rating the securities or

          --   a short-term unsecured debt rating or certificate of deposit
               rating acceptable to those rating agencies; and

          --   whose deposits are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance
               Corporation.

     To the extent that the unsecured debt ratings of DVI Financial Services
Inc. are acceptable to the rating agencies, amounts deposited in any of these
accounts may be commingled with the general account moneys of DVI Financial
Services Inc. We will not allow DVI Financial Services Inc. to have rights to so
commingle moneys unless we tell you about it in the related prospectus
statement.




                                       19

<PAGE>



THE SERVICING PROCEDURE

     The initial servicer for each series of our securities issued by any
affiliate of ours has always been DVI Financial Services Inc. We expect DVI
Financial Services Inc. to be the servicer under each contribution and servicing
agreement that we are a party to. Regardless of who acts as servicer, each
servicer must make reasonable efforts to collect all payments due and owing on
each contract that comprises the related trust property. We will require each
servicer of our transactions to be as diligent in collecting payments for our
transactions as that servicer is with each other contract that it services for
itself and other third parties.

     Our transactions will permit each servicer, in its discretion and on a
case-by-case basis, to arrange with an obligor on a contract the extension or
modification of that contract's payment schedule if the servicer, in its
professional judgment, thinks that obligor will make good its payments some time
in the near future. Some of these arrangements made by a servicer (including,
without limitation, any extension of the payment schedule beyond the final
scheduled payment date for the related securities) may result in the servicer
purchasing a defaulted contract from the trust property. We will also allow the
servicer to sell any equipment related to a Defaulted Contract at a public or
private sale, or take any other action permitted by applicable law, to try to
recoup or at least minimize the loss of payments to securityholders caused by
these defaults. After payment of some fees and expenses incurred in the
foreclosure process, the servicer must deposit into the related collection
account the cash, if any, collected from the disposition and other enforcement
of each Defaulted Contract.

PAYMENTS BY THE SERVICER

     All payments on contracts, from whatever source, and all proceeds of the
contracts collected by each servicer during each collection period will either
be remitted to the related trustee or be deposited into the related collection
account. Except in unusual circumstances, each servicer must either remit or
deposit those amounts into that collection account within two business days of
the servicer's receipt of that money. If the rating agencies for the related
series of securities permit, all deposits of cash collected during a particular
collection period need only be made into the collection account two business
days prior to the related payment date. Pending deposit into the related
collection account, collections may be invested by a servicer at its own risk
and for its own benefit. These investments are not usually required to be
segregated from other investments of the servicer's. This commingling of
investments could delay the timely


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<PAGE>



return of the funds invested by the servicer into the collection account. This
delay could cause shortfalls in payments to you on your securities.

SERVICING COMPENSATION

     On each payment date we pay the related servicer a fee for the work it did
during the preceding collection period. This servicing fee is usually an amount
equal to the product of (i) one-twelfth, (ii) a specified percentage (determined
on a series-by-series basis) per annum and (iii) the aggregate Discounted
Contract balance of all contracts in the related pool as of the beginning of the
previous collection period. We pay this fee to the servicer from funds in the
related collection account, together with any portion of the servicing fee that
did not get paid on prior payment dates. Furthermore, we usually pay this fee
before making payments to you and the other securityholders.

     To earn its servicing fee, the servicer performs the functions of a third
party servicer of similar trust property as an agent for the securityholders of
that series. These functions include collecting and posting all payments,
responding to obligors' inquiries, investigating delinquencies, sending payment
coupons to obligors, reporting tax information to obligors, paying costs of
collection and disposition of defaults and policing the contracts and other
trust property. The servicing fee also compensates a servicer for administering
the contracts, accounting for collections and furnishing any required statements
to the trustee about distributions. We also intend that the servicing fee
reimburse the servicer for various taxes, accounting fees, outside auditor fees,
data processing costs and other costs incurred in connection with administering
the contracts.

     As another part of its compensation, each servicer keeps any late fees, the
penalty portion of interest paid on past due amounts and other administrative
fees or similar charges allowed by applicable law and paid under the contracts.
Each servicer is also entitled to reimbursement for certain liabilities. The
servicer allocates payments by or on behalf of obligors to scheduled payments,
late fees and other charges in accordance with that servicer's normal practices
and procedures.



                                       21

<PAGE>



DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE SECURITIES

     On or prior to each series's payment date, the related servicer must
provide the applicable trustee with a statement setting forth some data about
the contracts and other trust property as of the close of business on the last
day of the preceding related collection period. You should refer to the section
of this prospectus entitled "REPORTS TO SECURITYHOLDERS" for further information
about these periodic reports from the servicer and the trustee. Based largely on
the data in this periodic servicer report, the trustee will calculate what
amount to distribute, and whom to pay, from the collection account. On each
payment date for that series, the trustee will distribute payments of principal
and interest, on each class or series to the related securityholders entitled to
those payments. We may also vary the timing, calculation, allocation, order,
source, priorities of and requirements for each class of each series of
securities. On the payment date for each series of securities, the trustee will
transfer collections on the related contracts from the collection account to any
applicable distribution account for distribution to the related securityholders.
Credit enhancement, such as money on deposit in a reserve account, may or may
not be available to cover any shortfalls in the amount available for
distribution on that payment date.

THE CREDIT ENHANCEMENT

     We may or may not arrange for any security to have some form of credit
enhancement. Furthermore, each class within a series of securities that has
credit enhancement may have different amounts, types and providers of credit
enhancement. We do not expect that any credit enhancement for any class of
securities will provide protection against all risks of loss or guarantee timely
payment of all principal and interest on that claim of securities. If losses
occur which exceed the amount covered by the available credit enhancement,
securityholders of any class or series will bear their allocable share of
deficiencies. In addition, securityholders of any credit-enhanced series are
subject to the risk that the amounts made available by that credit enhancement
will be exhausted by the prior claims of other securityholders entitled to that
same source of enhancement.



                                       22

<PAGE>



RESIGNATION, LIABILITY AND MERGER OF SERVICER

     Each contribution and servicing agreement provides that the servicer may
not resign from its obligations and duties except in connection with either a
permitted assignment under that agreement or upon determination that the
servicer's performance of its duties have somehow become illegal. No resignation
of a servicer is effective until the related trustee or a successor servicer has
assumed the original servicer's obligations and duties under that contribution
and servicing agreement.

     Each contribution and servicing agreement also provides that neither the
servicer nor any of its directors, officers, employees or agents will be liable
to the related issuer, trustee or securityholder for any action taken or not
taken in good faith pursuant to the terms of that agreement. Nonetheless, no one
is protected from liability for its own breach of any representation or any
warranty contained in the related contribution and servicing agreement. The
servicer or any of its directors, officers, employees or agents are also exposed
to liability arising by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross
negligence in the performance of any of their duties or by reason of reckless
disregard of their obligations and duties under that agreement.

     Each contribution and servicing agreement will provide that the servicer is
under no obligation to appear in, prosecute, or defend any legal action that is
not incidental to its servicing responsibilities under that agreement and that,
in such servicer's opinion, may cause it to incur any expense or liability. The
servicer may, however, undertake any reasonable action that it may deem
necessary or desirable in respect of its contribution and servicing agreement
related to it, the rights and duties of the parties to or the interests of the
securityholders under that agreement.

     The parties to each contribution and servicing agreement will agree to view
any corporation or other entity into which the servicer may be merged or
consolidated, which results from any merger or consolidation to which the
servicer is a party or which succeeds to the business of the servicer, as the
successor servicer if the new entity agrees to assume the servicer's duties
under that agreement and meets other qualifications.

SERVICER DEFAULTS

     A servicer default occurs if either:


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<PAGE>



     o    the servicer fails to deliver to the related trustee any required
          payment or to direct that trustee to make any required distributions,
          if either failure continues unremedied for a period of time;

     o    the servicer materially breaches any other covenant or agreement in
          its contribution and servicing agreement, if that failure materially
          and adversely affects the rights of the related securityholders.
          However, to constitute a servicer default, that failure must go
          unremedied for a period of thirty days after either the servicer
          becomes aware of that failure or someone gives written notice of that
          failure to the servicer or to us; or

     o    an insolvency, readjustment of debt, marshalling of assets and
          liabilities or similar proceedings regarding the servicer occurs or
          the servicer indicates its insolvency, need to reorganize, or
          inability to pay its obligations in a bankruptcy proceeding or other
          similar actions.

RIGHTS UPON A SERVICER DEFAULT

     As long as a servicer default under a contribution and servicing agreement
remains unremedied, the related trustee, upon the request of more than 66-2/3%
of the Voting Rights, must terminate all of the servicer's rights and
obligations, if any, under that agreement. That trustee must then either quickly
appoint a successor servicer or assume all the responsibilities, duties and
liabilities of the servicer. Our transaction documents will require that any
appointed successor trustee have a net worth of at least $15,000,000. We also
like to appoint as successor servicer only those persons whose regular business
includes the servicing of a similar type of equipment loans or leases. Our
transactions will pay any successor servicer similar compensation arrangements
as the initial servicer was entitled to under the related contribution and
servicing agreement unless that compensation is determined to be less than the
current market rate. If, however, a bankruptcy trustee or similar official has
been appointed to act as the servicer, and no servicer default other than that
appointment has occurred, that bankruptcy trustee or official may have the power
to prevent the trustee or the securityholders from making this kind of transfer
of servicing duties. In the event that the trustee is unwilling or unable to
transfer those servicing duties, it may appoint, or petition a court of
competent jurisdiction for the appointment of, a successor servicer.



                                       24

<PAGE>



EVENTS OF DEFAULT UNDER THE TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS

     Events that cause defaults for a series of securities also permit the
trustee to engage in special procedures in an attempt to protect the investments
of securityholders. Although this may not be true for each series or even each
class of securities, we expect to permit at least a majority of the Voting
Rights of any affected series to waive any default caused by DVI Financial
Services Inc., DVI Receivables Corp. VIII or the related issuer in the
performance of any of their respective obligations. The only defaults that we
usually do not allow securityholders to waive are:

     o    a default in making any required deposits to or payments from any of
          the accounts or

     o    a default concerning a covenant or provision which cannot be modified
          or amended without the consent of each holder of an affected
          outstanding security.

     No waiver changes the securityholders' rights regarding future defaults.


AMENDMENT OF THE TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS

     The transaction documents for each series of securities can be amended if
the parties to the document in question sign a written amendment. Although this
may change for any particular series, we expect to allow parties to any
transaction document to amend that document without the consent of the related
securityholders, if the purpose of the amendment is any of the following:

     o    to add any provisions to, to change in any manner or to eliminate any
          of the provisions of a transaction document, or to modify rights of
          securityholders, as long as attorneys approved by the trustee opine in
          writing that the amendment will not materially and adversely affect
          the interests of the securityholders,

     o    to make any change needed to comply with applicable laws, rules or
          regulations, or



                                       25

<PAGE>



     o    for the purpose of issuing other classes of securities in accordance
          with the express terms of the applicable document for that
          transaction.

     The parties to a transaction document may amend that document with the
consent of at least a majority of the Voting Rights of those securities, for the
purpose of:

     o    adding any provisions to that document,

     o    changing or eliminating any of the provisions of that document,

     o    or otherwise modifying the securityholders' rights.

Despite this, the consent of all securityholders of the affected series will be
required to make any amendment that:

     o    changes the amount, accelerates or delays the timing of collections of
          either contract payments or distributions made for securityholders'
          benefit,

     o    reduces the required percentage of securityholders for a series needed
          to consent to any amendment,

     o    releases any of the trust property from the lien of the indenture,
          trust agreement or other applicable transaction document or modifies
          sections of an important transaction document.

TERMINATION OF THE TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS

     The obligations of the servicer, the trustee, DVI Financial Services Inc.,
DVI Receivables Corp. VIII and any issuer of a series of securities terminate
after the related issuer pays either the amounts received upon liquidation of
the latest-maturing contract in the related trust property or all of the amounts
that it owes to the related securityholders. Any series may have circumstances
under which issuer can prepay the principal amount of those securities. If an
issuer prepays an entire series of the securities, it will purchase the trust
property for that series at a price equal to the entire outstanding principal
balance of those securities together with their accrued interest at the
applicable interest rate. The issuer will also redeem all outstanding securities
of the related


                                       26

<PAGE>



class or series that we prepay concurrently with the distribution to the related
securityholders of all amounts owed them. Any prepayment that an issuer makes
may affect the prepayment of the other classes in that series.

           LEGAL MATTERS AFFECTING AN OBLIGOR'S RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS

     Most states have adopted a version of Article 2A of the Uniform Commercial
Code, which is applicable to "true leases." A true lease is a lease where the
lessor has the benefits and burdens of ownership of the leased equipment, as
opposed to a so-called "finance lease" where the lessee has the right to buy the
leased equipment at a bargain price. Article 2A purports to codify many
provisions of existing common law on leasing. Although there have been few court
decisions interpreting Article 2A, Article 2A may, among other things,

     o    limit enforceability of any unconscionable lease or provision,

     o    provide a lessee with remedies, including the right to cancel the
          lease for any breach or default by the lessor, and

     o    may add to or modify the terms of "consumer leases" and leases where
          the lessee is a "merchant lessee."

     We do not anticipate, but can not assure you, that Article 2A will
materially and adversely affect payment to securityholders. First, Article 2A
recognizes typical commercial lease "hell or high water" rental payment clauses
and validates reasonable liquidated damages provisions in the event of lessor or
lessee defaults. Second, Article 2A also recognizes the concept of freedom of
contract and permits the parties in a commercial context a wide latitude to vary
provisions of the law. Lastly, DVI Financial Services Inc. will represent in
each contribution and servicing agreement that, to the best of its knowledge, no
contract is a "consumer lease" and no obligor has failed to accept, to inspect,
or to test the equipment leased to it.




                                       27

<PAGE>



                    MATERIAL FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

     Each class or series of securities may have different anticipated material
federal income tax considerations relevant to the purchase, ownership and
disposition of those securities. You should read the section of the prospectus
supplement for your series that discusses possible tax consequences applicable
to your security.

                              ERISA CONSIDERATIONS

     We will summarize in the prospectus supplement for each series
considerations under ERISA relevant to the purchase of that series by employee
benefit plans and individual retirement accounts. You should familiarize
yourself with these sections.

                              PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

     The securities will be offered in series through one or more methods,
including either firm commitment or best efforts underwriting and competitive
bidding. The prospectus supplement prepared for each series will describe how
the underwriters are offering that series of securities, the public offering or
the purchase price of those securities and the net proceeds that we will receive
from the sale.

     If underwriters are used in any sale of securities, and if the underwriting
is not on a best efforts basis, then the underwriters will acquire those
securities for their own account and then may resell them from time to time.
These resales may occur in one or more transactions, including negotiated
transactions, at fixed public offering prices or at varying prices. The resale
transaction parties may negotiate any price determined either at the time of
sale or at the time of commitment.

     If the underwriters for any resale of securities are broker-dealers
affiliated with us, their identities and relationships to DVI Receivables Corp.
VIII will be described in the related prospectus supplement. The cover of each
prospectus supplement will also tell you who are the managing underwriter or
underwriters of a particular series and who are the members of the underwriting
syndicate, if any.



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<PAGE>



     In connection with a sale of the securities, either we, the issuer, DVI
Financial Services Inc. or purchasing securityholders may compensate
underwriters in the form of discounts, concessions or commissions. Also, a court
could deem underwriters and dealers participating in any distribution of
securities to be underwriters in connection with those securities. Any discounts
or commissions received from us or the related issuer, by those persons deemed
underwriters, and any profit on the resale of securities by them, may be deemed
to be underwriting discounts and commissions under the Securities Act of 1933.
Each prospectus supplement will describe any compensation paid by us to the
underwriters.

     We expect each underwriting agreement pertaining to the sale of any series
of securities to require that:

     o    the obligations of the underwriters will be subject to several
          conditions precedent,

     o    if the underwriting is not on a best efforts basis, the underwriters
          will be obligated to purchase all of the securities if any are
          purchased, and

     o    in limited circumstances, we will either indemnify the underwriters
          and the underwriters will indemnify us against customary civil
          liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933,
          as amended, or will contribute to payments required to be made in
          respect of such indemnity.

     Each prospectus supplement that offers securities by placements through
dealers will contain information about the nature of the offering and any
agreements to be entered into between us and purchasers of securities of that
series.

     We expect to sell the securities offered by this prospectus primarily to
institutional investors. Depending on the facts and circumstances of these
purchases, a court may decide that purchasers of securities, including dealers,
are "underwriters" within the meaning of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
in connection with reoffers and sales by those purchasers of securities.
Prospective securityholders should consult their legal advisors about this
possibility prior to reselling or otherwise transferring the securities.




                                       29

<PAGE>



                                  LEGAL MATTERS

     DVI's general counsel and Thacher Proffitt & Wood, New York, New York,
special counsel to the underwriters, will pass upon some of the more important
legal matters relating to the issuance of the securities.

                         FINANCIAL INFORMATION ABOUT US

     We have determined that our financial statements are not material to the
offering made by this prospectus. However, we will give any prospective
purchaser who asks to review our financial information a copy of the most recent
financial statements of DVI Financial Services Inc., our parent. See the section
of this prospectus entitled "DESCRIPTIONS OF THE SECURITIES -- REPORTS TO
SECURITYHOLDERS" for more information about these reports. In addition,
prospectus supplements may contain the financial statements of any provider of
material credit enhancement for the securities offered by that prospective
supplement.

                       WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

     This prospectus, together with the prospectus supplement for each series of
securities, contains a summary of the material terms of the applicable exhibits
to the registration statement and the related documents we mention here and in
those exhibits. We have filed copies of these exhibits at the Securities and
Exchange Commission's offices in Washington, D.C. You may obtain those exhibits
at rates prescribed by that Commission. You could also inspect those exhibits
without charge at the Commission's offices.

     We have filed a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange
Commission regarding the securities offered by this prospectus. For further
information, you should refer to the registration statement which is available
for inspection without charge at either the Commission's office at 450 Fifth
Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549 or the Commission's regional offices at
Seven World Trade Center, 13th Floor, New York, New York 10048 and at the
Northwestern Atrium, 500 West Madison Street, Suite 1400, Chicago, Illinois
60661-2511. You can obtain copies of the registration statement from the Public
Reference Section of the Commission at 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.
20549, at prescribed rates.



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<PAGE>



     We have not authorized anyone to give any information or to make any
representation other than those contained in this prospectus and any related
prospectus supplement. If anybody attempts to give you additional information,
you must not rely on it while making your investment or your purchasing
decisions. Neither this prospectus nor any related prospectus supplement
constitute either an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any
securities other than the securities we offer in this prospectus. We do not
intend that either this prospectus or any prospectus supplement constitute an
offer of the securities to any person in any state or other jurisdiction in
which an offer would be unlawful. You should not interpret the delivery of this
prospectus at any time to imply that the information in this prospectus is
correct as of any time subsequent to its date.

                     INCORPORATION OF DOCUMENTS BY REFERENCE

     Either we or DVI Financial Services Inc. may file documents on behalf of an
issuer relating to any series of securities referred to in the accompanying
prospectus supplement with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to
Section 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended. These documents may be filed after the date of this prospectus and
prior to the termination of any offering of the related securities. You should
consider any documents filed in this way to be incorporated by reference into
this prospectus and the related prospectus supplement. Any court construing this
prospectus will likely consider those documents to be a part of this prospectus
and the related prospectus supplement from the respective dates of filing of
those documents. Any statement contained here or in another document which is
incorporated or deemed to be incorporated by reference here modifies or
supersedes this prospectus and the related prospectus supplement to the extent
that a statement contained here (or in any other subsequently filed document
which also is deemed to be incorporated by reference) modifies or supersedes
that statement. Any statement that is either modified or superseded in this way
shall not be deemed, except as so modified or superseded, to constitute a part
of this prospectus or the related prospectus supplement.




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<PAGE>


                                    GLOSSARY

     When a term in this prospectus begins with a capital letter, it has the
meaning described below:


     A DEFAULTED CONTRACT is a contract in the trust property that has either:

          o    a very late payment (I.E., 180 days) still outstanding,

          o    a late payment and the servicer fails to advance money in lieu of
               that payment because the servicer did not believe that obligor
               will make good on all of that payment,

          o    an obligor that rejected the contract in a bankruptcy proceeding,
               or

          o    if the contract involves a loan to a lessor, a lessor that
               rejected the lease collateralizing that loan.

     The DISCOUNTED CONTRACT BALANCE is the sum of all then-outstanding
scheduled payments due on a contract, with each future payment multiplied by the
discount rate that we select to express the value of that future payment in
present-day dollars.

     The VOTING RIGHTS are, for each class of securities, all of the
securityholders of that class necessary to represent the entire principal
balance then-outstanding for that class.


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                           DVI RECEIVABLES CORP. VIII

                                   REGISTRANT

                   ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES ISSUABLE IN SERIES

                     --------------------------------------

                              PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT

                              DATED ________, 2000

                               -------------------

             BANC ONE CAPITAL MARKETS, INC. AND MERRILL LYNCH & CO.

                                  UNDERWRITERS


Until ninety days after _______, 2000, all dealers that effect transactions in
these securities, whether or not participating in this offering, may be required
to deliver a prospectus supplement and prospectus.
This is in addition to the dealers' obligation to deliver a prospectus
supplement and prospectus when acting as underwriters and with respect to their
unsold allotments or subscriptions.


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