PLM EQUIPMENT GROWTH FUND V
PRER14A, 2000-06-22
EQUIPMENT RENTAL & LEASING, NEC
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                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

           Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
                     Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No. __)

Filed by Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [ ]

Check the appropriate box:

[X]  Preliminary Proxy Statement   [ ]   Confidential, for Use of the Commission
                                         Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[ ]  Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ]  Definitive Additional Materials
[ ]  Soliciting Material Pursuant to Rule 14a-11(c) or Rule 14a-12


                           PLM Equipment Growth Fund V
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)


    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)


Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]  No fee required
[ ]  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.

     1.   Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

     2.   Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

     3.   Per unit  price  or other  underlying  value of  transaction  computed
          pursuant to Exchange  Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which the
          filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):

     4.   Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

     5.   Total fee paid:


[ ]  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
[ ]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided  by  Exchange  Act
     Rule  0-11(a)(2)  and identify the filing for which the  offsetting fee was
     paid  previously.  Identify the previous filing by  registration  statement
     number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

     1.   Amount Previously Paid:

     2.   Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

     3.   Filing Party:

     4.   Date Filed:


<PAGE>



                             SOLICITATION STATEMENT

                          PLM FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.

         This  solicitation  statement is being provided to the limited partners
of  PLM  Equipment  Growth  Fund  V  (referred  to as  either  "Fund  V" or  the
"Partnership") by PLM Financial  Services,  Inc. which is the General Partner of
the Partnership, in connection with the proposed equitable settlement of a class
action  litigation  brought on behalf of the limited  partners and other current
and former investors in the Partnership. As more fully described throughout this
solicitation  statement,  the equitable settlement will make a number of changes
to the Partnership. The major changes include: extending until December 31, 2004
the time period during which the Partnership can acquire equipment with its cash
flow and sales  proceeds;  extending until January 1, 2007 the date by which all
of the  Partnership's  equipment  must be sold;  requiring  the  Partnership  to
repurchase,  to the  extent  that  limited  partners  request,  up to 10% of the
outstanding  units,  and;  increasing  the  amount of certain  fees the  General
Partner can be paid by the Partnership.

         CERTAIN  FACETS OF THESE CHANGES TO THE  PARTNERSHIP  INVOLVE RISKS AND
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST  THAT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED  BY THE LIMITED  PARTNERS.  SEE
"RISK FACTORS" BEGINNING ON PAGE 6 OF THIS SOLICITATION STATEMENT AND "CONFLICTS
OF  INTERESTS"  BEGINNING ON PAGE 26. IN  PARTICULAR,  LIMITED  PARTNERS  SHOULD
CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING:

o        The negative  consent  procedure by which the 6-year  extension will be
         voted upon makes  approval  of the  extension  more  likely  since only
         voting  forms  actually  returned  and  indicating  opposition  will be
         counted.

o        The attorneys for the limited  partners agreed to the negative  consent
         voting  procedure and,  subject to court approval,  could receive legal
         fees of up to $2,239,819  from the  Partnership  only if the Amendments
         are approved and the Partnership achieves certain performance levels.

o        The  Partnership's  performance  has been  lackluster  and  unless  the
         Amendments are rejected,  limited partners will not have the funds from
         this investment available for 6 years more than expected.

o        The Amendments will significantly reduce the price that the Partnership
         will pay to repurchase units from the average limited partner from 110%
         of net  unrecovered  principal  ($5.37 per unit for the average limited
         partner as of December  31,  1999) to 80% of net asset value ($4.64 per
         unit as of December 31, 1999).

o        The  General  partner's   recommendation  of  the  Amendments   involve
         potential  conflicts of interest since the General Partner will receive
         economic  benefits with respect to the increase in  compensation  which
         could be payable to it, as well as potential  conflicts from one of its
         subsidiaries  having the  opportunity to earn  management  fees through
         January 1, 2007.

o        The corporate  parent of the General Partner has retained an investment
         banking firm to explore strategic  alternatives to maximize shareholder
         value, which could include a merger with another company or the sale of
         the  business  as well as the sale of the  General  Partner  to a third
         party; in the event of a sale,  directly or indirectly,  of the General
         Partner,  the  purchaser  could  modify  the  business  of the  General
         Partner.

         THE GENERAL  PARTNER  RECOMMENDS  ADOPTION OF THE AMENDMENTS AND THAT
         LIMITED  PARTNERS NOT VOTE AGAINST THEM.  COUNSEL FOR THE LIMITED
         PARTNERS ALSO SUPPORT THE AMENDMENTS, WHICH FORM AN INTEGRAL PART
         OF THE PROPOSED EQUITABLE SETTLEMENT.



<PAGE>


         LIMITED PARTNERS WHO FAVOR THE AMENDMENTS NEED DO NOTHING OR CAN SUBMIT
THE VOTING FORM IN FAVOR OF THE  AMENDMENTS;  LIMITED  PARTNERS WHO WISH TO VOTE
AGAINST THE AMENDMENTS MUST DO SO BY FOLLOWING THE PROCEDURES  DESCRIBED HEREIN.
LIMITED PARTNERS WHO FAIL TO RETURN THE VOTING FORM OR WHO MARK "ABSTAIN" ON THE
VOTING FORM WILL BE TREATED AS IF THEY HAD VOTED IN FAVOR OF THE AMENDMENTS.

         This solicitation  statement  provides  information with respect to the
Amendments,  the  predominant  component  of  the  equitable  settlement.   This
solicitation  statement  is  being  mailed  to  limited  partners  on  or  about
________________, 2000.

         The defendants in the  litigation  are the General  Partner and some of
its subsidiaries that are compensated by the Partnership for providing services.

         The proposed equitable settlement of the litigation is part of a larger
settlement,  including a monetary  settlement  that would resolve and settle all
claims  brought  against  the  General  Partner  and the  other  defendants.  To
implement the equitable settlement, the Amended and Restated Limited Partnership
Agreement of the Partnership (the "Partnership  Agreement") will be amended (the
"Amendments") to:

o              extend by 6 years,  until January 1, 2007,  the date by which the
               General   Partner   must   complete   the   liquidation   of  the
               Partnership's  equipment,  thereby  extending  the length of this
               investment by 6 years;

o              extend by 5 years,  until  December 31, 2004,  the period  during
               which the General  Partner will reinvest the  Partnership's  cash
               flow,   surplus   funds  and  retained   proceeds  in  additional
               equipment;

o              require the  Partnership  to  repurchase up to ten percent 10% of
               the outstanding units from limited partners;

o              require a subsidiary  of the General  Partner to defer receipt of
               25%  of  the  equipment  management  fee  it  receives  from  the
               Partnership for a period of 2 1/2 years,  payable only if certain
               financial performance goals for the Partnership are attained; and

o              increase the  limitation on the amounts that the General  Partner
               can receive from the  Partnership  for equipment  acquisition and
               lease  negotiation  services and from  distributions  of proceeds
               from the disposition of equipment

                              CAUTIONARY STATEMENT

         THIS SOLICITATION  STATEMENT CONTAINS  FORWARD-LOOKING  STATEMENTS THAT
ARE SUBJECT TO RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES. THESE FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS INCLUDE
INFORMATION  ABOUT  POSSIBLE  OR ASSUMED  FUTURE  RESULTS  OR THE  PARTNERSHIP'S
OPERATIONS  OR  PERFORMANCE  AND ABOUT THE POSSIBLE  EFFECTS OF THE  AMENDMENTS.
ALSO, THE WORDS "BELIEVES,"  "ANTICIPATES,"  "EXPECTS," "PROJECTS," "DETERMINED"
AND SIMILAR  EXPRESSIONS  USED IN THIS  SOLICITATION  STATEMENT  ARE INTENDED TO
IDENTIFY FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS. SUCH FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS ARE SUBJECT
TO KNOWN AND UNKNOWN RISKS,  UNCERTAINTIES  AND OTHER FACTORS THAT MAY CAUSE THE
ACTUAL RESULTS,  PERFORMANCE OR ACHIEVEMENTS OF THE PARTNERSHIP TO BE MATERIALLY
DIFFERENT FROM THE HISTORICAL ACHIEVEMENTS OF THE PARTNERSHIP.



<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                     TABLE OF CONTENTS


<S>                                                                                                              <C>
SUMMARY........................................................................................................   1
       Procedure for Approval of the Amendments................................................................   1
       Effect of the Amendments................................................................................   1
       Risk Factors............................................................................................   2
              The Affirmative Vote of a Majority of the Units is Not Required to Bind all Limited Partners.....   2
              Declining Revenue and Distributions of the Partnership...........................................   2
              Lackluster Performance of this Investment........................................................   2
              Extending the Life of the Partnership Will Delay by 6 Years Payment of Distributions to the Limited
              Partners from the Liquidation of the Partnership's Equipment.....................................   3
              Significant Reduction in Unit Repurchase Price...................................................   3
              Conflicts of Interest of General Partner.........................................................   3
              Cash Used to Fund the Repurchase Could Limit Distributions to Limited Partners...................   3
              Cash Used to Fund the Compensation Increase Could Limit Distributions to Limited Partners........   3
              The Potential Acceleration in Paying Either the Deferred Portion of the Management Fee
              and some of Class Counsel's Fees Could Deter a Change of Control.................................   3
       Alternatives to the Amendments..........................................................................   3
       General Partner's Reasons for Recommending the Amendments...............................................   4
       Voting Procedures.......................................................................................   4
       Effect of Settlement of the Litigation..................................................................   5
       No Appraisal Rights.....................................................................................   5
       Conflicts of Interest...................................................................................   5
              General Partner..................................................................................   5
              Class Counsel....................................................................................   5

RISK FACTORS...................................................................................................   6
       Risks Relating to the Amendments........................................................................   6
              The Affirmative Vote of a Majority of the Units is Not Required to Bind all Limited Partners.....   6
              Extending the Life of the Partnership Will Cause a 6 Year Delay in the Payment of Distribution
              to the Limited Partners from the Liquidation of the Partnership's Equipment......................   6
              Significant Reduction in Unit Repurchase Price...................................................   6
              Adverse Consequences to the Partnership if the Amendments are not Approved.......................   6
              Cash Used to Fund the Repurchase Could Limit Distributions to Limited Partners...................   7
              Cash Used to Fund the Compensation Increase Could Limit Distributions to Limited Partners........   7
              The Potential Acceleration in Paying Either the Deferred Portion of the Management Fee or the
              Equitable Class Fee Award Could Deter a Change of Control........................................   7
       Investment Risks........................................................................................   7
              Declining Revenue and Distributions..............................................................   7
              Lackluster Performance of this Investment........................................................   8
              Parent Company of the General Partner Reviewing Strategic Alternatives...........................   8
       Ongoing Risks relating  to the Partnerships and Tax Risks of this Investment............................   8
       Conflicts of Interest...................................................................................   8
              Conflict of Interest of General Partner..........................................................   8
              Class Counsel....................................................................................   9

BACKGROUND, BENEFITS OF, AND REASONS FOR, THE AMENDMENTS.......................................................  10
       Description of the Litigation...........................................................................  10
              Summary of Settlement............................................................................  11
              Class Members....................................................................................  12
              Approval Procedure for the Equitable Settlement..................................................  12
              Effect on Rights of Limited Partners.............................................................  12
       Class Counsel...........................................................................................  13
       Provisions of the Amendments............................................................................  13
       The Extension of the Reinvestment Period................................................................  14
       The Delayed Liquidation Date............................................................................  14
       The Management Fee Deferral.............................................................................  14
       The Repurchase..........................................................................................  14
       The Compensation Increase...............................................................................  15
       Comparison of Extending the Reinvestment Period and the Extension (and the Benefits thereof) to
       Termination of Reinvestment and Liquidation of Equipment as Scheduled...................................  16
              Continued Operation of Assets....................................................................  16
              Reinvestment of Proceeds into Additional Equipment...............................................  17
              Equipment Transactions Entered into Since January 1998...........................................  18
              Marine Containers................................................................................  18
              Marine Vessels...................................................................................  18
              Aircraft and Aircraft Spare Parts................................................................  19
              Portable Heaters.................................................................................  19
       Railcars................................................................................................  19
              Trailers.........................................................................................  19
       Change of Strategy......................................................................................  20
       Comparison of Alternatives to the Extension.............................................................  20
              General..........................................................................................  20
              General Partner's Assumptions....................................................................  20
              Currently Owned Equipment Assumptions............................................................  22
              Newly Acquired Equipment Assumptions.............................................................  23
              Estimated December 31, 1999 Value of a Partnership Unit on a Present Value Basis Applying a
              11.1% Discount Rate..............................................................................  25
              Benefits of Liquidation as of December 31, 1999 and January 1, 2001..............................  25

COMPARISON CHART OF PARTNERSHIP OPERATIONS WITH AND WITHOUT THE AMENDMENTS.....................................  26

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST..........................................................................................  30
       General.................................................................................................  30
       Conflict of Interest of General Partner.................................................................  30
       Conflict of Interest of Class Counsel...................................................................  30

VOTING PROCEDURES..............................................................................................  32
       Time of Voting and Record Date..........................................................................  32
       No Vote.................................................................................................  32
       Revocability of Vote....................................................................................  32
       No Appraisal Rights.....................................................................................  32
       Information Services....................................................................................  33

INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN DOCUMENTS BY REFERENCE................................................................  34
</TABLE>

TEXT OF THE AMENDMENTS                         Appendix A

FINANCIAL ASSUMPTIONS                          Appendix B

BALANCE SHEETS OF GENERAL PARTNER              Appendix C

VOTING FORM                                    Appendix D


<PAGE>



                                     SUMMARY

         THE  FOLLOWING  SUMMARY IS  QUALIFIED  IN ITS  ENTIRETY BY THE DETAILED
INFORMATION APPEARING ELSEWHERE IN THIS SOLICITATION STATEMENT.

PROCEDURE FOR APPROVAL OF THE AMENDMENTS

         The Amendments are being proposed by the General  Partner and supported
by counsel for  plaintiffs in the  litigation  ("Class  Counsel") as an integral
part  of the  proposed  equitable  settlement.  Pursuant  to the  court's  order
preliminarily  approving the settlement  stipulation  and subject to final court
approval,  unless limited partners holding 50% or more of the units vote against
one or more of the Amendments by timely delivering a vote against the Amendments
on the form  attached  as  Appendix  B,  the  Partnership  Agreement  will be so
amended.

         The  Amendments  are also being  proposed  to the  limited  partnership
agreements  of two other  partnerships  for which the  General  Partner  acts as
general  partner,  PLM Equipment  Growth Fund VI ("Fund VI"),  and PLM Equipment
Growth and Income Fund VII ("Fund VII"). The  Partnership,  Fund VI and Fund VII
are collectively  referred to as the "Partnerships," and the limited partnership
agreements of the Partnerships are collectively  referred to as the "Partnership
Agreements." Changes to the Partnership Agreements of Funds VI and VII identical
to those proposed for the Partnership are also referred to as the "Amendments."

         Prior to issuing the order,  the court reviewed the proposed  equitable
notice and a draft of this solicitation  statement including the manner in which
the Amendments are voted on by the limited  partners.  See "VOTING  PROCEDURES."
The court asked that certain  changes be made, and after reviewing such changes,
approved  the form and  content  of both  this  solicitation  statement  and the
equitable notice.

         In  addition,   the  court  has   scheduled  a  fairness   hearing  for
_______________, 2000, at which time:

o        members of the equitable  class who follow the procedures  described in
         the  equitable  notice  may  appear  before the court and object to any
         aspect of the  settlement,  including the  Amendments,  notwithstanding
         their  failure  to  deliver  a vote by  ___________________,  2000 (the
         "Voting Deadline");

o        the General  Partner will  provide the court with a  tabulation  of the
         number of units held by limited  partners  in each of the  Partnerships
         that have voted against one or more of the Amendments; and

o        the court may: (1) not approve the  equitable  settlement  in the event
         that limited partners of any of the Partnerships holding 50% or more of
         the units  vote  against  the  Amendments  (2)  approve  the  equitable
         settlement as to one, two or all of the Partnerships so long as limited
         partners  holding  less than 50% of the  units of any such  Partnership
         vote against the Amendments,  or (3) notwithstanding  votes against the
         Amendments  by limited  partners  holding less than 50% of the units in
         each Partnership, still not approve the equitable settlement.

EFFECT OF THE AMENDMENTS

         The Amendments will extend the period during which the Partnership will
be able to  reinvest  its cash flow,  surplus  funds and  retained  proceeds  in
additional equipment (the "Reinvestment  Period") by approximately 5 years until
December 31, 2004. During that time, the General Partner will purchase equipment
and endeavor to lease, and ultimately sell it, consistent with the objectives of
the  Partnership.  The Amendments will also extend the date by which the General
Partner must complete the liquidation of the Partnership's equipment by 6 years,
to  January  1,  2007  (the  "Extension"),  whereas  the  Partnership  Agreement
presently requires the liquidation of equipment by January 1, 2001.

         From January 1, 2002 until June 30, 2004,  PLM  Investment  Management,
Inc. (the  "Manager"),  which is a subsidiary of the General Partner and manages
the Partnership's  equipment assets,  will defer receipt of 25% of the equipment
management fee (the "Management Fee") it would otherwise be entitled to receive.
The Manager will be entitled to be paid the deferred  portion of the  Management
Fee by the Partnership  only if there is an annualized  increase of at least 10%
in the actual cash flow  received by the limited  partners  relative to the cash
flow which the  General  Partner  projects  would have been  received by limited
partners  commencing January 1, 2000 if the Partnership were to be liquidated as
contemplated by the Partnership Agreement.

         The current limitation on front-end fees payable to the General Partner
will be increased by 20% (the "Front-End Fee Increase").  The current limitation
is  based  upon  the  guidelines   issued  by  the  North  American   Securities
Administrators Association, Inc. ("NASAA"). The Front-End Fee Increase will have
the effect of  increasing  the total  compensation  permitted  to be paid to the
General  Partner and its affiliates by the amount of the Front-End Fee Increase.
As a result,  the General  Partner and its affiliates  will be permitted to earn
equipment  acquisition  and  lease  negotiation  fees  ("Front-End  Fees")  that
otherwise  would have been limited by the NASAA  guidelines,  and if the General
Partner  and its  affiliates  do not earn the full amount of the  Front-End  Fee
Increase,  additional  categories  of  compensation,  which  otherwise  would be
restricted  by the  NASAA  guidelines,  could be paid.  Absent  the  Amendments,
however,  the only  payments to the General  Partner other than  Front-End  Fees
which could result in total  compensation  exceeding the NASAA guidelines is the
payment to the General Partner of its interest in the distributed  proceeds from
the sale of equipment ("Net Disposition  Proceeds").  In this regard,  the NASAA
guidelines permit the General Partner to be paid 1% of Net Disposition Proceeds,
while the  Partnership  Agreement  permits the General  Partner to be paid 5% of
such Net  Disposition  Proceeds.  Without  the  Amendments,  the  payment to the
General Partner of up to the additional 4% of Net Disposition  Proceeds to which
it is entitled under the Partnership Agreement would be permitted only if and to
the extent  the  General  Partner  has  otherwise  been paid less than the total
amount of the  compensation  allowed  by the NASAA  guidelines.  Therefore,  the
Amendments  will enable the General  Partner to receive up to this additional 4%
so long as the amount of Net Disposition Proceeds,  together with the additional
Front-End  Fees, do not exceed the 20%  Front-End Fee Increase.  The increase in
the Front-End Fees and in Net Disposition  Proceeds is collectively  referred to
as the "Compensation Increase."

         Finally,  the  Partnership  will offer to  repurchase  up to 10% of its
units at a price of 80% of the net asset value per Unit determined at the end of
the  fiscal  quarter  immediately   preceding  the  deadline  for  submitting  a
repurchase  request  (the  "Repurchase").  This will  replace the  Partnership's
discretionary  authority  to  repurchase,  on an annual  basis,  up to 2% of the
outstanding units at a price of 110% of a selling limited partner's  unrecovered
principal.  See "BACKGROUND,  BENEFITS OF, AND REASONS FOR, THE AMENDMENTS - The
Repurchase."

RISK FACTORS

         Limited partners should carefully  consider the matters disclosed under
"RISK FACTORS" beginning on page 6 and "CONFLICTS OF INTEREST" beginning on page
26 before deciding whether or not to vote against the Amendments.  The following
is a summary of the material risks and other effects of the Amendments.

         THE AFFIRMATIVE VOTE OF A MAJORITY OF THE UNITS IS NOT REQUIRED TO BIND
ALL LIMITED PARTNERS.  Pursuant to the court's order preliminarily approving the
settlement  stipulation and subject to final court approval, the Amendments will
be  effective  unless  limited  partners  holding  50% or more of the units vote
against one or more of the Amendments.  Under the  Partnership  Agreement in its
current form, if the Amendments were not subject to a judicial determination and
court order  following the fairness  hearing,  the Amendments  could be effected
only by obtaining the affirmative  approval of limited partners holding at least
a majority of the units.  In  addition,  although  this  procedure  by which the
Amendments  will be voted  upon has been  preliminarily  approved  by the court,
neither Class Counsel nor counsel for the General Partner specifically  directed
the court's  attention to the fact that the negative consent voting procedure is
contrary to the voting  procedures set forth in the Partnership  Agreement.  See
"VOTING PROCEDURES."

         DECLINING REVENUE AND DISTRIBUTIONS OF THE PARTNERSHIP. Since 1997, the
Partnership's  revenue and the annual cash  distributions  to  unitholders  have
significantly  declined. In the third quarter of 1998, a distribution to limited
partners  was  skipped  in order to allow the  Partnership  to make a payment of
principal due under a loan agreement.  Commencing in the fourth quarter of 1998,
the  distributions  to  limited  partners  were  reduced  to $0.25  per unit per
quarter.  This  historical  level of  performance  should  be kept in mind  when
evaluating the General Partner's recommendation to adopt the Amendments.

         LACKLUSTER PERFORMANCE OF THIS INVESTMENT. As of December 31, 1999, the
value of this  investment  was $20.98 per unit,  calculated by adding the sum of
the weighted average of distributions (weighted to reflect the fact that limited
partners  acquired units at different times during the offering period) received
to such date and the estimated distribution that would have been received if the
assets of the  Partnership  had been  liquidated  on  September  30,  1999 and a
liquidating  distribution  made to limited  partners by December 31, 1999.  This
value is only  slightly  higher than the original  purchase  price of $20.00 per
unit without taking into effect the time value of money.

         EXTENDING THE LIFE OF THE PARTNERSHIP  WILL DELAY BY 6 YEARS PAYMENT OF
DISTRIBUTIONS TO THE LIMITED PARTNERS FROM THE LIQUIDATION OF THE  PARTNERSHIP'S
EQUIPMENT.  Each  limited  partner's  investment  will change from an  ownership
interest in a partnership whose Partnership Agreement  contemplates that it will
liquidate its equipment assets before approximately  January 1, 2001 to one that
will liquidate its equipment assets before approximately January 1, 2007.

         SIGNIFICANT  REDUCTION IN UNIT  REPURCHASE  PRICE.  The Amendments will
reduce  the price at which  the  Partnership  shall  repurchase  units  from the
average limited partner from 110% of net unrecovered capital per unit ($5.37 for
the average  limited  partner as of December  31,  1999) to 80% of the net asset
value per unit ($4.64 per unit as of December 31, 1999).

         CONFLICTS OF INTEREST OF GENERAL PARTNER. The General Partner initiated
and  participated  in  structuring  the Amendments and has conflicts of interest
with respect to their effect,  including the facts that: (a) the General Partner
will earn Front-End Fees for  approximately 5 additional years; (b) the Manager,
which is a subsidiary of the General  Partner,  will earn  Management Fees for 6
additional  years;  (c) the limitation on some  compensation the General Partner
could receive will be increased by 20% over current limits; and (d) the approval
of the  Amendment  may  make  a  transaction  involving  the  General  Partner's
corporate  parent more attractive to a third-party."  See 'RISK FACTORS - Parent
Company of the General Partner Reviewing Strategic  Alternatives" and "CONFLICTS
OF INTEREST - Conflict of Interest of the General Partner."

         CASH USED TO FUND THE REPURCHASE  COULD LIMIT  DISTRIBUTIONS TO LIMITED
PARTNERS.  In order to fund the  Repurchase  projected to cost  $4,204,705,  the
Partnership  may  have  to use  cash  that  would  otherwise  be  available  for
distributions to the limited partners or for reinvestment in equipment.

         CASH USED TO FUND THE COMPENSATION  INCREASE COULD LIMIT  DISTRIBUTIONS
TO LIMITED PARTNERS.  Part of the equitable  settlement  includes increasing the
compensation  which can be paid by the Partnership to the General  Partner.  Any
amounts  paid to the General  Partner as a result of the  Compensation  Increase
will  be  unavailable  for   distributions   to  the  limited  partners  or  for
reinvestment in equipment.

         THE POTENTIAL ACCELERATION IN PAYING EITHER THE DEFERRED PORTION OF THE
MANAGEMENT FEE AND SOME OF CLASS COUNSEL'S FEES COULD DETER A CHANGE OF CONTROL.
The equitable settlement provides that, to the extent the applicable  conditions
have been met, the portion of the Management Fee which will be deferred, as well
as the Equitable Class Fee Award (defined below),  will be payable in a lump sum
in the event the limited partners approve a roll-up transaction or more than 50%
of the units in the Partnership are tendered in response to a registered  tender
offer (a "Change of  Control").  Absent a Change of Control,  such fees would be
paid over time.  These  provisions  could have the effect of deterring a roll-up
transaction or a tender offer. See "CONFLICTS OF INTEREST - Conflict of Interest
of Class Counsel."

ALTERNATIVES TO THE AMENDMENTS

         In the event the court  does not  approve  the  Amendments,  or limited
partners  holding  50% or more of the units vote  against  the  Amendments,  the
General  Partner will continue to operate the  Partnership  according to what is
contemplated by the Partnership  Agreement.  The Partnership stopped reinvesting
available cash in additional equipment in 1998 (except for certain contractually
mandated  capital  modifications),  and has now entered a holding  phase  during
which equipment may be re-leased or sold, but no new equipment can be purchased.
The Partnership  Agreement  currently  provides that the equipment will be fully
sold by January 1, 2001, after which the General Partner will proceed to wind up
the  affairs of the  Partnership  and  distribute  all  remaining  funds,  after
providing for Partnership obligations, to the limited partners.

GENERAL PARTNER'S REASONS FOR RECOMMENDING THE AMENDMENTS

         The  Amendments  were proposed by the General  Partner  pursuant to the
settlement stipulation.  The General Partner believes that the Extension (of the
liquidation  date) is  likely  to  provide  the  General  Partner  with  greater
flexibility  both to generate  additional  revenue from  continuing  to lease an
asset and to  determine  when to sell an asset  based on market  conditions.  In
other  words,  the  General  Partner  believes  that  much of the  Partnership's
equipment will have future cash flow generating potential from continued rentals
and eventual  sales  proceeds and that the present value thereof will exceed the
present value of continued rentals and the sales proceeds of that same equipment
based upon the current  liquidation  date.  Additionally,  the  General  Partner
believes that extending the  Reinvestment  Period will allow the  Partnership to
generally  refocus its operations  away from  underperforming  marine vessels to
other types of equipment markets that are currently experiencing better returns.

         The  General  Partner  believes  its  recommendation  in  favor  of the
Amendments is also supported by: (a) the process of arm's length  negotiation of
the structure,  terms and conditions of the Amendments with Class Counsel acting
on behalf of the equitable class; (ii) the General Partner's  knowledge that any
amendments to the  Partnership  Agreement  would  necessarily  entail  obtaining
preliminary  and  final  approval  by the  court  of the  equitable  settlement,
including the  Amendments;  and (iii) the  opportunity  for each limited partner
both to vote against the Amendments  and/or to object to the settlement in court
as part of the fairness hearing. In addition, those holders of units who are not
limited  partners will also have the  opportunity to object to the settlement as
part of the fairness hearing.  The General Partner's judgment,  however,  may be
affected by the fact that it will derive financial benefits from the Amendments,
and is thus  subject to  conflicts of  interest.  See  "CONFLICTS  OF INTEREST -
Conflict of Interest of the General Partner."

VOTING PROCEDURES

         Pursuant to the court's order  preliminarily  approving the  settlement
stipulation and subject to final court approval,  the Partnership Agreement will
be amended in accordance with the Amendments unless limited partners holding 50%
or more of the units vote against any or all of the Amendments. Limited partners
may vote against the  Amendments  by delivering a Voting Form marked "No" to the
General Partner. Limited partners may also object to any aspect of the equitable
settlement,  including the Amendments,  at the fairness hearing by following the
procedures set forth in the equitable notice which accompanies this solicitation
statement. However, even if limited partners holding 50% or more of the units do
not vote against the Amendments,  the court may not approve the settlement as to
a particular  Partnership,  and then the Amendments will not be given effect and
that Partnership will not participate in the equitable settlement.

         LIMITED  PARTNERS WHO ARE NOT IN FAVOR OF THE AMENDMENTS  MUST RETURN A
SIGNED  VOTING  FORM (THE FORM OF WHICH IS  ATTACHED AS APPENDIX B) TO GILARDI &
CO., 1115 MAGNOLIA AVENUE, LARKSPUR,  CALIFORNIA 94977, AS SOON AS POSSIBLE, BUT
IN ANY  EVENT,  NO LATER  THAN  _____________,  2000,  FOR  THIS  AND ANY  OTHER
PARTNERSHIP IN WHICH THEY HOLD UNITS.  THE VOTING FORM MUST CONTAIN THE NAME AND
ADDRESS OF THE  LIMITED  PARTNER,  AND THE  NUMBER OF UNITS HELD BY THE  LIMITED
PARTNER.

         Limited  partners  holding units as of  _________________  (the "Record
Date"),  have  until 5:00 p.m.  Pacific  Time,  on  ____________,  2000,  unless
extended, to submit their Voting Form (the "Voting Deadline").

         Limited partners may withdraw or revoke their vote at any time prior to
the Voting Deadline. See "VOTING PROCEDURES - Revocability of Vote."

         THE GENERAL  PARTNER  RECOMMENDS  ADOPTION OF THE  AMENDMENTS  AND THAT
LIMITED  PARTNERS NOT VOTE AGAINST THEM.  CLASS COUNSEL SUPPORTS THE AMENDMENTS,
WHICH FORM AN INTEGRAL PART OF THE PROPOSED  EQUITABLE  SETTLEMENT.  The General
Partner and Class  Counsel are subject to conflicts of interest  with respect to
the Amendments. See "CONFLICTS OF INTEREST."

EFFECT OF SETTLEMENT OF THE LITIGATION

         The  settlement  will  result  in the  full  and  complete  settlement,
discharge  and  release  of the  claims by class  members  against  the  General
Partner,  affiliates of the General  Partner and other  defendants in connection
with or which arise out of the allegations made in the litigation. The equitable
settlement  will result in each class  member  releasing  and  discharging  each
defendant in the equitable  settlement  irrespective of whether the class member
voted against the Amendments or objected to the Amendments in court. Even if the
court finally approves the equitable settlement,  however, each class member who
is also a monetary  class member will retain the option of not releasing  claims
against the General Partner and other  defendants and may pursue those claims by
opting out of the monetary settlement. The class members' retention of rights to
pursue defendants in the monetary settlement occurs because the settling parties
are asking the court to approve the  equitable  and monetary  settlement  as two
separate, albeit related, class action settlements.

NO APPRAISAL RIGHTS

         Neither  the   Partnership   Agreement   nor  state  law  provides  for
dissenters'  or  appraisal   rights  to  limited  partners  who  object  to  the
Amendments.  Such rights,  when they exist,  give the holders of securities  the
right to  surrender  such  securities  for an appraised  value in cash,  if they
oppose a merger or similar reorganization. No such right will be provided by the
Partnership in connection with the Amendments.

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

         GENERAL  PARTNER.  The General  Partner  initiated and  participated in
structuring  the  Amendments and has conflicts of interest with respect to their
effect.  For a discussion  of the  conflicts of interest of the General  Partner
with  respect to the  Amendments,  see  "CONFLICTS  OF  INTEREST  - Conflict  of
Interest of the General Partner."

         CLASS COUNSEL.  Limited partners should consider that Class Counsel may
be deemed to have a conflict of interest  with  respect to their  support of the
equitable settlement, of which the proposed Amendments form an integral part. As
part of the equitable settlement,  Class Counsel will apply for a fee award (the
"Equitable Class Fee Award") from any of the  Partnerships  participating in the
equitable  settlement.  The  Equitable  Class Fee Award will only be paid if the
Amendments  are approved,  the equitable  settlement is approved and future cash
distributions to limited partners reach a targeted level. If the Equitable Class
Fee  Award  is  paid,  it is  estimated  to be  payable  at or near the time the
Partnership  liquidates  from funds that would  otherwise be  distributed to the
limited  partners.  The defendants will not have any separate  liability for the
payment of the Equitable  Class Fee Award,  and it will be paid to Class Counsel
only if there is an annualized  increase of at least 12% in the actual cash flow
received  by the  limited  partners  relative to the cash flow which the General
Partner projects would have been received by limited partners commencing January
1,  2000  if the  Partnership  were  to be  liquidated  as  contemplated  by the
Partnership  Agreement.  If such a rate is obtained,  and the General  Partner's
projection of the Partnership's  future performance as a result of the Extension
and extended  Reinvestment  Period is realized (assuming the Partnership debt is
extended),   Class  Counsel's  attorney  fees  with  respect  to  the  equitable
settlement  would be  $2,239,819.  See  "CONFLICTS  OF  INTEREST -  Conflict  of
Interest of Class  Counsel."  Additional fees and expenses will be paid to Class
Counsel in connection  with the monetary  settlement,  if approved by the court.
Such fees will be no greater than one-third of the monetary settlement fund, and
will be paid by  defendants  and their  insurance  company  out of the  monetary
settlement fund.

<PAGE>


                                  RISK FACTORS

         The Amendments involve material risks and other adverse factors, all of
which the General Partner  believes are discussed or referred to below.  Limited
partners  are  urged  to  read  this  solicitation  statement  in its  entirety,
including all appendices and supplements  hereto,  and the original  prospectus,
and should  consider  carefully  the  following  material  risks in  determining
whether to vote  against  one or more of the  Amendments,  as well as whether to
object to the  equitable  settlement  in court as part of the  fairness  hearing
scheduled for ________________.


RISKS RELATING TO THE AMENDMENTS

         THE AFFIRMATIVE VOTE OF A MAJORITY OF THE UNITS IS NOT REQUIRED TO BIND
ALL LIMITED PARTNERS.  Pursuant to the court's order preliminarily approving the
settlement  stipulation and subject to the final court approval,  the Amendments
will be effective  unless limited partners holding 50% or more of the units vote
against  one or more of the  Amendments.  A  limited  partner  who does not vote
against any of the Amendments  will be deemed as favoring the  Amendments,  even
though such limited  partner may favor neither the  Amendments nor the equitable
settlement.  As such, it is possible that the Amendments may be approved even if
disfavored  by the  holders of a  majority  of the units or even if fewer than a
majority actually receive this solicitation statement or consider the Amendments
described herein.

         Although the procedure by which the  Amendments  will be voted upon has
been preliminarily  approved by the court, neither Class Counsel nor counsel for
the General Partner specifically directed the court's attention to the fact that
the negative consent voting  procedure is contrary to the voting  procedures set
forth  in the  Partnership  Agreement.  There  is no  reported  appellate  court
decision approving a change in the voting procedure of a limited  partnership to
allow  non-votes  to be  treated  as  affirmative  votes  where the  partnership
agreement did not specifically  permit non-votes to be so counted.  In the event
the voting mechanism used here to approve the Amendments were to be successfully
objected to at the fairness  hearing,  the Partnership  would not participate in
the equitable settlement.

         Limited  Partners  should be aware that this  negative  consent  voting
procedure is not typically  used for  solicitations  governed by the SEC's proxy
solicitation  rules, which normally require an affirmative vote for matters such
as approval of the Amendments.  Additionally,  limited partners who vote against
the  Amendments  will  be  bound  by the  equitable  settlement  (including  the
implementation of the Amendments)  unless limited partners holding more than 50%
of the  units  vote  against  one or more of the  Amendments  and the  equitable
settlement is not approved by the court.  No limited partner will be able to opt
out of the  equitable  settlement.  If the  Amendments  were  not  subject  to a
judicial  determination  and court order  following  the fairness  hearing,  the
Amendments  could be effected  only by  obtaining  the  affirmative  approval of
limited  partners  holding not less than a majority  of the units.  See " VOTING
PROCEDURES"  and  "CONFLICTS  OF  INTEREST  -  Conflicts  of  Interest  of Class
Counsel."

         EXTENDING THE LIFE OF THE PARTNERSHIP  WILL CAUSE A 6 YEAR DELAY IN THE
PAYMENT OF  DISTRIBUTIONS  TO THE LIMITED  PARTNERS FROM THE  LIQUIDATION OF THE
PARTNERSHIP'S  EQUIPMENT.  Each limited partner's investment will change from an
ownership  interest in a partnership  which  contemplates  a liquidation  of its
equipment  assets  before  approximately  January  1,  2001,  to one  that  will
liquidate its equipment assets not later than January 1, 2007.  Therefore,  as a
result of the  Amendments,  it is  anticipated  that limited  partners  will not
receive  final  distributions  from  the  liquidation  and  dissolution  of  the
Partnership  until   approximately  6  years  later  than  contemplated  by  the
Partnership Agreement.

         SIGNIFICANT  REDUCTION IN UNIT  REPURCHASE  PRICE.  The Amendments will
reduce  the price at which  the  Partnership  shall  repurchase  units  from the
average limited partner from 110% of net unrecovered capital per unit ($5.37 for
the average  limited  partner as of December  31,  1999) to 80% of the net asset
value per unit ($4.64 per unit as of December 31, 1999).

         ADVERSE  CONSEQUENCES  TO THE  PARTNERSHIP  IF THE  AMENDMENTS  ARE NOT
APPROVED. If the limited partners do not approve the Amendments,  or if they are
approved  but  overturned  as a result of an  appeal,  or if the court  does not
approve the Amendments,  the equitable settlement will become null and void. The
non-approval of the equitable settlement,  however,  would have no impact on the
monetary  settlement  (so long as it is approved by the court after the fairness
hearing).  The General Partner  believes that the return limited  partners would
receive from their  investment if the  Amendments are not approved would be less
than the return they would likely receive if the Amendments are approved.

         CASH USED TO FUND THE REPURCHASE  COULD LIMIT  DISTRIBUTIONS TO LIMITED
PARTNERS.  In order to fund the Repurchase,  projected to cost  $4,204,705,  the
Partnership  may  have to use  cash  which  would  otherwise  be  available  for
distributions to the limited partners or for reinvestment in equipment.

         CASH USED TO FUND THE COMPENSATION  INCREASE COULD LIMIT  DISTRIBUTIONS
TO LIMITED PARTNERS.  Part of the equitable  settlement  includes increasing the
fees which can be paid by the Partnership to the General Partner. Any amounts so
paid to the General  Partner will be unavailable  for  distributions  to limited
partners or for  reinvestment in equipment.  Furthermore,  the aggregate  amount
paid to the General  Partner as a result of the  Front-End  Fee  increase  could
offset any benefits to the Partnership  resulting from the Manager deferring (or
even not receiving) 25% of the  Management  Fee.  During the time frame when the
Manager defers  receiving 25% of the Management Fee, the Partnership will retain
the deferred fees and may reinvest  them in equipment,  deposit them in interest
bearing accounts, or do both. The Partnership's return on those investments,  or
even  the  Partnership's  savings  if it does  not pay  the  Manager  any of the
deferred  portion of the  Management  Fee (if the  Manager  does not achieve the
stipulated  performance  target),  may be less than the amount of Front-End Fees
and Net Distribution  Proceeds payable to the General Partner as a result of the
increase in the limitation on its fees.

         THE POTENTIAL ACCELERATION IN PAYING EITHER THE DEFERRED PORTION OF THE
MANAGEMENT FEE OR THE EQUITABLE CLASS FEE AWARD COULD DETER A CHANGE OF CONTROL.
The equitable  settlement  provides that both the portion of the  Management Fee
(25%) which will be deferred,  as well as the Equitable Class Fee Award, will be
payable in a lump sum upon a Change of Control,  but only if the General Partner
and Class  Counsel  agree that an  annualized  increase of 10% (for the Deferred
Management  Fee) and/or 12% (for the Equitable Class Fee Award) in the cash flow
received  by the  limited  partners  relative to the cash flow which the General
Partner  projects  would have been  received by the General  Partner  commencing
January 1, 2000 (if the Partnership  were to be liquidated as is contemplated by
the  Partnership  Agreement)  would  have been  attained  absent  the  Change of
Control.  Without a Change of Control, such fees would be paid over time, if the
10% and 12%  targets  were  met.  These  provisions  could  have the  effect  of
deterring a roll-up  transaction or a tender offer. See "CONFLICTS OF INTEREST -
Conflict of Interest of Class  Counsel,"  and "- Conflict of Interest of General
Partner."

         As discussed  above,  the General Partner and Class Counsel agreed that
the payment of the Equitable Class Fee Award would be accelerated  upon a Change
of Control,  but only if the limited  partners  had obtained the benefits of the
Extension and extended  Reinvestment  Period.  That is, the General  Partner and
Class Counsel  agreed that Class  Counsel would receive the Equitable  Class Fee
Award upon a Change of Control if the required cash flows, which were the agreed
upon  condition for paying Class  Counsel,  would have been attained and paid to
the limited partners absent the Change of Control.

         The  payment  of  the  Equitable  Class  Fee  Award  is  tied  to,  and
conditioned  upon,  the operation of the  Partnership's  business in its current
form,  that  is as a  Partnership  distributing  cash to its  investors.  If the
Partnership  is  subject  to a Change  of  Control,  it may not be  possible  to
calculate  whether and when the targeted  thresholds  for awarding the Equitable
Class Fee Award have been met,  even if the limited  partners  have obtained the
targeted benefits of the Extension and extended Reinvestment Period.

         Several alternative payment structures were considered by Class Counsel
and the defendants.  Ultimately,  it was agreed that Class Counsel would be paid
at the time of a Change of Control  transaction,  if, at the time of a Change of
Control transaction, absent the Change of Control, had the Partnership continued
to operate in its then current form the targeted threshold  distributions to the
limited  partners  would  otherwise  have been  achieved.  That is, the  General
Partner and Class Counsel  agreed that Class Counsel would receive the Equitable
Class Fee Award upon a Change of Control if the required cash flows,  which were
the  agreed  upon  conditions  for  payment  to Class  Counsel,  would have been
attained and paid to the limited partners absent the Change of Control.

INVESTMENT RISKS

         DECLINING  REVENUE AND  DISTRIBUTIONS.  Since 1997,  the  Partnership's
revenue has  significantly  declined.  Annual cash  distributions to unitholders
have also  declined,  reduced to $1.00 in the fourth quarter of 1998, to reflect
diminished cash flow from  operations.  Limited partners are urged to review the
Partnership's annual and quarterly reports on Forms 10-K and 10-Q filed with the
SEC for a detailed  review of these  developments,  the most recent of which are
being delivered to limited partners along with this solicitation statement.

         LACKLUSTER PERFORMANCE OF THIS INVESTMENT. As of December 31, 1999, the
value of this investment (the sum of the distributions received to such date and
the  estimated  distribution  that would have been received if the assets of the
Partnership  had  been  liquidated  on  September  30,  1999  and a  liquidating
distribution  made to limited  partners by December 31,  1999) is only  slightly
higher than its  original  purchase  price  without  taking into effect the time
value of money.  The average  limited  partner  who  acquired  units  during the
offering period has received  distributions  through December 31, 1999 of $15.12
for each $20.00 unit purchased,  and the General Partner  estimates that, if the
Partnership had been liquidated as of December 31, 1999,  limited partners would
have  received  an  additional  $5.86 per unit,  for a total of $20.98.  Through
December 31, 1999,  limited  partners  who invested at the  commencement  of the
offering  have  received  distributions  totaling  $16.74 per unit and those who
invested at the end of the offering period have received  distributions totaling
$13.49 per unit.

         PARENT COMPANY OF THE GENERAL PARTNER REVIEWING STRATEGIC ALTERNATIVES.
On  November 8, 1999,  PLM  International,  Inc.,  the  corporate  parent of the
General  Partner,  announced  that  its  board  of  directors  has  engaged  the
investment  banking firm of Imperial Capital,  LLC, to explore various strategic
and  financial  alternatives  for  maximizing  shareholder  value on a near-term
basis.  Such  alternatives  may  include,  but are not  limited  to, a  possible
transaction or series of transactions representing a merger,  consolidation,  or
any other  business  combination,  a sale of all or a substantial  amount of the
business,   securities,   or   assets   of  PLM   International,   Inc.,   or  a
recapitalization or spin-off.  The Compensation  Increase and the opportunity to
earn  Management  Fees for an additional 6 years  provided for by the Amendments
may make a transaction  involving the  corporate  parent of the General  Partner
more attractive.  In the event of a sale, directly or indirectly, of the General
Partner, the purchaser could modify the business of the General Partner.

ONGOING RISKS RELATING TO THE PARTNERSHIPS AND TAX RISKS OF THIS INVESTMENT

         Throughout  the  Extension,  the  operation  of  the  Partnership  will
continue to be subject to risks  similar to those that were  present at the time
limited  partners  purchased  their  units,  which  risks are  described  in the
Prospectus for the  Partnership,  copies of which are available from the General
Partner.

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

         CONFLICT OF INTEREST OF GENERAL PARTNER.  The General Partner initiated
and  participated  in the  structuring  of the  Amendments and has the following
conflicts of interest with respect to their effect:

          (1) As part of the  Amendments,  the  limitation on the Front-End Fees
and Net  Disposition  Proceeds  that can be paid to the  General  Partner by the
Partnership  will be  increased  effective  as of January  1, 1999,  so that the
General  Partner  can earn such fees in excess of the amount  proscribed  in the
NASAA guidelines.

          (2) The General  Partner will earn Front-End Fees for  approximately 5
additional years as a result of the extension of the Reinvestment Period. During
the period from 1997 through  1999,  the  Partnership  paid the General  Partner
average annual Front-End Fees of $379,539.

          (3) The General Partner will earn greater Net Disposition  Proceeds as
a result of extending  the  Reinvestment  Period.  To date,  no Net  Disposition
Proceeds have been paid because all disposition proceeds have been reinvested in
equipment or used for Partnership operations.

          (4) The  Manager,  an  affiliate  of the  General  Partner,  will earn
Management  Fees  for 6 more  years  than  is  contemplated  by the  Partnership
Agreement.  Additionally, the ability to reinvest through December 31, 2004 will
result in the level of Management Fees not decreasing at as great a rate as they
likely  would  otherwise,  since  Management  Fees are based  upon  gross  lease
revenues  which likely  would  decrease  more quickly  during those years in the
absence of  reinvestment  in equipment.  During the period 1997 through 1999 the
Partnership paid the Manager on average Management Fees of $1,526,856 per year.

          (5) If any portion of the Management Fee has been deferred at the time
a Change of Control occurs, the deferred portion may be payable in a lump sum if
the General  Partner and Class Counsel agree that an annualized  increase of 10%
in the cash flow  received  by the  limited  partners  relative to the cash flow
which the  General  Partner  projects  would have been  received  by the limited
partners  commencing  January 1, 2000 (if the Partnership  were to be liquidated
pursuant to what is contemplated by the Partnership  Agreement)  would have been
attained absent the Change of Control.

         See  "CONFLICTS OF INTEREST - Conflict of Interest of General  Partner"
for a fuller discussion.

         Class Counsel.  In assessing Class  Counsel's  support of the equitable
settlement  of which the  proposed  Amendments  form an integral  part,  limited
partners  should consider that Class Counsel may be deemed to have a conflict of
interest with respect to such support. In particular:

          (a) the fees and  expenses  of Class  Counsel in  connection  with the
monetary  settlement,  if approved  by the court,  will be paid in part from the
cash  settlement  fund  provided  by the  defendants  pursuant  to the  monetary
settlement;

          (b) as part of the equitable settlement,  Class Counsel will apply for
the Equitable  Class Fee Award which is estimated to be paid at or near the time
the Partnership liquidates from funds that would otherwise be distributed to the
limited  partners  if there is an  annualized  increase  of at least  12% in the
actual  cash flow  received by the  limited  partners  relative to the cash flow
which the General Partner  projects would have been received by limited partners
commencing  January  1,  2000  if  the  Partnership  were  to be  liquidated  as
contemplated by the Partnership Agreement;

          (c) the Equitable Class Fee Award will be payable in a lump sum in the
event of a Change of Control if the General Partner and Class Counsel agree that
an annualized  increase of 12% in the cash flow received by the limited partners
relative to the cash flow which the  General  Partner  projects  would have been
received by the limited partners  commencing January 1, 2000 (if the Partnership
were to be liquidated as contemplated by the Partnership  Agreement)  would have
been attained absent the Change of Control; and

          (d) given the  additional  protections  for  members of the  equitable
class,  including  the right to object to the proposed  equitable  settlement in
whole or in part,  and the court's  prerogative to reject the settlement and the
Amendments even if the requisite consent of limited partners is obtained,  under
those  circumstances  Class  Counsel has agreed to the negative  consent  voting
procedure  concerning the Amendments,  which procedure makes their approval more
likely and, as a  consequence,  Class  Counsel could receive legal fees of up to
$2,239,819  if the  Amendments  are  approved and the  Partnership  achieves the
targeted threshold of performance  (assuming  renegotiation of the Partnership's
debt). Class Counsel may receive such fees at some time in the future (estimated
to  occur  at  or  near  the  time  the  Partnership  liquidates),   subject  to
acceleration  in the event of a Change of Control.  Such fees could only be paid
to Class Counsel if the limited partners receive the targeted threshold level of
distributions.  See  "CONFLICTS  OF  INTEREST - Conflict  of  Interest  of Class
Counsel."



<PAGE>



            BACKGROUND, BENEFITS OF, AND REASONS FOR, THE AMENDMENTS

DESCRIPTION OF THE LITIGATION

         PLM  International,  Inc., a Delaware  corporation,  the  Manager,  the
General  Partner  and two  subsidiaries  of the  General  Partner  were named as
defendants in a lawsuit filed as a putative  class action on January 22, 1997 in
the Circuit Court of Mobile County,  Mobile,  Alabama,  Case No.  CV-97-251 (the
"Alabama action").  Plaintiffs,  who filed the complaint on their own behalf and
on behalf of all class  members  similarly  situated,  are six  investors in the
Partnerships,  for which the General  Partner acts as the general  partner.  The
complaint asserted causes of action against all defendants,  including fraud and
deceit,  suppression,  negligent  misrepresentation,  intentional  and negligent
breaches of fiduciary  duty,  unjust  enrichment,  conversion,  and  conspiracy.
Plaintiffs  alleged that each defendant owed plaintiffs and the class duties due
to their status as fiduciaries,  financial advisors, agents and control persons.
Plaintiffs  further asserted liability against defendants for improper sales and
marketing  practices,  mismanagement  of the  Partnerships,  and concealing such
mismanagement from investors in the Partnerships.

         Plaintiffs  also alleged that the  offering  materials  prepared by the
General Partner for use by third-party  brokers  misrepresented the purchases of
units in the  Partnerships  as safe,  non-speculative  investments  with  annual
double-digit  cash  distribution  rates,  and that the  General  Partner,  other
defendants and non-defendant brokers misled class members by failing to disclose
what plaintiffs  alleged to be the actual risks associated with investing in the
Partnerships.  Plaintiffs sought unspecified compensatory and recissory damages,
as well as punitive damages,  and have offered to tender their units back to the
defendants. Defendants have denied all of the allegations.

         In March 1997,  the  defendants  removed  the  Alabama  action from the
Alabama  state  court to the  United  States  District  Court  for the  Southern
District of Alabama,  Southern Division (Civil Action No. 97-0177-BH-C) based on
the diversity  jurisdiction  of the United  States  District  Court.  Defendants
removed  the Alabama  action to the Alabama  federal  court  because  defendants
believed  that the case  should  have been  brought  in  federal  court and that
plaintiffs  had  incorrectly  filed the complaint in Alabama state court because
Alabama  state  courts  are  widely  perceived  to be  predisposed  in  favor of
plaintiffs in class  actions,  more likely to certify a putative  class than the
federal courts, and more likely to award punitive damages.  Defendants were also
aware of the practice of plaintiffs  attorneys to file national class actions in
Alabama state court where very few plaintiffs  reside in order to take advantage
of these perceived court-specific advantages.

         After defendants removed the case to Alabama federal court,  plaintiffs
filed a motion to remand  the case back to  Alabama  state  court.  The  Alabama
federal court denied  plaintiffs'  motion,  after which  plaintiff  successfully
appealed  the  Alabama  federal  court's  ruling to the Court of Appeals for the
Eleventh Circuit.

         Further,   in  December  1997,   the  Alabama   federal  court  granted
defendants' motion to compel arbitration of the named plaintiffs' claims,  based
on an  agreement to arbitrate  contained  in the  Partnership  Agreement of each
Partnership.  The Alabama federal court's ruling meant that each plaintiff could
not prosecute the Alabama action as a class action in federal court, but instead
would  have  been  likely  required  to pursue  his or her  claim in  individual
arbitration  proceedings,   all  in  San  Francisco,  as  provided  for  in  the
Partnership  Agreement.  Plaintiffs  therefore  also appealed  this  significant
decision, but in June 1998 voluntarily dismissed their appeal pending settlement
of the Alabama action, as discussed below.

         On June 5, 1997,  the  defendants  were sued in another  putative class
action filed in the San Francisco  Superior  Court,  San Francisco,  California,
Case No.  987062 (the  "California  action").  The  plaintiff in the  California
action is an investor in Fund V, and filed the  complaint  on her own behalf and
on behalf of all class  members  similarly  situated who invested in the limited
partnerships  for  which  the  General  Partner  acts  as the  general  partner,
including the Partnerships. The California action alleges the same facts and the
same causes of action as in the Alabama action, plus additional causes of action
against all of the defendants, including alleged unfair and deceptive practices,
constructive fraud, and violations of the California Securities Law of 1968.

         In July 1997,  defendants  filed with the United States  District Court
for the Northern  District of  California  (Case No.  C-97-2847  VHO) a petition
under the Federal  Arbitration Act seeking,  as in the Alabama action, to compel
arbitration  of the California  plaintiffs'  claims and for an order staying the
California state court proceedings pending the outcome of the arbitration sought
by  the  petition.   In  October  1997,  the  California  federal  court  denied
defendants' petition, but in November 1997, agreed to hear the General Partner's
motion for  reconsideration  of this order.  That the  California  federal court
decided to reconsider  its ruling  denying  defendants'  motion to arbitrate was
also  significant  since  that  court's  reconsideration  created  the  risk for
plaintiffs  that the  California  federal  court would  follow the ruling of the
Alabama federal court, and therefore, like in the Alabama action, the California
action would not be able to proceed as a class action in the federal courts, but
would  instead  likely  have to proceed  as an  individual  arbitration  for the
California  plaintiff  and any other  plaintiff in the  California  action.  The
hearing on this motion for  reconsideration  has been taken off calendar and the
California  federal court has dismissed the petition  pending  settlement of the
California  action.  The  California  state court action is stayed  pending such
resolution.

         After the  California  federal  court in  November  1997 agreed to hear
defendants'  motion for  reconsideration of their petition to compel arbitration
of the  California  action,  and the Alabama  federal court granted  defendants'
motion to compel  arbitration  in the  Alabama  action,  the  parties  commenced
serious  settlement  negotiations.  Negotiations  were  long and  involved,  and
required Class Counsel to review  materials  relating to the  Partnerships  that
they had collected in other  proceedings  against brokers and from defendants in
this litigation.  Material terms over which the parties negotiated  included the
dollar  amount  of the  monetary  settlement,  when  defendants  would  fund the
monetary  settlement (which would commence the payment of interest),  the claims
procedures  by which  class  members  would file  claims  against  the  monetary
settlement  fund,  the  benefits  to the  limited  partners  if the  term of the
Partnerships were extended, the determination to include each Partnership in the
equitable  settlement,  the  repurchase  of  units  by  the  Partnership  for  a
percentage  of their net asset  value,  the deferral of  Management  Fees by the
General  Partner's  subsidiary,  the return threshold for the General  Partner's
subsidiary  becoming  entitled to receive the deferred portion of the Management
Fee,  the  payment  of  additional  compensation  to  the  General  Partner  for
performing  services  during the Extension,  and the definition and scope of the
settlement  classes  which  would  participate  in the  claims  process  and the
equitable settlement and would release claims against defendants and others.

         On February 9, 1999,  Class Counsel and the  defendants  entered into a
settlement stipulation providing for a monetary and equitable settlement of both
the Alabama action and California action,  and filed the settlement  stipulation
and supporting  papers in the Alabama  federal court.  The Alabama federal court
preliminarily approved the stipulation on June 29, 1999 after a hearing attended
by representatives of defendants and plaintiffs. Although the procedure by which
the  Amendments  will be voted  upon has been  [preliminarily]  approved  by the
court,  neither Class Counsel nor counsel for the General  Partner  specifically
directed  the court's  attention to the fact that the  negative  consent  voting
procedure  is contrary  to the voting  procedures  set forth in the  Partnership
Agreement.  The Alabama federal court also  preliminarily  certified two classes
for settlement purposes,  a monetary class and an equitable class,  approved the
forms of notices to be sent to class  members,  and scheduled a date for a final
fairness  hearing  at which all class  members  will have an  opportunity  to be
heard.

         Since the commencement of the Alabama action, which includes the period
of settlement negotiations, the General Partner has not considered involving the
Partnership  in a  merger,  acquisition,  combination,  consolidation  or  joint
venture  with other  entities in the  equipment  leasing  business.  The General
Partner  also  has  not  been  aware  of  any  such  offers  to so  involve  the
Partnership.  However,  the General  Partner's  corporate parent has retained an
investment  banker  to  consider  strategic  alternatives,  including  a merger,
consolidation,  and  sale  of  all of its  business  or  assets,  and  any  such
transaction could involve the General Partner.

         SUMMARY OF SETTLEMENT.  The  settlement is comprised of two parts,  the
monetary  settlement,  which involves the  Partnerships and PLM Equipment Growth
Fund IV ("Fund IV"), and the equitable settlement in which only the Partnerships
(and not Fund IV) may  participate,  as more fully set forth in the accompanying
two separate  notices of the  equitable and monetary  settlements.  The monetary
settlement in part requires  defendants to pay up to $6,600,000 in settlement of
the monetary  class claims.  The General  Partner's  parent is  responsible  for
$330,000 of this amount with the balance  funded by  insurance.  $6,000,000  was
deposited  into a  settlement  account  on July  21,  1999,  and the  additional
$600,000  will be deposited  shortly.  Monetary  class members who properly file
claims with the settlement  administrator will be paid in accordance with a plan
of allocation  that was  formulated by Class Counsel and is to be considered for
final approval by the court.  Amounts  payable to monetary class members will be
reduced by the fees paid to Class  Counsel from the monetary  settlement,  which
will be no greater  than  one-third of the monetary  settlement.  The  equitable
settlement  contemplates  the  extension  of the  Reinvestment  Period  and  the
deferred  liquidation  of the  equipment  in each  Partnership,  as set forth in
detail in this document.

         CLASS  MEMBERS.  The monetary  class  consists of,  among  others,  all
persons  whom  between  May 23, 1989 and June 29,  1999  purchased  units in the
Partnerships  and Fund IV,  regardless of whether they currently hold units. The
General  Partner is also the  general  partner of Fund IV. The  equitable  class
consists of, among others,  all persons who were unitholders in the Partnerships
as of June 29, 1999 or their successors and/or  assignees.  There is substantial
overlap  between  the two  classes  and they are not  mutually  exclusive.  Most
everyone  who is a member of the  equitable  class  will also be a member of the
monetary class (only those unitholders who acquired their units in a Partnership
after June 29, 1999 will not be monetary class members).

         APPROVAL  PROCEDURE  FOR  THE  EQUITABLE   SETTLEMENT.   The  equitable
settlement  provides that,  assuming other  conditions are met,  including court
approval,  the  Partnership  Agreement  will be  amended  to give  effect to the
Amendments  unless  limited  partners  holding  50% or more of the units in such
Partnership  vote against one or more of the Amendments.  Limited  partners have
until  _________________,  2000 to vote  against one or more of the  Amendments.
Thus, the Partnership will participate in the equitable settlement if:

          (1)  limited  partners  holding  less than 50% of the units of a given
               Partnership vote against one or more of the Amendments;

          (2)  the court  approves  of the  Partnership  being  included  in the
               equitable settlement; and

          (3)  the other terms and conditions of the settlement  stipulation are
               satisfied or waived.

         Under the Partnership Agreement, implementation of the Amendments could
only be effected by obtaining the approval of the limited  partners  holding not
less than a majority of the units.  However,  because the Amendments are subject
to a judicial  determination  and court order following the fairness hearing (as
provided for in the settlement  stipulation),  the Amendments will be effective,
subject to the other conditions just described above,  unless 50% or more of the
units vote against one or more of the  Amendments  (the negative  consent voting
procedure).  The General  Partner is  recommending  the negative  consent voting
procedure  involving the  Amendments,  since such procedure makes their approval
more  likely.  Any  limited  partner  objecting  to this  change  in the  voting
procedure  (or to any  other  part of the  equitable  settlement)  will have the
opportunity  both to vote against the  Amendments  by submitting a signed Voting
Form by __________, 2000 and/or to object to them in court at the final approval
hearing on ______2000 by following the  instructions  contained in the equitable
notice  accompanying  this  solicitation.  At that hearing,  the Alabama federal
court will hear and consider any such  objections  (as well as  objections  from
class members who are not limited  partners),  as well as other  submissions  by
Class Counsel and defendants,  as part of its  determination of whether both the
equitable and monetary class settlements are fair and reasonable  resolutions of
this litigation.  As part of that determination,  the Alabama federal court will
consider any  objection to any part of the  settlement  including  objections to
that part of the  equitable  settlement  that  alters the  Partnership's  voting
procedures.

         EFFECT ON RIGHTS OF LIMITED PARTNERS. An equitable class member has the
right to vote against the equitable  settlement by voting against one or more of
the  Amendments  by  delivery of a Voting  Form  pursuant  to this  solicitation
statement and/or to object to the equitable settlement in court by following the
procedures set forth in the equitable notice which accompanies this solicitation
statement.  An  equitable  class  member  may  not  opt  out  of  the  equitable
settlement,  and upon  approval of the equitable  settlement  by the court,  the
Amendments will be approved and all equitable class members will be participants
in the equitable settlement.

         Approval  of the  equitable  settlement  will  result  in the  full and
complete settlement,  discharge and release of the claims by the equitable class
members against the General Partner, affiliates of the General Partner and other
defendants in connection with or which arise out of the allegations  made in the
litigation  irrespective of whether the equitable class member voted against the
Amendments  or  objected  to the  equitable  settlement  in  court,  unless  the
equitable class member is also a monetary class member who properly opted out of
the monetary settlement. A member of the equitable class who is also a member of
the  monetary  class and who has opted out of the  monetary  class may pursue an
individual claim regardless of the outcome of the equitable settlement.

         The class  members'  retention  of rights to pursue  defendants  in the
monetary  settlement occurs because the settling parties are asking the court to
approve the equitable and monetary  settlement as two separate,  albeit related,
class action  settlements.  And accordingly,  each class member who has released
defendants  by virtue of  approval of the  equitable  settlement  will,  if they
properly opted out of the monetary  settlement,  not have released defendants in
the  monetary  settlement.  But each  class  member  who does not opt out of the
monetary settlement will be restrained from commencing or prosecuting any claims
settled and released as part of the monetary settlement.

         A class member who chooses to vote against the amendments and/or object
to the equitable settlement in court is not, however, required to opt out of the
monetary settlement, and may still participate in the benefit of such settlement
if approved by the court.

         The  equitable  settlement  will not be  approved  by the  court if the
monetary  settlement is not approved (the  monetary  settlement  may be approved
even if the equitable settlement is not approved).

         If  defendants  elect to terminate  the  equitable  settlement  for the
reasons  discussed below,  class members will still have the right to opt out of
the  monetary  settlement  if they wish to pursue  claims  against  the  General
Partner,  other  defendants,  or others.  If  defendants  elect to terminate the
monetary settlement as well, class members will also retain whatever rights they
previously  had to pursue any claims  they might have had  against  the  General
Partner, other defendants or others.

CLASS COUNSEL

         Class  Counsel  consists  of law firms  located  throughout  the United
States, each of which is unaffiliated with the General Partner.  Such firms were
selected  by the  individual  plaintiffs  who  commenced  or  intervened  in the
litigation,  all of whom are limited partners, to represent and act on behalf of
other limited partners and unitholders in the litigation,  including  settlement
of the litigation. Class Counsel are coordinated by Michael E. Criden of the law
firm of Hanzman, Criden, Chaykin, Ponce and Heise in Miami, Florida.

         Each of plaintiffs' law firms is experienced in representing  investors
in securities  and limited  partnership  class action  litigation,  and each has
represented investors in complex settlement  negotiations resulting in a variety
of settlement  transactions.  Class  Counsel  investigated  the claims  asserted
against the defendants in the  litigation,  conducted  discovery,  including the
review of numerous  documents,  and conducted  extensive  negotiations  with the
General Partner resulting in the settlement.

         Class Counsel may be considered to have a conflict of interest in their
support of the equitable  settlement,  of which the proposed  Amendments form an
integral part,  because Class Counsel intends to apply to the court for an award
of fees and reimbursement of expenses.  See "CONFLICTS OF INTEREST - Conflict of
Interest of Class  Counsel."  Class  Counsel's fee application is subject to the
approval of the court.

         Class Counsel will not receive  attorneys' fees from the Partnership or
the limited  partners  in the event the  Amendments  are not  approved or if the
defendants elect to terminate the equitable settlement.

PROVISIONS OF THE AMENDMENTS

         The Amendments, if approved by the court and the limited partners, will
consist of five material components, each described below:

         o        the extension of the Reinvestment Period by approximately five
                  years;

         o        the extension, until January 1, 2007, of the date by which the
                  General  Partner  must  liquidate  all  of  the  Partnership's
                  equipment,  which date is 6 years beyond what is  contemplated
                  by the Partnership Agreement;

         o        the 2 1/2 year deferral of the Manager's receipt of 25% of its
                  Management Fee until specified performance levels are achieved
                  by the Partnership;

         o        the offer of the  Partnership  to  repurchase up to 10% of its
                  units from  equitable  class members at 80% of their net asset
                  value; and

         o        an increase  in the limitation on compensation the General
                  Partner can  receive.

THE EXTENSION OF THE REINVESTMENT PERIOD

         The  Reinvestment  Period  will be  extended,  permitting  the  General
Partner to reinvest cash flow,  surplus funds or retained proceeds in additional
equipment into the year 2004, which will allow  approximately 5 additional years
of reinvestment.

THE DELAYED LIQUIDATION DATE

         The Partnership Agreement requires that the Partnership's  equipment be
liquidated by January 1, 2001. The Amendments  will extend that date by 6 years,
until January 1, 2007.

THE MANAGEMENT FEE DEFERRAL

         Commencing  January 1, 2002 and continuing for 2 1/2 years, the Manager
will defer receipt of 25% of the Management  Fee it would  otherwise be entitled
to receive  from the  Partnership  pursuant to the  Partnership  Agreement.  For
equipment  management  services rendered to the Partnership in 1999, the Manager
was paid a Management Fee of $1,292,340.

         The time period over which the Manager  agrees to defer  receipt of 25%
of the  Management  Fee will end June 30,  2004.  The  deferred  portion  of the
Management Fee will be accrued by the Manager  during the that period,  and will
not be earned or paid to the Manager  unless there is an annualized  increase of
at least 10% in the actual cash flow received by the limited  partners  relative
to the cash flow which the General Partner  projects would have been received by
limited  partners  commencing  January  1,  2000 if the  Partnership  were to be
liquidated as contemplated by the Partnership Agreement. The deferred portion of
the Management  Fee, if earned,  will be paid to the Manager from any additional
cash flow of the Partnership until paid in full.

THE REPURCHASE

         In structuring the equitable settlement,  the General Partner sought to
make  available  an  immediate  liquidity  option to limited  partners who might
oppose  the  Amendment  and/or  those  who  wish  to  sell  their  units  in the
near-future,  capped at ten percent (10%) of the outstanding  units.  Currently,
limited partners have two ways of selling their units. They can sell them on the
secondary  market,  in which  price is volatile  and volume is low (10  reported
trades in the November/December  issue of "Partnership  Spectrum",  at prices of
between  $4.50 and $4.60 per unit),  or they can tender them to the  Partnership
for repurchase.  However,  the Partnership  Agreement  presently only allows the
Partnership  to  repurchase,  on an annual basis,  up to two percent (2%) of the
outstanding units, at a price of one hundred and ten percent (110%) of a limited
partner's net  unrecovered  capital per unit  (original  investment  amount less
distributions  received  through the repurchase  date, per unit). As of December
31, 1999, 110% of net  unrecovered  capital for a limited partner who bought his
or her units upon  commencement  of the  Partnership was $3.58 per unit, and for
the average  limited  partner who bought  units at any time during the  offering
period, 110% of net unrecovered capital was $5.37 per unit.

         Currently, the Partnership is obligated only to repurchase units if the
General Partner  determines that such repurchase would not impair the capital or
operations  of  the  Partnership.   Additionally,   the  Partnership   Agreement
prioritizes  repurchase  requests,  with first  priority going to units owned by
estates,  then to IRAs and  other  qualified  plans,  and  finally  to all other
limited partners.

         In light of this lack of liquidity,  the General Partner  believes that
offering to  repurchase  up to ten  percent  (10%) of all  outstanding  units at
eighty  percent (80%) of net asset value  reflects an  appropriate  discount for
immediate  liquidity.  As of December 31, 1999, 80% of net asset value, on a per
unit basis,  was $4.64. If the Repurchase is approved as part of the Amendments,
the  Partnership's  discretionary  ability  to  repurchase  units  for 110% of a
limited partner's net unrecovered  capital will terminate and the Partnership is
projected to spend $4,204,705 for this one-time repurchase.

         Any equitable  class member  intending to submit for repurchase some or
all of his, her or its units must  indicate  this  intention  on the  repurchase
request that they receive along with the equitable notice and this  solicitation
statement.  The  repurchase  price for each unit shall be determined as follows:
first,  the net asset value of the Partnership (the value of all equipment owned
by the Partnership as determined by the General Partner as of the fiscal quarter
immediately   preceding  the  repurchase   date,  plus  any  cash,   uncollected
receivables  and any  other  assets,  less  accounts  payable,  debts  and other
liabilities  of the  Partnership  as of the same  date)  will be  divided by the
number of outstanding units to determine the net asset value per unit. Then, the
net asset value per unit will be multiplied  by 80% to determine the  repurchase
price per unit. The repurchase of units will be completed not later than the end
of the  first  fiscal  quarter  after  final  court  approval  of the  equitable
settlement.

         If the eligible class members request that the  Partnership  repurchase
more than 10% of its outstanding  units,  the Partnership  will repurchase up to
10% of the  outstanding  units pro rata  within  certain  groups of  established
priorities  based on the number of units  offered  for  repurchase  in each such
group, or as close to a pro rata basis as is reasonably  possible.  Any such pro
rata  allocation  adjustment  will be  determined  by the claims  administrator,
giving first priority to units owned by estates,  IRAs and qualified  plans,  in
that order, and which were purchased in the initial offering.  In the event that
the total number of units  requested by eligible class members to be repurchased
exceeds 10% of that  Partnership's  outstanding  units, the General Partner will
have the option, but not the obligation, to purchase these excess units with its
own monies and on its own behalf.

THE COMPENSATION INCREASE

         The current limitation on Front-End Fees payable to the General Partner
will be increased by twenty-percent  (20%). The current limitation is based upon
the guidelines  issued by NASAA. The Front-End Fee Increase will have the effect
of increasing the total compensation permitted to be paid to the General Partner
and its affiliates, if earned, by the amount of the Front-End Fee Increase. As a
result, if the General Partner and its affiliates do not earn the full amount of
the  Front-End  Fee  Increase,  additional  categories  of  compensation,  which
otherwise would be restricted by the NASAA guidelines, could be paid. Absent the
Amendments,  however,  the only other payment to the General Partner which could
result in total  compensation  exceeding the NASAA  guidelines is the payment to
the General Partner of its interest in Net Disposition Proceeds. In this regard,
the NASAA guidelines permit the General Partner to be paid 1% of Net Disposition
Proceeds, while the Partnership Agreement permits the General Partner to be paid
5% of such Net Disposition Proceeds.  Without the Amendments, the payment to the
General Partner of up to the additional 4% of Net Disposition  Proceeds to which
it is entitled under the Partnership Agreement would be permitted only if and to
the extent  the  General  Partner  has  otherwise  been paid less than the total
amount of the  compensation  allowed  by the NASAA  guidelines.  Therefore,  the
Amendments  will enable the General  Partner to receive up to this additional 4%
so long as the amount of Net Disposition Proceeds,  together with the additional
Front-End  Fees,  do not exceed the 20%  Front-End  Fee  Increase.  The  General
Partner and Class Counsel  agreed to this fee increase to compensate the General
Partner for the  additional  services it will perform  during the  Extension (an
additional  six years).  Without this  increase,  the General  Partner would not
necessarily  have agreed to the Amendments,  which the General Partner  believes
will benefit the limited partners for the reasons described below.



<PAGE>


COMPARISON  OF EXTENDING  THE  REINVESTMENT  PERIOD AND THE  EXTENSION  (AND THE
BENEFITS THEREOF) TO TERMINATION OF REINVESTMENT AND LIQUIDATION OF EQUIPMENT AS
SCHEDULED

         The Amendments are being proposed by the General  Partner in connection
with the equitable  settlement and pursuant to the settlement  stipulation.  The
structure,  terms and conditions of the Amendments have been negotiated at arm's
length with Class Counsel acting on behalf of the equitable  class.  The General
Partner  is  recommending  that  the  limited  partners  not  vote  against  the
Amendments because it believes,  for the reasons set forth below, that extending
the Reinvestment  Period,  and the Extension,  both are in the best interests of
the limited partners.

         To date,  the  Partnership  has acquired  and  operated  transportation
equipment  to generate  cash flow to pay the  expenses  and  obligations  of the
Partnership and to make distributions to the limited partners with any remaining
cash flow. The General  Partner  stopped  reinvesting  proceeds from the sale of
equipment  in  1998   (except  for  certain   contractually   mandated   capital
modifications),  and the  Partnership has entered the holding phase of its life.
During the holding phase,  the General Partner is permitted to continue  leasing
equipment under existing leases, to enter into new leases, or to sell equipment.
Once  equipment  is sold during the holding  phase,  the proceeds may be used to
repay  Partnership  debt, to maintain an  appropriate  level of working  capital
reserves,  and to make distributions to limited partners. The proceeds cannot be
reinvested in additional equipment,  however. The holding phase will be followed
by the  liquidation  phase,  when the General Partner will undertake the orderly
and  businesslike  liquidation  of the  equipment  and will begin to wind up the
affairs of, and liquidate, the Partnership.  The Partnership Agreement presently
requires that the Partnership's equipment be liquidated by January 1, 2001.

         In reviewing the  Partnership's  portfolio  and in connection  with the
litigation,  the  General  Partner  analyzed  the  continued  operation  of  the
Partnership and liquidation of Partnership equipment substantially in accordance
with the timetable  described above.  The Partnership  portfolio on December 31,
1999  consisted,  on an original cost basis, of  approximately  $55.3 million in
aircraft equipment,  $43.6 million in marine vessels, $11.3 million in railcars,
$9 million in  containers  and $9 million in  trailers  (totaling  approximately
$128.5 million),  which equipment the General Partner believes had a fair market
value of $69.1 million as of December 31, 1999. The General  Partner  determined
that,  in general,  certain  types of  equipment  were  underperforming  (marine
vessels and  aircraft)  and other types of  equipment  were meeting or exceeding
expectations (railcars,  containers and trailers).  The General Partner believes
that  Partnership  performance can be improved if the  Partnership  continues to
hold and operate certain assets beyond the current expected liquidation date and
if  specific  underperforming  assets are sold and the  proceeds  reinvested  in
assets which would earn yields of 11.8% and 10.7% (assuming the extension of the
Partnership debt and no extension of such debt, respectively), which the General
Partner believes can be obtained for the reasons described below.

         CONTINUED OPERATION OF ASSETS. The General Partner believes that it can
continue to rent and operate the higher  performing  assets beyond 2000 and that
such assets will generate cash flow from continued  rentals and eventual  sales,
the present value of which are expected to exceed the present value of continued
rentals and the sales proceeds of that same  equipment  based upon the presently
expected  liquidation  date. Much of this  equipment,  because of its age and/or
operating characteristics,  is not expected to experience significant reductions
in its  estimated  fair  market  value  through  the  Extension,  yet this  same
equipment can be leased to third-party users at rental rates only slightly lower
than those commanded by similar equipment  (notwithstanding  higher  maintenance
and repair  costs on older  equipment,  which is taken into account when setting
lease rates) that is newer and has a higher fair market value Absent  unforeseen
changes in the marketplace for these types of equipment The General Partner does
not believe that the fair market value of these assets will  materially  decline
between the time the General Partner would  liquidate the equipment  pursuant to
the terms of the  Partnership  Agreement and the time the General  Partner would
liquidate the equipment during the Extension.

         Based  on  these  factors,  the  General  Partner  believes  that  this
equipment is well positioned to earn favorable returns for limited partners over
the next five to seven years when compared to its current fair market value. For
example,   the  General  Partner  has  calculated   projected   returns  on  the
Partnerships'  portfolio of railcars,  containers  and trailers  (not  including
equipment  purchased during the last two years) from January 1, 2000 through the
Partnerships'  expected  liquidation  pursuant  to the terms of the  Partnership
Agreements,  and pursuant to the Extension,  using the  assumptions set forth on
pages 20 through 23. The General  Partner  projects the returns on this group of
assets on a  weighted  average  basis to be 14%  (assuming  no  leverage  on the
equipment) to 18% (assuming 20% leverage on the equipment) if the equipment were
liquidated  during  the time  frame  specified  in the  Partnership  Agreements,
compared to 16%  (assuming no leverage on the  equipment)  to 19%  (assuming 20%
leverage on the equipment) if the equipment were liquidated  during the proposed
Extension.  However, there can be no assurance that such equipment will earn the
projected  returns,  as the equipment markets in which the Partnership  operates
are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause performance
to be materially  different  from  historical  performance  of the  Partnership.
Additionally,  there can be no  assurance  that the  General  Partner  would not
determine to sell certain types of equipment if it determined such sale to be in
the best interests of the Partnership.

         REINVESTMENT OF PROCEEDS INTO ADDITIONAL EQUIPMENT. The General Partner
from time to time  identifies  assets which it intends to sell for any number of
reasons,  including  because the asset's  performance is not meeting the General
Partner's  expectations  and  is  not  expected  to  improve,  or  to  pay  down
Partnership  debt. In the absence of the extension of the  Reinvestment  Period,
sales  proceeds  from  assets  sold  cannot be used to  reinvest  in  additional
equipment  (to the extent such  proceeds were not needed to pay down debt or for
partnership  operations).  With the extension of the Reinvestment  Period, sales
proceeds may be used as available to purchase additional assets through December
31, 2004. The General Partner believes that the Partnership  performance will be
improved  during the Extension if, in addition to the continued  lease of higher
performing  assets,   available  Partnership  funds  from  the  sale  of  poorer
performing assets are reinvested in equipment with yields of approximately 10.8%
and 10.7%  (assuming the extension of the  Partnership  debt and no extension of
such debt,  respectively),  which yields the General  Partner has assumed can be
achieved based upon returns  projected to be earned on equipment  purchased over
the last two years,  taking into  account the change of  strategy.  These yields
approximate  the discount rate of 11.1% applied in evaluating the benefit to the
limited  partners of the  Extension and extended  Reinvestment  Period (see Page
24). While such transactions will make up only a small percentage of the overall
portfolio,  they will allow  Partnership  overhead  and other  fixed costs to be
spread out over a larger  portfolio,  resulting in a decrease in such costs as a
percentage of Partnership revenues. The General Partner believes it will be able
to identify  equipment for the  Partnership  to acquire  using the  reinvestment
funds  with  projected  returns  similar  to those  described  below for  marine
containers and railcars (See Equipment  Transactions  Entered into Since January
1998.)

         The  Partnership  currently  has  approximately  $13.5  million in debt
outstanding  under  a  loan  agreement  scheduled  to  be  repaid  in  quarterly
installments of  approximately  $1.9 million each. If the Extension is approved,
the General Partner may seek to renegotiate the debt,  thereby changing the time
at which  payments  of  principal  must be made to a date later  than  currently
scheduled.  Assets which would otherwise have to be sold during the Reinvestment
Period  (in order to pay down the debt)  would  then  either:  (i) remain in the
portfolio  in order to  continue to  generate  revenue;  or (ii) be sold and the
proceeds  used  to  reinvest  in  additional  equipment.  During  the  five-year
extension  of the  Reinvestment  Period,  and  assuming the debt is paid down as
currently   scheduled,   the  General   Partner   projects  that  it  will  have
approximately $18 million available from the sale of assets for reinvestment. If
the debt is  renegotiated,  the General Partner projects that it will have up to
approximately  $30.5 million available from the sale of assets for reinvestment.
However,  there can be no assurance that suitable equipment transactions will be
available or that projected returns will be realized as the equipment markets in
which the  Partnership  operates are subject to risks,  uncertainties  and other
factors  that  may  cause  performance  to be  materially  different  from  that
described  below or even from  historical  performance  of the  Partnership.  It
should also be noted that the  General  Partner  will be  entitled to  equipment
acquisition and lease negotiation fees when additional equipment is acquired and
initially   leased  out.  See  "RISK  FACTORS,"   "CONFLICTS  OF  INTEREST"  and
"CAUTIONARY STATEMENT."


<PAGE>



          EQUIPMENT  TRANSACTIONS ENTERED INTO SINCE JANUARY 1998. Since January
of 1998, the General  Partner has acquired,  on behalf of the  Partnerships  and
Professional  Lease  Management  Income Fund I, L.L.C.  ("LLC")  $153,956,000 of
equipment as specified below:

Type of equipment           Total Expenditures by the
                               Partnerships and LLC         Expenditures for V

Marine Containers               $ 52,080,000                        --
Marine Vessels                  $ 51,819,000                    $9,200,000
Aircraft and Spare Parts        $ 40,325,000                        --
Portable Heaters                $  4,115,000                        --
Railcars                        $  3,929,000                        --
Trailers                        $  1,688,000                        --
Total                           $153,956,000                    $9,200,000

         The General Partner has calculated  projected returns on this equipment
assuming the  Amendments  are  approved  and,  except as otherwise  specifically
noted,  the equipment is held until  liquidation of each program (fourth quarter
2006). The returns were calculated on the following basis:

          (i)    the acquisition  cost of the equipment was increased to include
                 Front-End Fees;

          (ii)   projected  equipment revenue was reduced to reflect  Management
                 Fees that have been and will be paid, and reduced to reflect an
                 allocation of overhead;

          (iii)  projected returns are expressed on a cash basis, pre-tax;

          (iv)   the  equipment  lessees do not default and the equipment has no
                 time off lease,  except as otherwise noted below, (Fund VII has
                 had significant  off-lease and default experience over the last
                 two years, however); and

          (v)    the   Partnership   does  not  need  to  make  any   unbudgeted
                 expenditures for equipment repair and modification.

MARINE CONTAINERS

         In 1998 and 1999 the General Partner acquired and leased on a long-term
basis 19,970  predominately new (in no event more than 2 years old) 20', 40' and
40' Hi Cube dry maritime containers at a cost of $52,081,000.
This equipment is projected to return on a weighted average basis 11.2%.

MARINE VESSELS

         Anchor Handling Tug/Supply ("AHTS") Vessels

         During the first six months of 1998, the General Partner  acquired,  in
two  separate  transactions,  3 AHTS  vessels  for  $28,025,000,  including  one
purchased  on behalf of the  Partnership  for  $9,200,000.  Based on the current
lease  rates,  the  General  Partner  originally   projected  returns  on  these
investments  from 9.2% to 9.1%.  During the third  quarter  of 1999,  one of the
partnerships  managed by the General Partner had a vessel similar to these three
vessels come off lease.  Based upon the re-lease  rate  achieved on that vessel,
which is lower than that currently being earned by these 3 vessels,  the General
Partner  has  determined  to sell  these  vessels  in 2001 and has  revised  the
projected return on these three vessels to between 2.1% and 2.4%.

         Product Tanker

         During  the second  quarter of 1998,  the  General  Partner  acquired a
product tanker for $17,000,000.  The expected return on this  investment,  based
upon the General  Partner's  projected  future charter rates when the vessel was
acquired,  was 9.2%.  Based upon the vessel's  actual  performance and projected
future charter rates,  the General Partner will shortly be marketing this vessel
for sale,  and the  projected  return on this  investment  has been  reduced  to
(0.5)%.

         Handy Sized Bulk Carrier Vessel

         In the first quarter of 1999, the General  Partner  acquired for one of
the programs a handy sized bulk carrier vessel for  $6,674,000.  At the time the
vessel was acquired, based upon projected charter rates and vessel residual, the
General Partner projected the return on this vessel to be 13.8%.  Several months
after acquiring this vessel, based upon unanticipated  softness in charter rates
available  in  the  market  for  vessels  of  this  type,  the  General  Partner
re-evaluated the projected return this asset would yield,  and,  concurrent with
continuing  to charter  the vessel,  began  marketing  the vessel for sale.  The
vessel was sold in October  of 1999 for  $7,500,000  yielding a return of 13.1%.
See "CHANGE OF STRATEGY."

AIRCRAFT AND AIRCRAFT SPARE PARTS

         In 1998 the General Partner, on behalf of one of the programs, acquired
and leased to an airline a portfolio of aircraft spare parts for $2,175,000. The
expected return to the program on this portfolio investment is 10.1%, assuming a
sale in December 2003 at the end of the lease term.

         In 1998 the General  Partner  acquired an MD 82 "stage three"  aircraft
and assumed the remaining long-term lease with an airline, for $15,550,000.  The
projected  return on this investment is 9.3%,  assuming a sale at the end of the
lease in the second quarter of 2003.

         In  1999,  the  General  Partner   acquired  a  737-300   aircraft  for
$22,500,000.  At the time of purchase,  it was expected that this aircraft would
be leased  promptly  at a lease rate and with an  expected  residual  that would
yield a return on this investment of 8.5%. The Aircraft has not yet been leased.
The  General  Partner  is now  projecting  that it will be  leased  in the first
quarter of 2000 at a lease rate and with an expected  residual  that will result
in a return on this  investment  of 2.7%,  assuming  a sale of this asset in the
third quarter 2005. See "CHANGE OF STRATEGY."

PORTABLE HEATERS

         In 1998 the General Partner  acquired 638 portable heaters at a cost of
$4,115,000, subject to a four-year lease. The General Partner expected that this
equipment  would  yield a return of 13.9%.  After  approximately  one year,  the
lessee of the heaters encountered financial  difficulties and ceased paying rent
on the  equipment.  The lessee was declared in default under the lease,  and the
equipment was sold approximately 18 months after purchase.  The actual return on
this equipment was 4.0%.

RAILCARS

         The General Partner acquired, in three separate transactions,  215 tank
railcars at a cost of  $3,929,000.  The railcars  are on various  medium to long
term leases, ranging from 1 to 5 years. This equipment is projected to return on
a weighted average basis 14.7%.

TRAILERS

         In  1999  the  General  Partner  acquired  75 new,  dry,  over-the-road
trailers,  at a total cost of $1,688,000.  These trailers are operating  under a
revenue  sharing  agreement  with a major  carrier and are  projected  to have a
return on investment of 10.5%.


<PAGE>



CHANGE OF STRATEGY

         In light of the  historical  performance  of the  Partnership's  marine
vessel and  aircraft  investments,  as discussed  in this  Section,  the General
Partner recently changed the investment strategy it will employ on behalf of the
Partnership, if the Reinvestment Period is extended. In this regard, the General
Partner  believed in 1998 and early 1999 that the marine  vessel market was at a
low point,  both in terms of the cost to acquire  equipment and lease rates. The
General Partner also believed that there would be an upturn in the marine vessel
market such that the continued  acquisition of vessels for the Partnership would
meet the targeted investment return threshold,  notwithstanding the then current
lease  rates.  Towards  the end of the  first  quarter  of  1999,  based  upon a
re-analysis and forecast of vessel market trends, the General Partner determined
that it did not believe the vessel market would sufficiently  recover during the
time horizon required in order to meet the previous  projections and the General
Partner then re-evaluated the projected return of the Partnership's  vessels. As
a result,  the General  Partner has decided to curtail  acquiring any additional
vessels and to sell all of the Partnership's vessels over the next 2 years.

         Furthermore,  as a result of its  experience  in the  aircraft  market,
during the  extended  Reinvestment  Period the  General  Partner  will no longer
invest  Partnership  funds in commuter aircraft or aircraft that, at the time of
acquisition,  is not  subject  to lease or for  which it does not have a binding
lease commitment.  Additionally,  the General Partner will not lease aircraft to
lessees located in less developed countries whose legal system may not allow the
Partnership to effectively enforce its rights under a lease, absent an unusually
attractive  lease  rate or  satisfactory  credit  support.  See "RISK  FACTORS,"
"CONFLICTS OF INTEREST" and "CAUTIONARY STATEMENT."

COMPARISON OF ALTERNATIVES TO THE EXTENSION

          GENERAL.  To assist the limited partners in evaluating the Amendments,
the General Partner has computed estimates of the following:

o                 the value of a unit, on a present  value basis,  assuming that
                  the Partnership renegotiates its debt agreements, reinvests in
                  equipment through the Reinvestment Period (December 31, 2004),
                  and then  liquidates its equipment at the end of the Extension
                  (by January 1, 2007)

o                 the value of a unit, on a present  value basis,  assuming that
                  the  Partnership  does not  renegotiate  its debt  agreements,
                  reinvests  in  equipment   through  the  Reinvestment   Period
                  (December 31, 2004),  and then liquidates its equipment at the
                  end of the Extension (by January 1, 2007)

o                 the value of a unit, on a present  value basis,  assuming that
                  the  Partnership  liquidates  its  equipment by  approximately
                  January 1, 2001; and

o                 the   value   of  a  unit  if  the   Partnership's   equipment
                  hypothetically  had been  liquidated on September 30, 1999, in
                  order  for  the   Partnership   to   liquidate   and  for  the
                  Partnership's   investors  to  receive  a  final   liquidating
                  distribution by December 31, 1999;

The present value of a unit  represents the value as of December 31, 1999 of the
sum of the estimated  distributions  per unit to be received by limited partners
from  January  1,  2000  through  the date of  liquidation  of the  Partnership,
discounted for the time value of money, which the General Partner has assumed to
be 11.1%. The present value of a unit does not include Partnership distributions
paid to investors from the date of their investment through December 31, 1999.


         GENERAL  PARTNER'S  ASSUMPTIONS.  The General  Partner has made certain
assumptions in order to estimate the value of a Partnership unit as of each time
period described above.

         For  liquidation  as of December  31,  1999,  the  General  Partner has
assumed that the Partnership equipment was sold in an orderly liquidation (i.e.,
a willing  buyer, a willing  seller,  and closing of the sale within 90 days) on
September 30, 1999. The primary component of this analysis,  the estimated sales
proceeds  that could be received  upon the sale of the  Partnership's  equipment
assets,  was  determined by the General  Partner's  best estimate of the current
market  values of such assets  based on the  opinions  of the General  Partner's
staff  equipment   specialists.   These  opinions  were  reached  based  on  the
specialists'  knowledge of the equipment markets for which they are responsible,
including their knowledge of or research into recent similar transactions in the
marketplace,  if any. Estimated sales proceeds,  working capital,  collection of
accounts  receivable and  liquidation of other assets were then  aggregated and,
from this total, all existing debt, including prepayment  penalties,  if any, as
well of the payment of any other  liabilities  was assumed to be paid out in the
fourth quarter of 1999. The General Partner assumed that a final distribution to
investors would be made by December 31, 1999. The specific  projections of sales
proceeds, expenses and other cash flow items made by the General Partner are set
forth on the chart in Appendix B. The  Partnership  equipment was not liquidated
on December 31, 1999, and the General Partner currently has no plan to liquidate
the  Partnership's  entire  portfolio  of  equipment  prior  to the  time  frame
contemplated  by the  Partnership  Agreement,  whether or not the Amendments are
approved.

         For  liquidation  pursuant  to the terms of the  Partnership  Agreement
(equipment  liquidation  by January  1,  2001),  the  General  Partner  has made
assumptions as to the financial  performance of each item of equipment currently
owned by the Partnership, including expected lease revenues, operating expenses,
date of  sale  and  the  amount  of sale  proceeds.  Lease  revenues,  operating
expenses,  and sale proceeds for currently owned equipment were estimated based,
in part on the General Partner's and its staff equipment specialists' historical
experience with each particular asset or asset type, and in part on the opinions
of its  equipment  specialists  as to the future  performance  of each asset and
their  expectation of the trends in the various  equipment  markets,  as further
described below in "Currently  Owned Equipment  Assumptions."  Limited  Partners
should  bear in mind that Fund VII has had  significant  off-lease  and bad debt
experience over the last two years, and from its inception through September 30,
1999,  Fund VII has had  uncollected  lease  revenue  (bad  debt)  of 1.73%  and
equipment  off-lease  experience of 5.8% (expressed as a percent of the original
cost of all equipment purchased). Proceeds received from the sale of assets were
applied as required to pay off Partnership debt, were added to the Partnership's
working capital or reserves or available for  distributions to limited partners.
The  General  Partner  also  made  assumptions  regarding  the  amount  of other
non-operating expenses and cash flows of the Partnership, such as the payment of
Management  Fees,  overhead  and other  administrative  costs,  and  partnership
distributions.  The specific cash flow  projections  made by the General Partner
are set forth on the chart in Appendix B.

         For liquidation  pursuant to the proposed extended  Reinvestment Period
and Extension  (reinvestment through December 31, 2004 and equipment liquidation
by January 1, 2007) with no  renegotiation  of  Partnership  debt,  the  General
Partner made the same  assumptions as were made for liquidation  pursuant to the
Partnership   Agreement,   except  that  the  General   Partner   assumed   that
approximately  $18  million  of  available  partnership  funds  could be used to
purchase additional equipment through December 31, 2004.  Partnership funds were
considered  to be  available if they were not needed to pay down debt or for the
Partnership's  working  capital  or  reserves.   The  General  Partner  has  not
identified  any  particular  assets  or  related  leases  transactions  for such
reinvestment,  but assumed that the newly  acquired  equipment in the  aggregate
could yield a pre-tax cash return of 10.7% as further  described below in "Newly
Acquired  Equipment  Assumptions."  Further,  the General  Partner  assumed that
approximately  $4,204,705 of Partnership  funds, from the Partnership's  working
capital and asset sales,  would be used to fund the repurchase  contemplated  by
the  Amendments in the second and third quarters of 2000. The specific cash flow
projections  made by the General  Partner are set forth on the chart in Appendix
B.

         For liquidation  pursuant to the proposed extended  Reinvestment Period
and Extension  (reinvestment through December 31, 2004 and equipment liquidation
by January 1, 2007) with the  renegotiation  of  Partnership  debt,  the General
Partner made the same  assumptions as were made for liquidation  pursuant to the
proposed  extended  Reinvestment  Period  and  Extension  (reinvestment  through
December  31,  2004 and  equipment  liquidation  by  January  1,  2007)  with no
renegotiation of Partnership  debt, except that the General Partner assumed that
it was able to  renegotiate  the  Partnership's  current debt so that  principal
payments become due later than currently scheduled.  The General Partner has not
secured the  agreement  of the  Partnerships'  lenders to extend the term of the
loan.  The General  Partner  further  assumed that the proceeds from assets sold
during the extended  Reinvestment  Period (some of which would have been used to
pay down the  original  debt),  were used  instead to reinvest in  approximately
$12.5  million  of  additional  equipment,  for a total of  approximately  $30.5
million reinvested during the extended  Reinvestment Period. The General Partner
assumed that the newly acquired  equipment  could yield a pre-tax cash return of
10.8% as further described below in "NEWLY ACQUIRED EQUIPMENT  ASSUMPTIONS." The
specific cash flow  projections made by the General Partner are set forth on the
chart in Appendix B.

         CURRENTLY  OWNED  EQUIPMENT  ASSUMPTIONS.  For  equipment  owned by the
Partnership  and for the purposes of estimating a portion of the returns in each
of the scenarios discussed above except for liquidation as of December 31, 1999,
the General Partner has made the following assumptions:

         Railcars: The General Partner tracks railcar performance by determining
the number of days per year that a railcar  was  available  to be  on-lease  and
compares that number to the actual number of days it generated revenues. For the
past 5 years,  railcars have  historically  remained at above 98.5%  utilization
pursuant to leases ranging from 1 - 5 years.  The General  Partner assumed that,
on a going  forward  basis,  the  railcars  would  remain at  approximately  97%
utilization.  The General Partner also assumed that the lease rates for railcars
would remain steady and that railcar  expenses would increase 3% per year, which
assumptions  are  consistent  with  lease  rate and  expense  cost  trends.  The
Partnership's  fleet  of  railcars  has  not  experienced  any  lessee  defaults
resulting in non-payment of rent or other amounts,  and the General  Partner did
not assume any  "bad-debt" in the future.  The General  Partner has assumed that
railcars can be sold at the end of the partnership term for an average of 48% of
original  equipment  cost, and at the end of the Extension for an average of 40%
of original  equipment cost.  These  percentages are consistent with the General
Partner's  experience  in  connection  with the sale of railcars  owned by other
managed partnerships,  and based on the opinion of the General Partner's railcar
specialists as to the value of railcars over the next 4 to 7 years.

         Containers: The Partnership's container fleet is mostly leased pursuant
to term leases ranging from 3 to 6 years duration, with the remaining containers
in the portfolio being leased on a revenue  sharing/utilization  basis. When the
term leases  expire,  those  containers  will by  agreement  also be placed into
revenue sharing arrangements with the current lessees,  earning revenue based on
their  level of  utilization  and after  deducting  the costs of  operating  the
equipment.  The General  Partner has assumed that  containers  will earn revenue
based on the actual lease rates through the expiration of the container  leases,
and thereafter,  based on levels of utilization and lease rates experienced over
the past two years. The General Partner believes that the container industry has
reached a historic  low, in terms of both,  the cost of new  equipment and lease
rates. For example, a new container  purchased in 1990 for approximately  $2,500
could be  purchased  today  for  approximately  $1,475,  and  lease  rates  have
similarly  declined over the same period of time.  The General  Partner does not
believe  lease rates will continue to decline and  therefore,  has assumed lease
rates   consistent  with  those   experienced  over  the  last  two  years.  The
Partnership's  fleet of term lease  containers  has not  experienced  any lessee
defaults  resulting in  non-payment  of rent or other  amounts,  and the General
Partner  did  not  assume  any  "bad-debt"  in the  future  for the  term  lease
containers.  The General  Partner has assumed  that the  containers  can be sold
during and at the end of the partnership  term for an average of 33% of original
equipment cost, and during and at the end of the Extension for an average of 27%
of original  equipment cost, based on the General Partner's  experience  selling
used containers  owned by the Partnership  and other managed  partnerships,  and
based on the General  Partner's  opinion as to the value of used containers over
the next 4 to 7 years.

         Trailers:  All of the Partnership's  trailers are rented out on a short
term  basis out of trailer  yards  owned and  operated  by an  affiliate  of the
General Partner or on a utilization  basis pursuant to an agreement with a third
party.  For all trailers,  the General  Partner  tracks  trailer  performance by
determining  the number of days per year that a trailer was  available for lease
and compares that number to the actual number of days it generated revenues, the
amount of revenues  generated  and the costs and  expenses,  including bad debt,
associated  with operating the trailer.  The General  Partner assumed that, on a
going forward basis, the Partnership  trailers would remain at the same level of
utilization  as during the preceding  year, but that revenues would decline at a
rate of 2% per year and costs and  expenses  would  increase at a rate of 3% per
year,  consistent  with lease rate and cost  trends.  The  General  Partner  has
assumed that trailers can be sold during and at the end of the partnership  term
for an average of 35% of original  equipment  cost, and during and at the end of
the  Extension  for  an  average  of  22%  of  original  equipment  cost.  These
percentages are consistent with the General  Partner's  experience in connection
with  the  sale  of  trailers  owned  by  the   Partnership  and  other  managed
partnerships,  and based on the  opinion of the  trailer  specialists  as to the
value of the trailers  over the next 4 to 7 years.  The General  Partner did not
assume that the Partnership's portfolio of trailers would be sold in bulk, which
is one of the  possible  results  of the  strategic  review by the parent of the
General Partner. In the event the trailers are sold in bulk, the General Partner
would  utilize the proceeds  from such sale to pay down debt or to reinvest into
additional  equipment for the Partnership if the Partnership was permitted to do
so.

         Marine  Vessels:  Consistent  with  the  General  Partner's  change  of
strategy,  all of the  Partnership's  marine vessels are  anticipated to be sold
over the next two years.  Because of the short time horizon, the General Partner
assumed that the vessels (which  operate on short term charters)  would continue
to  generate  revenues  (based on  utilization  and after  taking  into  account
estimated vessel operating  expenses)  consistent with current levels during the
period of time the vessels are held. The  Partnership  has not  experienced  any
marine vessel lessee defaults resulting in non-payment of rent or other amounts,
and the  General  Partner did not assume any  "bad-debt"  in the future for this
equipment.  The General Partner further assumed that the marine vessels would be
sold at average prices equal to  approximately  40% of original  equipment cost.
These  assumptions are consistent with prices that the General  Partner's marine
experts have recently observed in the market place.

         Aircraft:  The General  Partner has assumed that the aircraft  owned by
the Partnership remain on their current leases for the duration of those leases,
earning the agreed upon lease rates.  The General  Partner has also assumed that
aircraft coming off lease during the partnership  term or the Extension are sold
in the quarter  following the  expiration of the lease,  and that aircraft whose
leases extend beyond the  partnership  term or the Extension are sold at the end
of the partnership term or the Extension,  respectively. The General Partner has
assumed that the aircraft can be sold during the partnership term for an average
of 66% of original  equipment  cost,  and during the Extension for an average of
43% of original  equipment  cost. The General  Partner has assumed that aircraft
costs (after  adjusting  for the size of the aircraft  portfolio)  increase 5% a
year, including reserves of 3% for bad debt and off-lease. Although this reserve
is lower than the Partnership's  historical experience for aircraft bad debt and
off lease,  the General  Partner  believes it is  sufficient  after  taking into
account its change in strategy (discussed on page 20).

         NEWLY  ACQUIRED  EQUIPMENT  ASSUMPTIONS.  For  equipment  that  will be
purchased on behalf of the Partnership during the extended  Reinvestment  Period
(through  2004) and for the  purposes of  estimating a portion of the returns in
each of the scenarios  discussed above except for liquidation as of December 31,
1999,  the General  Partner has assumed  that assets  purchased on behalf of the
Partnership would yield an average of 10.7% and 10.8%,  depending on whether the
equipment was purchased,  during the extended Reinvestment Period (through 2004)
without  renegotiation of Partnership debt, or during the extended  Reinvestment
Period  (through 2004) with  renegotiation  of Partnership  debt,  respectively.
These yields were  calculated  as the internal  rate of return of the total cash
flow stream of the reinvestment, which cash flow was calculated after taking all
operating  expenses,  fees and overhead  into  account,  and assuming an average
residual  value for the acquired  equipment of 57% for equipment sold at the end
of the Extension.  Although investments made by the General Partner on behalf of
the  Partnership  and other  managed  programs  since the  beginning of 1998 are
projected,  on a weighted  average basis, to yield 6.8% on a pre-tax cash basis,
the  General  Partner  believes  that as a result of its  change  of  investment
strategy,  reinvestment  proceeds can be used to acquire equipment  projected to
generate the assumed  returns.  This belief is based on its  calculation  of the
average yields on all equipment purchased since the beginning of 1998, excluding
marine vessels and aircraft,  which are projected to be approximately  11%, with
yields for the marine  containers  and railcars  projected to be 11.2% and 14.7%
respectively. There can be no assurance that investments in similar transactions
would be available in the marketplace at the time that the Partnership has funds
to invest, or that such transactions,  if available, would ultimately perform as
projected.

         ALL OF  THE  GENERAL  PARTNER'S  VALUATION  ESTIMATES  ARE  SUBJECT  TO
SIGNIFICANT  UNCERTAINTIES,  SINCE  THE  ESTIMATED  VALUE  OF A UNIT WAS IN TURN
DERIVED  FROM A  NUMBER  OF  ASSUMPTIONS  AND  ESTIMATES  PROJECTED  OVER  TIME.
THEREFORE,  NO ASSURANCE CAN BE GIVEN THAT THE ESTIMATED  VALUES INDICATED WOULD
BE REALIZED AND ACTUAL  REALIZED VALUES LIKELY WILL DIFFER FROM THE ESTIMATES OF
SUCH VALUES. THE ASSUMPTIONS AND ESTIMATES WERE BASED UPON INFORMATION AVAILABLE
TO THE GENERAL  PARTNER AT THE TIME THE ESTIMATED  VALUES WERE COMPUTED,  AND NO
ASSURANCE CAN BE GIVEN THAT THE SAME CONDITIONS CONSIDERED OR ANTICIPATED BY THE
GENERAL PARTNER IN ARRIVING AT THE ESTIMATE OF VALUES WOULD EXIST AT ANY TIME IN
THE FUTURE.  WHILE THE GENERAL PARTNER  BELIEVES IT HAS REASONABLE BASES FOR ITS
ASSUMPTIONS,  IT IS INEVITABLE  THAT SOME OF THEM WILL NOT  MATERIALIZE AND THAT
SOME OF THOSE WHICH DO WILL BE DIFFERENT  IN MATERIAL  RESPECTS.  THE  ESTIMATED
VALUE OF A UNIT WOULD HAVE BEEN DIFFERENT HAD THE GENERAL PARTNER MADE DIFFERENT
ASSUMPTIONS AND, AS NOTED, THE ACTUAL PERFORMANCE OF THE PARTNERSHIP WILL LIKELY
VARY  FROM  THE  ESTIMATES,  AND  COULD  BE  SUBSTANTIALLY  DIFFERENT  FROM  THE
ESTIMATES.  MOREOVER,  THE  OCCURRENCE  OF ANY OF THE EVENTS  GIVING RISE TO THE
PRESENT  RISKS SET FORTH  UNDER  THE  CAPTION  "RISK  FACTORS"  AND  "CAUTIONARY
STATEMENT"  COULD  HAVE A  MATERIAL  ADVERSE  EFFECT ON THE  PERFORMANCE  OF THE
PARTNERSHIP.


<PAGE>




         ESTIMATED  DECEMBER 31, 1999 VALUE OF A  PARTNERSHIP  UNIT ON A PRESENT
VALUE BASIS APPLYING A 11.1% DISCOUNT RATE. The General partner has computed the
estimated  values of a unit as of December  31, 1999,  on a present  value basis
(using  a  discount  rate of  11.1%),  based on a  variety  of  assumptions  and
estimates  that have been made by the  General  Partner as  described  in detail
above. The results of these computations are summarized in the following table:


Estimated Present     Estimated Present
Value per Unit for    Value per Unit for
Liquidation as of     Liquidation as of    Estimated Present   Estimated Value
January 1, 2007       January 1, 2007      Value per Unit for  per Unit for
(with renegotiation   (no renegotiation    Liquidation as of   Liquidation as of
of debt)              of debt)              January 1, 2001    December 31, 1999

     $6.60                $6.48                  $6.04             $5.86


         BENEFITS OF  LIQUIDATION  AS OF DECEMBER  31, 1999 AND JANUARY 1, 2001.
Notwithstanding   the  General  Partner's   recommendation  of  the  Amendments,
including the Extension, there could potentially be some benefits to the limited
partners  were the  Partnership  to be  liquidated  at this time.  Although  not
considered as an option by the General  Partner,  liquidating the Partnership at
this time would eliminate all future risks associated with this investment,  and
limited partners could receive a liquidating distribution of possibly as much as
$5.86 per unit, which could be directed into other types of investments prior to
the  liquidation  date  contemplated by the  Partnership  Agreement  (January 1,
2001). Liquidation as contemplated by the Partnership Agreement would reduce the
risk  associated  with  holding  this  investment  from  January 1, 2001 through
January 1, 2007,  and would  allow  limited  partners  to  redirect  liquidating
distributions  into other types of  investments  six years  sooner than is being
proposed. The General Partner has not received any third-party reports, opinions
or appraisals relating to the Amendments,  nor has it utilized any in concluding
to recommend the Amendments to limited partners.

         As  noted  on  the  cover  page  of  the  Solicitation  Statement,  PLM
International,  Inc., the corporate  parent of the General  Partner,  previously
engaged  the  investment  banking  firm of  Imperial  Capital,  LLC,  to explore
strategic and  financial  alternatives  for  maximizing  shareholder  value on a
near-term  basis.  As a  result  of  those  endeavors,  on  May  24,  2000,  PLM
International, Inc. entered into an agreement to sell all of its trailer leasing
operations to Marubeni America  Corporation.  At that time, the Partnership also
agreed to sell certain of its trailers to Marubeni America Corporation, with the
sale expected to close in the third quarter of 2000.

         The General  Partner  does not believe that the  Partnership's  sale of
these trailer assets materially affects any of the information  presented in the
Solicitation  Statement.  It is  anticipated  that,  when the sale  closes,  the
Partnership  will receive $3.5 million for its trailers,  which is approximately
50% of the original cost of the trailers. The General Partner has recomputed the
estimated  values of a unit as of December 31, 1999,  using the same methodology
described  above, but assuming that the sale of the trailer assets occurs in the
third quarter 2000. The estimated  present value per unit for  liquidation as of
January 1, 2007 (with  renegotiation  of debt) is $6.69.  The estimated  present
value per unit for liquidation as of January 1, 2007 (no  renegotiation of debt)
is $6.56. The estimated  present value per unit for liquidation as of January 1,
2001 is $6.11.



<PAGE>


                 COMPARISON CHART OF PARTNERSHIP OPERATIONS WITH
                           AND WITHOUT THE AMENDMENTS



                       DURATION OF THE REINVESTMENT PERIOD

                             WITHOUT THE AMENDMENTS


Pursuant to Section  2.02(r) of the  Partnership  Agreement,  except for certain
contractually   mandated   capital   modifications,   the  Partnership   stopped
reinvesting in equipment as of December 31, 1998.

                               WITH THE AMENDMENTS

The Partnership will be permitted to reinvest in equipment  through December 31,
2004.


                                 LOAN REPAYMENT

                             WITHOUT THE AMENDMENTS

Pursuant to the terms of the  Partnership's  loan agreement,  the Partnership is
obligated  to repay a total of  approximately  $13.5  million  in  principal  in
quarterly installments of approximately $1.9 million each.

                               WITH THE AMENDMENTS

The General  Partner may seek to  renegotiate  the loan in order to postpone the
repayment of principal due under the loan.



                           EQUIPMENT LIQUIDATION DATE

                             WITHOUT THE AMENDMENTS

The  Partnership   Agreement  requires  that  the  Partnership's   equipment  be
liquidated by January 1, 2001.

                               WITH THE AMENDMENTS

The General  Partner will  liquidate the  Partnership's  equipment by January 1,
2007.


                               REPURCHASE OF UNITS

                             WITHOUT THE AMENDMENTS

Pursuant to Section 6.11 of the  Partnership  Agreement,  the Partnership may be
obligated to repurchase up to 2% of the  outstanding  units in any year,  unless
the General Partner  determines that such repurchase would either: (a) cause the
Partnership  to be  taxed  as a  corporation;  or  (b)  impair  the  capital  or
operations  of the  Partnership.  The  repurchase  price is equal to 110% of the
selling limited  partner's  unrecovered  principal (i.e., the amount paid to the
Partnership for units less any distributions  received from the Partnership with
respect to the units),  with priority going to units owned by estates,  followed
by IRA's and qualified plans.

                               WITH THE AMENDMENTS

The  Partnership  will be obligated to repurchase  up to 10% of the  outstanding
units at 80% of their net asset value as of the end of the  quarter  immediately
preceding  court  approval  of  the  equitable  settlement,  projected  to  cost
$4,204,705. The existing annual repurchase obligation will cease.



                  CLASS COUNSEL FEES TO BE PAID FROM CASH FLOW

                             WITHOUT THE AMENDMENTS

There is no provision for the payment of Class Counsel fees by the  Partnership.
If the monetary  settlement is approved,  Class Counsel will be paid not greater
than  one-third  of the  monetary  settlement  fund  by the  Defendants  and the
insurance carrier.

                               WITH THE AMENDMENTS

Class Counsel will be paid not greater than one-third of the monetary settlement
fund by the Defendants and the insurance  carrier (because the Amendments may be
approved only if the monetary  settlement has been approved).  Additionally,  if
there is an annualized increase of at least 12% in the actual cash flow received
by the limited  partners  relative  to the cash flow which the  General  Partner
projects would have been received by limited partners commencing January 1, 2000
if the Partnership were to be liquidated pursuant to what is contemplated by the
Partnership  Agreement,  Class  Counsel  will be entitled to receive a graduated
percentage of the excess, paid out of the Partnership's cash flow, of $2,239,819
if the General Partner's projections of the Partnership's  distributions through
liquidation at January 1, 2007 (assuming the debt is renegotiated) are accurate,
and  $1,453,189  if the  General  Partner's  projections  of  the  Partnership's
distribution  through  liquidation at January 1, 2007 (assuming no change to the
debt) are accurate.  Additionally,  assuming that the sale of the trailer assets
(discussed  on page 24) occurs in the third quarter  2000,  the General  Partner
projects Class Counsel will receive fees of $2,343,058 if the Partnership's debt
is renegotiated, and $1,517,152 if it is not.



                                 MANAGEMENT FEES

                             WITHOUT THE AMENDMENTS

Pursuant to Section 2.05(f) of the Partnership  Agreement,  the Partnership will
continue to pay Management  Fees each month to the Manager,  a subsidiary of the
General  Partner.  Management Fees are calculated based on a percentage of Gross
Lease Revenues,  which percentage depends on the types of leases the Partnership
equipment  is  subject  to and the level of  services  that are  provided  by an
affiliate of the General Partner. The Partnership Agreement does not contain any
performance goals as a condition to the payment of Management Fees.

                               WITH THE AMENDMENTS

Payment of 25% of the Management Fee will be deferred for 2 1/2 years commencing
January 1, 2002  pending the  Partnership's  attainment  of  performance  goals;
except for the deferred  Management  Fees which will only be paid if there is an
annualized  increase  of at least 10% in the actual  cash flow  received  by the
limited  partners  relative to the cash flow which the General Partner  projects
would have been received by limited partners  commencing  January 1, 2000 if the
Partnership  were to be  liquidated  pursuant  to what  is  contemplated  by the
Partnership Agreement.  These fees will be paid for approximately 6 years beyond
what is contemplated by the Partnership Agreement.  Additionally, as a result of
the extension of the Reinvestment  Period,  the Management Fees through December
31, 2004 will not  decrease at as great a rate as they likely  would  otherwise,
since  Management  Fees are based upon gross lease  revenues  which likely would
decrease  more  quickly  during  those years in the absence of  reinvestment  in
equipment.


                   FRONT-END FEES AND NET DISPOSITION PROCEEDS

                             WITHOUT THE AMENDMENTS

Pursuant to Section  2.05(h) of the  Partnership  Agreement,  front-end fees and
overall payments to the General Partner are subject to the  compensation  limits
set forth in the Statement of Policy of NASAA.  The General  Partner is entitled
to be paid a total of $39,150,778 over the life of the Partnership for front-end
fees, and 1% of Net Disposition Proceeds,  increased up to 5%, to the extent the
General  Partner does not receive the maximum  amount of front-end fees to which
it is entitled.  Through  December 31, 1999,  the General  Partner has been paid
front-end fees of  $37,147,884,  of which  $15,369,791 is comprised of Front-End
Fees (acquisition and lease negotiation fees).

                               WITH THE AMENDMENTS

The current  limitation on front-end fees payable to the General Partner will be
increased by  twenty-percent  (20%).  The current  limitation  is based upon the
guidelines  issued by NASAA.  The Front-End Fee Increase will have the effect of
increasing the total  compensation  permitted to be paid to the General  Partner
and its affiliates, if earned, by the amount of the Front-End Fee Increase. As a
result, if the General Partner and its affiliates do not earn the full amount of
the  Front-End  Fee  Increase,  additional  categories  of  compensation,  which
otherwise would be restricted by the NASAA guidelines, could be paid. Absent the
Amendments,  however,  the only other payment to the General Partner which could
result in total  compensation  exceeding the NASAA  guidelines is the payment to
the General Partner of its interest in Net Disposition Proceeds. In this regard,
the NASAA guidelines permit the General Partner to be paid 1% of Net Disposition
Proceeds, while the Partnership Agreement permits the General Partner to be paid
5% of such Net Disposition Proceeds.  Without the Amendments, the payment to the
General Partner of up to the additional 4% of Net Disposition  Proceeds to which
it is entitled under the Partnership Agreement would be permitted only if and to
the extent  the  General  Partner  has  otherwise  been paid less than the total
amount of the  compensation  allowed  by the NASAA  guidelines.  Therefore,  the
Amendments  will enable the General  Partner to receive up to this additional 4%
so long as the amount of Net Disposition Proceeds,  together with the additional
Front-End Fees, do not exceed the 20% Front-End Fee Increase.

As of January 1, 1999 the  limitation on the total of Front-End  Fees payable to
the  General  Partner  will be  increased  so that the General  Partner  will be
entitled to be paid up to an additional  $7,406,500 for earned  acquisition  and
lease negotiation fees and for up to 4% of Net Disposition Proceeds. The General
Partner  expects  that,  from  January 1, 2000  through the end of the  extended
Reinvestment  Period,  it will be paid  additional  aggregate  Front-End Fees of
approximately  $1,622,500  assuming  the  debt  is  renegotiated,  and  $935,000
assuming no change to the debt, and it projects that upon the liquidation of the
Partnership's  equipment, Net Disposition Proceeds of 4% will be paid, a portion
of which may be available  regardless  of whether the  Amendments  are approved.
Assuming  that the sale of the trailer  assets  (discussed on page 24) occurs in
the third quarter 2000, the General Partner expects that over the remaining life
of the  Partnership,  Front-End Fees will increase from $1,622,500 to $1,787,500
with   renegotiation   of  debt  (and  from  $935,000  to   $1,045,000   without
renegotiation).





<PAGE>


                          DISTRIBUTIONS TO UNITHOLDERS

                             WITHOUT THE AMENDMENTS

The General  Partner  projects that aggregate  distributions  (not discounted to
present  value) to limited  partners  from  January 1, 2000 through 2001 will be
$61,819,436,  including  distributions  resulting  from  operating  revenues and
equipment sales.

                               WITH THE AMENDMENTS

As a result of extending the Reinvestment Period and the Extension,  the General
Partner projects that aggregate  distribution  (not discounted to present value)
to limited  partners  from  January  1, 2000  through  2007 will be  $89,857,630
assuming the Partnership  debt is renegotiated and sales proceeds are reinvested
in equipment  rather than paying down debt during the Reinvestment  Period,  and
$87,572,533 assuming no changes are made to the Partnership debt, each including
distributions  resulting  from operating  revenues and equipment  sales and each
including the $4,204,705  anticipated to be paid to investors for the repurchase
of 10% of the Partnership units at 80% of their net asset value.





<PAGE>


                              CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

         GENERAL.  The General Partner has fiduciary duties to the Partnerships,
in addition to the  specific  duties and  obligations  imposed upon it under the
Partnership Agreement.  Subject to the terms of the Partnership  Agreement,  the
General  Partner,  in managing  the affairs of the  Partnership,  is expected to
exercise good faith,  to use care and prudence and to act with an undivided duty
of loyalty to the limited partners.  Under these fiduciary  duties,  the General
Partner is  obligated  to ensure  that the  Partnership  is  treated  fairly and
equitably in transactions with third parties,  especially where  consummation of
such  transactions  may result in the  interests  of the General  Partner  being
opposed  to,  or not  aligned  with,  the  interests  of the  limited  partners.
Accordingly,  the General  Partner has  assessed  the  potential  benefits to be
derived by limited partners from the Amendments. Notwithstanding any conflict of
interest, after consideration of the terms and conditions of the Amendments, the
General  Partner  recommends  that  limited  partners  do not vote  against  the
Amendments and do not object to the equitable settlement.

         CONFLICT OF INTEREST OF GENERAL PARTNER.  The General Partner initiated
and  participated  in  structuring  the Amendments and has conflicts of interest
with respect to their effect. As part of the Amendments, the limitation on front
end fees that can be paid to the  General  Partner  by the  Partnership  will be
increased by 20% so that the General Partner can earn such fees in excess of the
amount proscribed in the Statement of Policy of NASAA effective January 1, 1999.
As a result of extending the Reinvestment  Period, the General Partner will earn
Front-End Fees, for equipment acquisition and lease negotiation  services,  from
the Partnership for approximately 5 additional  years;  during 1997 through 1999
the Partnership paid the General Partner  Front-End Fees averaging  $379,539 per
year. Upon liquidation of the Partnership, it will also earn up to an additional
4% of Net Disposition Proceeds.

         The Manager, a subsidiary of the General Partner,  will earn Management
Fees for 6 years beyond what the  Partnership  Agreement  contemplates  . During
1997 through 1999 the Manager was paid Management Fees averaging  $1,526,856 per
year.  Additionally,  the ability to  reinvest  through  December  31, 2004 will
result in the level of Management Fees not decreasing at as great a rate as they
likely  otherwise  would,  since  Management  Fees are based  upon  gross  lease
revenues  which likely  would  decrease  more quickly  during those years in the
absence  of  reinvestment  in  equipment.  Although  the  payment  of 25% of the
Management Fee will be deferred for 2 1/2 years commencing January 1, 2002 until
performance goals are attained, the payment of any accrued deferred fees will be
accelerated  (and paid in a lump sum) upon a Change of Control  occurring  after
January  1,  2002  if the  General  Partner  and  Class  Counsel  agree  that an
annualized  increase of 10% in the cash flow  received  by the limited  partners
relative to the cash flow which the  General  Partner  projects  would have been
received by the General  Partner  commencing  January 1, 2000 if the Partnership
were to be liquidated as contemplated  by the  Partnership  Agreement would have
been  attained  absent  the Change of  Control.  Any  increase  in the cash flow
received by limited  partners does not necessarily  mean that the Partnership is
making  money  since cash  distributions  could  include a return of capital and
could reflect the effects of depreciating the Partnership's equipment.

         On November 8, 1999, PLM  International,  Inc., the corporate parent of
the  General  Partner,  announced  that its board of  directors  has engaged the
investment  banking firm of Imperial Capital,  LLC, to explore various strategic
and  financial  alternatives  for  maximizing  shareholder  value on a near-term
basis.  Such  alternatives  may  include,  but are not  limited  to, a  possible
transaction or series of transactions representing a merger,  consolidation,  or
any other  business  combination,  a sale of all or a substantial  amount of the
business,   securities,   or   assets   of  PLM   International,   Inc.,   or  a
recapitalization or spin-off.  The Compensation  Increase and the opportunity to
earn  Management  Fees for an additional 6 years  provided for by the Amendments
may make a transaction  involving the  corporate  parent of the General  Partner
more attractive.  In the event of a sale, directly or indirectly, of the General
Partner, the purchaser could modify the business of the General Partner.

         CONFLICT OF INTEREST OF CLASS  COUNSEL.  In assessing  Class  Counsel's
support of the  equitable  settlement of which the proposed  Amendments  form an
integral part, limited partners should consider that Class Counsel may be deemed
to have a  conflict  of  interest  with  respect  to  such  support.  Given  the
additional  protections for members of the equitable class,  including the right
to object to the proposed  equitable  settlement,  in whole or in part,  and the
court's  prerogative to reject the  settlement  and the  Amendments  even if the
requisite  consent of limited  partners is obtained,  under those  circumstances
Class Counsel has agreed to the negative consent voting procedure concerning the
Amendments,  which  procedure  makes  their  approval  more  likely  and,  as  a
consequence,  Class  Counsel could receive legal fees of up to $2,239,819 if the
Amendments are approved and the Partnership  achieves the targeted  threshold of
performance  (assuming  renegotiation  of Partnership  debt).  Class Counsel may
receive such fees at some time in the future  (estimated to occur at or near the
time the  Partnership  liquidates),  subject to  acceleration  in the event of a
Change of Control.  Such fees could only be paid to Class Counsel if the limited
partners receive the targeted threshold level of distributions.

         The fees and expenses of Class Counsel,  if approved by the court, will
be paid in part from the settlement  fund provided by the Defendant  pursuant to
the  monetary  settlement.  Also,  as part of the  equitable  settlement,  Class
Counsel will apply for an additional fee and expense  award.  Class Counsel will
not receive any Equitable  Class Fee Award from the  Partnership (or the limited
partners) in the event the Amendments are not approved or if defendants elect to
terminate the  equitable  settlement.  With respect to the  Equitable  Class Fee
Award,  commencing  January 1, 2000, the General Partner will calculate the cash
flows  received by the limited  partners to determine the rate of any annualized
increase  relative to the cash flows which the General  Partner  projects  would
have been  received by the limited  partners  commencing  January 1, 2000 if the
Partnership were to be liquidated as contemplated by the Partnership  Agreement.
At the time,  if ever,  that the  aggregate  increase  in the cash flows for the
Partnership  after January 1, 2000 equals or exceeds 12%,  Class Counsel will be
entitled  to  receive  from  each  future  distribution  to the  unitholders,  a
percentage  of the  distributions  in  excess  of  12%,  such  percentage  to be
established by the court in connection with Class  Counsel's  application for an
Equitable  Class  Fee Award in an  amount  not to exceed  27.5% of the first $10
million  of the  distributions  in  excess of 12% for each  Fund,  22.5% of such
distributions  between $10 million and $20  million,  15% of such  distributions
between $20 million and $30 million, and 10% of such distributions exceeding $30
million. Assuming the Partnership's debt is not extended, based upon the General
Partner's  projection  of  distributions  in excess of 12% totaling  $5,284,325,
Class Counsel would receive fees of  $1,453,189.  If the  Partnership's  debt is
extended,  the General  Partner  projects  that there will be  distributions  in
excess of 12% totaling $8,144,798,  and that Class Counsel would receive fees of
$2,239,819.  See also "RISK FACTORS - Conflicts of Interest" which describes the
circumstances  under which the payment of the Equitable  Class Fee Award will be
accelerated.

         As  discussed  above,  the  equitable   settlement  provides  that  the
Equitable Class Fee Award will be payable in a lump sum in the event a Change of
Control,  but only if the  General  Partner  and  Class  Counsel  agree  that an
annualized  increase of 12% in the cash flow  received  by the limited  partners
relative to the cash flow which the  General  Partner  projects  would have been
received by the General Partner  commencing  January 1, 2000 (if the Partnership
were to be liquidated as contemplated by the Partnership  Agreement)  would have
been attained  absent the Change of Control.  Class Counsel  negotiated for this
accelerated  payment  procedure to be  triggered by a Change of Control  because
they did not want to risk deferring further receipt of their Equitable Class Fee
Award in the event  that a Change of  Control  altered  the  method or timing of
payment  of  their  Award.  Class  counsel  also  did not  want  to  risk  being
constrained to take some form of compensation  other than cash in the event of a
Change of Control. Accordingly, Class Counsel and defendants agreed that, in the
event  of  a  Change  of  Control,  they  both  would  analyze  Class  Counsel's
entitlement  to their  Equitable  Class  Fee  Award as if there was no Change of
Control.



<PAGE>


                                VOTING PROCEDURES

TIME OF VOTING AND RECORD DATE

         Limited   partners   holding   units  as  of  the  Record  Date  (i.e.,
________________)  have until the Voting  Deadline (i.e., , 2000) to vote on the
Amendments.  If you approve of the Amendments,  you need not do anything but can
return a vote in favor if you wish.

         As of the  Record  Date,  the  following  number of units  were held of
record by the number of limited partners indicated below:

                                          Number of Units Voting No Required for
Number of             Number of Units     the Partnership Not to Participate in
Limited Partners      Held of Record             Equitable Settlement

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


         LIMITED  PARTNERS WHO FAIL TO RETURN THE VOTING FORM WILL BE TREATED AS
IF THEY HAD VOTED IN FAVOR OF THE  AMENDMENTS.  YOU NEED NOT  RETURN THE FORM IF
YOU APPROVE OF THE AMENDMENTS.

         The number of units entitled to vote against the Amendments is equal to
the number of units held by limited  partners of record at the Record Date.  The
Partnership  Agreement  presently  gives the limited  partners the power,  by an
affirmative vote, to approve each individual  Amendment.  However, as structured
in the equitable settlement,  unless limited partners holding 50% or more of the
units  vote  against  one or  more  of  the  Amendments,  (in  which  event  the
Partnership will not participate in the settlement),  approval of the Amendments
is in the sole discretion of the court.

NO VOTE

         Limited  partners  that wish to vote against the  Amendments  must send
their Voting Form (attached as Exhibit A), indicating to which Amendment(s) they
object,  Gilardi & Co., 1115 Magnolia  Avenue,  Larkspur,  CA 94977,  as soon as
possible  but in no event  later  than the  expiration  of the  Voting  Deadline
(_______________,  2000).  The Voting Form must  contain the name and address of
the limited  partner and the number of units so held,  and the  Amendment(s)  to
which  they  object.  Limited  partners  also  have the  right to  object to the
settlement at or before the fairness hearing, whether or not they have submitted
a Voting Form in connection with this solicitation statement.

         The General Partner  recommends that limited  partners not vote against
the Amendments.

REVOCABILITY OF VOTE

         Limited   partners   may  revoke  their  vote  at  any  time  prior  to
________________,  2000,  by mailing a  revocation  to the address  above (which
revocation must be received by the General Partner on or prior to such date).

NO APPRAISAL RIGHTS

         Neither  the   Partnership   Agreement   nor  state  law  provides  for
dissenters'  or  appraisal   rights  to  limited  partners  who  object  to  the
Amendments.  Such rights,  when they exist,  give the holders of securities  the
right to  surrender  such  securities  for an appraised  value in cash,  if they
oppose a merger or similar reorganization. No such right will be provided by the
Partnership in connection with the Amendments.

INFORMATION SERVICES

         The General  Partner and its  officers,  directors  and  employees  may
assist in  providing  information  to limited  partners in  connection  with any
questions  they may have with  respect to this  solicitation  statement  and the
procedures to vote against the Amendments.



<PAGE>



                 INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN DOCUMENTS BY REFERENCE

         The  Partnership  incorporates  by reference  its annual report on Form
10-K for the fiscal year ended  December  31, 1999 and its  quarterly  report on
Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2000, which are delivered herewith.



<PAGE>



                                   APPENDIX A

                             TEXT OF THE AMENDMENTS

AMENDMENT I - THE EXTENSION

          Section  10.01(e)  of the  Partnership  Agreement  for  Fund V will be
amended to provide that an event of dissolution of the Fund shall occur when the
General  Partner  determines that it is necessary to commence the liquidation of
the  Equipment  (as  defined  in the  Partnership  Agreement)  to  complete  the
liquidation by January 1, 2007. Section 10.01(e) will be deleted and replaced in
its  entirety  so that the  introductory  sentence  (which  will not change) and
amended subsection (e) will read as follows:

               "EVENTS OF DISSOLUTION.  The  Partnership  shall be dissolved and
               shall  commence  the orderly  liquidation  of its assets upon the
               first to occur of any of the following:

                                      * * *

               (e) The determination by the General Partner that it is necessary
               to commence  the  liquidation  of the  Equipment in order for the
               liquidation  of all the  Equipment  to be completed in an orderly
               and businesslike fashion prior to January 1, 2007."


AMENDMENT II - COMPENSATION INCREASE

         Section 2.05(h) of the Partnership Agreement for Fund V will be amended
to  increase  the  limitations  on  the  General  Partner's  Fees  by 20% of the
limitations  presently  stated in the  Partnership  Agreement so as to allow the
General Partner to earn fees in excess of the compensatory limitations set forth
in the  Statement  of  Policy of the North  American  Securities  Administrators
Association,  Inc. during the extended  Reinvestment Period.  Specifically,  the
first  clause of the first  sentence  of section  2.05(h)  will be  deleted  and
replaced in its entirety as follows:

               "Limitation of Fees.  The General  Partner shall not receive fees
               in excess of 120% of the following  limitations which shall apply
               to the amount of Capital Contributions which must be committed to
               Investment in Equipment:"

AMENDMENT III - EXTENSION OF THE REINVESTMENT PERIOD

         Section  2.02  (r) of the  Partnership  Agreement  for  Fund V will  be
amended to allow the General  Partner to reinvest  such  amounts  through  2004.
Specifically, Section 2.02(r) will be amended by deleting only the language that
states  "for six years  after the year  which  includes  the  Funding  Date" and
replacing such language with "until December 31, 2004".

AMENDMENT IV - THE REPURCHASE

         Section  6.11 of the  Partnership  Agreement  for Fund V is  amended to
allow repurchase by the Partnership of up to 10% of its outstanding units at 80%
of net asset value in accordance  with the terms of the  settlement  stipulation
and the Repurchase Protocol which is Exhibit C to the stipulation.  Section 6.11
will be amended by adding the following language at the end of the section:

               "Notwithstanding any terms of the preceding paragraph,  from June
               29, 1999 forward the following  terms of Section 6.11 will govern
               and  control  all Limited  Partners'  and the  General  Partner's
               rights and obligations regarding repurchase of outstanding Units.
               The  Partnership  will  repurchase  up to 10% of the  then  total
               outstanding Units as of June 29, 1999 ("Outstanding  Units"). Any
               Unitholder  that intends to submit for repurchase  some or all of
               his, her or its Units must indicate this intention on the Request
               to Repurchase  Form that has been mailed to the Limited  Partners
               along  with  the   Equitable   Settlement   Hearing   Notice  and
               Solicitation Statement.  The repurchase price for each Unit shall
               be determined as follows:  the Net Asset Value of the Partnership
               (defined  below) as of the fiscal quarter  immediately  preceding
               [add  the  last  date to file  the  Repurchase  Request]  will be
               divided by the number of  Outstanding  Units to determine the Net
               Asset  Value  per  Unit.  The Net  Asset  Value  per Unit will be
               multiplied by 80% to determine the repurchase price per Unit (the
               "Repurchase Price"). The repurchase of Units will be completed no
               later than the end of the  fiscal  quarter  following  the fiscal
               quarter  during which the United  States  District  Court for the
               Southern  District  of  Alabama  enters an order  granting  final
               approval  of  the  Equitable  Class  Action  Settlement.  If  the
               Unitholders  request the  Partnership to repurchase more than 10%
               of its Units,  the  Partnership  will repurchase up to 10% of the
               Units,  pro-rata  based  on  the  number  of  Units  offered  for
               repurchase,  or as close  to a  pro-rata  basis as is  reasonably
               possible.  Any  such  pro-rata  allocation  adjustments  will  be
               determined  by the Claims  Administrator  who will give  priority
               according to the order of preference  for each category set forth
               below in this  paragraph.  To the  extent  that the demand in any
               category  would  exhaust the 10% number then all  Unitholders  in
               that  category  will have their Units  repurchased  on a pro rata
               basis,  rounded up to the nearest whole Unit, and the Unitholders
               in the  remaining  categories  will not have the option of having
               their Units  repurchased.  The order of preferences is: (1) Units
               owned by estates,  IRAs and Qualified  Plans which were purchased
               as part of the  initial  offering;  (2)  Units  owned by  Limited
               Partners  which were  purchased as part of the initial  offering;
               (3) Units owned by Limited  Partners which were  purchased  after
               the initial  offering;  (4) Units owned by Unitholders which were
               purchased after the initial offering. In the event that the total
               number of Units  requested to be  repurchased  exceeds 10% of the
               Partnership's  Units,  the General  Partner will have the option,
               but not the  obligation,  to purchase these excess Units with its
               own monies and on its own behalf."

               "Net  Asset  Value"  of the  Partnership  means  the value of all
               Equipment  owned  by the  Partnership  and as  determined  by the
               General Partner (and subject to consultation with Class Counsel's
               valuation expert) plus any cash, uncollected  receivables and any
               other assets, less accounts payable,  debts and other liabilities
               of the Fund as of the fiscal  quarter  immediately  preceding the
               repurchase date."

AMENDMENT V - ENABLING AMENDMENTS

         Article XVIII of the  Partnership  Agreement for Fund V will be amended
to provide: (a) that the limited partners may amend the Partnership Agreement to
make all amendments necessary to this equitable settlement, including amendments
to  Section  10.01  thereof;  and (b)  that any  such  amendment  may be made by
approval of a Majority in Interest as provided for in amended Article XV, below.
Article  XVIII  shall  remain the same except  that the first  provision  of the
second paragraph will be deleted and replaced in its entirety as follows:

               "[P]rovided, however that the Limited Partners may not amend this
               Agreement  to  extend  the  Partnership  term  or to  change  the
               provisions of Section 10.03;"

Additionally,  a new  paragraph  will be  added at the end of  Article  XVIII as
follows:

               "Approval  of a Majority in Interest  to all  amendments  of this
               Agreement   necessary  to   effectuating   the  Equitable   Class
               Settlement  shall be deemed to have been  given if less than half
               of the Units  held by  Limited  Partners  vote  against  any such
               amendment proposed by the _____, 2000 Solicitation  Statement, as
               provided for in amended Article XV of this Agreement."

AMENDMENT VI - ACTIONS BY LIMITED PARTNERS

         Article XV of the  Partnership  Agreement for Fund V will be amended to
provide that written consent of the limited  partners  respecting any matters in
connection  with the  equitable  settlement  shall be deemed to have been  given
unless limited partners holding more than one half of the units vote against any
such matter. Article XV will be amended to add the following language to the end
of the fourth paragraph of Article XV:

               "Provided,  however, that effective written consent by a Majority
               in Interest of the Limited  Partners to any  proposed  action set
               forth  in  the  ______,   2000  Solicitation   Statement  and  in
               connection with the Equitable Class  Settlement,  shall be deemed
               to have been given,  unless  Limited  Partners  holding more than
               half of the outstanding  Units in such Limited  Partnership  vote
               against any such action."

AMENDMENT VII - DISPUTES AND RESOLUTIONS

         Article XIV of the Partnership  Agreement for Fund V will be amended to
provide that all disputes relating to, or arising out of this settlement,  shall
be subject to the court's  continuing  jurisdiction over the  interpretation and
administration of this settlement and all the settlement documents  incorporated
herein.  Article XIV will be amended by adding the following language to the end
of the paragraph:

               "Provided,  however,  that any and all  disputes  relating  to or
               arising out of the Equitable Class Action Settlement  approved by
               the Federal  District Court for the Southern  District of Alabama
               by  final  order,   including   all  issues   pertaining  to  the
               interpretation   and   administration   of  the   Stipulation  of
               Settlement  and  all  its  exhibits,  shall  be  subject  to  the
               continuing  and exclusive  jurisdiction  of the Federal  District
               Court for the Southern District of Alabama."


<PAGE>


                                   APPENDIX B

                              FINANCIAL ASSUMPTIONS
                       Liquidation as of December 31, 1999
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                           Total Dollars                           Estimated
                                                                                                   Value per
                                                                                                        Unit
COMPONENTS OF OPERATING CASH FLOW<F1>1
<S>                                  <C>                  <C>                                       <C>
Interest Income                                                       -                                  -
Interest Expense                                                      -                                  -
Scheduled Debt Payment                                                -                                  -
Prepayment of Debt                                        $ (19,354,950)                            -$2.13
Distributions to General Partner                          $  (2,758,309)                            -$0.30
Other                                                     $   1,399,488                              $0.15
                                                          $ (20,713,771)                            -$2.29

SALES PROCEEDS BY EQUIPMENT TYPE<F2>2
Aircraft                                                  $  41,803,075                              $4.61
Containers                                                $   3,300,243                              $0.36
Railcars                                                  $   5,575,000                              $0.61
Trailers                                                  $   3,839,000                              $0.42
Vessels
         Gross Proceeds              $ 19,742,916
         Brokers Fees                $   (444,216)
         Net Proceeds                                     $  19,298,700                              $2.13
Redeployed (from Aircraft and Vessels)                                                                   -
                                                                 -
                                                          $  73,816,017                              $8.14

Estimated Total Cash Flow                                 $  53,102,246
Estimated Value of a Unit                                                                            $5.86


--------------------------
<FN>
<F1>
1    Fourth quarter 1999 cash flow items (revenues and expenses)  following sale
     of equipment  relating to operation  and  liquidation  of the  Partnership,
     including fees for prepayment of debt.

2    Assumes hypothetical liquidation as of September 30, 1999.

</FN>
</TABLE>

<PAGE>


                        Liquidation as of January 1, 2001
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                           Total Dollars                           Estimated
                                                                                                     Present
                                                                                                  Value* per
                                                                                                        Unit
OPERATING REVENUES BY EQUIPMENT TYPE (Net of Direct
Expenses)
<S>                                  <C>                     <C>                                     <C>
Aircraft                                                     $  8,097,123                             $0.84
Containers                                                   $    451,618                             $0.05
Railcars                                                     $  1,673,021                             $0.17
Trailers                                                     $  1,086,677                             $0.11
Vessels                                                      $  1,973,301                             $0.21
Redeployed (from Aircraft and Vessels)                                                                    -
                                                                        -
                                                             $ 13,281,741                             $1.38

COMPONENTS OF OPERATING CASH FLOW
Interest Income                                              $    161,782                             $0.02
Interest Expense                                             $   (720,223)                           -$0.07
Management Fees                                              $   (850,747)                           -$0.09
Other                                                        $   (792,472)                           -$0.27
                                                             $ (2,201,659)                           -$0.42


NON OPERATING CASH FLOW
Aircraft Reserves                                            $    672,416                             $0.07
Dry Dock                                                     $   (150,000)                           -$0.02
                                                             $    522,416                             $0.05
SALES PROCEEDS BY EQUIPMENT TYPE
Aircraft                                                     $ 37,877,958                             $3.76
Containers                                                   $  3,224,557                             $0.33
Railcars                                                     $  5,403,333                             $0.54
Trailers                                                     $  3,275,354                             $0.33
Vessels
         Gross Proceeds              $ 21,541,176
         Brokers Fees                $   (484,676)
         Net Proceeds                                        $ 21,056,500                             $2.19
Redeployed (from Aircraft and Vessels)                                                                    -

                                                             $ 70,837,702                             $7.14
EQUIPMENT PURCHASES
Cost of Equipment                                            $  2,200,000                            -$0.24
Fees on Equipment Purchases                                                                               -
                                                                        -
                                                             $  2,200,000                            -$0.24
DEBT and  FEES
Debt Payments                                                $(15,483,960)                           -$1.57
Redemptions of Units                                                    -                                 -
Class Counsel Fees                                                      -                                 -
Distributions to General Partner                             $ (2,936,803)                           -$0.31
                                                             $(18,420,764)                           -$1.88


Estimated Total Cash Flow                                    $ 61,819,436
Estimated Present Value of a Unit                                                                     $6.04
</TABLE>

       *Discounted at 11.1%


<PAGE>


                        Liquidation as of January 1, 2007
                           (no renegotiation of debt)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                           Total Dollars                           Estimated
                                                                                                     Present
                                                                                                  Value* per
                                                                                                        Unit
OPERATING REVENUES BY EQUIPMENT TYPE (Net of Direct
Expenses)
<S>                                  <C>                    <C>                                      <C>
Aircraft                                                    $ 36,401,645                              $3.40
Containers                                                  $  1,023,428                              $0.11
Railcars                                                    $  9,774,305                              $0.87
Trailers                                                    $  4,013,405                              $0.38
Vessels                                                     $  1,973,301                              $0.22
Redeployed (from Aircraft and Vessels)                      $ 18,487,500                              $1.45
                                                            $ 71,673,584                              $6.43

COMPONENTS OF OPERATING CASH FLOW
Interest Income                                             $    869,461                              $0.07
Interest Expense                                            $ (1,766,163)                            -$0.18
Management Fees                                             $ (4,255,715)                            -$0.38
Other                                                       $ (3,612,155)                            -$0.61
                                                            $ (8,764,572)                            -$1.10


NON OPERATING CASH FLOW
Aircraft Reserves                                           $  3,846,447                              $0.36
Dry Dock                                                    $   (150,000)                            -$0.02
                                                            $  3,696,447                              $0.35
SALES PROCEEDS BY EQUIPMENT TYPE
Aircraft                                                    $ 23,766,494                              $1.73
Containers                                                  $  3,199,648                              $0.33
Railcars                                                    $  4,498,333                              $0.29
Trailers                                                    $  2,021,854                              $0.16
Vessels
         Gross Proceeds              $ 21,541,176                                                         -
         Brokers Fees                $   (484,676)                                                        -
         Net Proceeds                                       $ 21,056,500                              $2.32
Redeployed (from Aircraft and Vessels)                      $  9,540,000                              $0.56
                                                            $ 64,082,829                              $5.40
EQUPMENT PURCHASES
Cost of Equipment                                           $(20,276,880)                            -$2.08
Fees on Equipment Purchases                                 $   (935,000)                            -$0.10
                                                            $(21,211,880)                            -$2.18
DEBT and  FEES
Debt Payments                                               $(15,483,960)                            -$1.53
Redemptions of Units                                        $ (4,204,705)                            -$0.47
Class Counsel Fees                                          $ (1,453,189)                            -$0.08
Distributions to General Partner                            $ (4,268,466)                            -$0.33
                                                            $(25,410,320)                            -$2.42

Estimated Total Cash Flow                                   $ 84,066,088
Estimated Present Value of a Unit                                                                     $6.48
</TABLE>

       *Discounted at 11.1%


<PAGE>
                        Liquidation as of January 1, 2007
                            (with debt renegotiation)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                           Total Dollars                           Estimated
                                                                                                     Present
                                                                                                  Value* per
                                                                                                        Unit
OPERATING REVENUES BY EQUIPMENT TYPE (Net of Direct
Expenses)
<S>                                  <C>                    <C>                                      <C>
Aircraft                                                    $ 36,392,562                              $3.40
Containers                                                  $  1,023,428                              $0.11
Railcars                                                    $  9,774,305                              $0.87
Trailers                                                    $  4,013,405                              $0.38
Vessels                                                     $  1,973,301                              $0.22
Redeployed (from Aircraft and Vessels)                      $ 31,021,500                              $2.41
                                                            $ 84,198,501                              $7.39

COMPONENTS OF OPERATING CASH FLOW
Interest Income                                             $  1,001,710                              $0.08
Interest Expense                                            $ (4,635,799)                            -$0.41
Management Fees                                             $ (4,865,840)                            -$0.43
Other                                                       $ (4,453,325)                            -$0.68
                                                            $(12,953,254)                            -$1.44

NON OPERATING CASH FLOW
Aircraft Reserves                                           $  3,846,447                              $0.37
Dry Dock                                                    $   (150,000)                            -$0.02
                                                            $  3,696,447                              $0.35
SALES PROCEEDS BY EQUIPMENT TYPE
Aircraft                                                    $ 23,766,494                              $1.73
Containers                                                  $  3,199,648                              $0.33
Railcars                                                    $  4,498,333                              $0.29
Trailers                                                    $  2,021,854                              $0.16
Vessels
         Gross Proceeds              $ 21,541,176                                                         -
         Brokers Fees                $   (484,676)                                                        -
         Net Proceeds                                       $ 21,056,500                              $2.32
Redeployed (from Aircraft and Vessels)                      $ 16,885,000                              $0.99
                                                            $ 71,427,829                              $5.83
EQUIPMENT PURCHASES
Cost of Equipment                                           $(32,776,880)                            -$3.30
Fees on Equipment Purchases                                 $ (1,622,500)                            -$0.16
                                                            $(34,399,380)                            -$3.46
DEBT and  FEES
Debt Payments                                               $(15,483,960)                            -$1.13
Redemptions of Units                                        $ (4,204,705)                            -$0.47
Class Counsel Fees                                          $ (2,239,819)                            -$0.13
Distributions to General Partner                            $ (4,388,734)                            -$0.34
                                                            $(26,317,218)                            -$2.07

Estimated Total Cash Flow                                   $ 85,652,926
Estimated Present Value of a Unit                                                                     $6.60

</TABLE>


               *Discounted at 11.1%




<PAGE>





                                   APPENDIX C

                        BALANCE SHEETS OF GENERAL PARTNER


                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT





The Board of Directors and Shareholder
PLM Financial Services, Inc.


We have audited the  accompanying  consolidated  balance  sheet of PLM Financial
Services,   Inc.  and   subsidiaries   (the   Company),   a  subsidiary  of  PLM
International,  Inc.  (the  Parent),  as of December 31,  1999,  and the related
consolidated  statement of income,  changes in  shareholder's  equity,  and cash
flows for the year then ended. These consolidated  financial  statements are the
responsibility of the Company's management.  Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on these consolidated financial statements based on our audit.

We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards.
Those standards  require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance   about  whether  the  financial   statements  are  free  of  material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

As more  fully  described  in  Notes  1 and  10,  the  Company  has  significant
transactions with its Parent and affiliates.

In our opinion, the consolidated  financial statements referred to above present
fairly, in all material  respects,  the consolidated  financial  position of PLM
Financial  Services,  Inc. and  subsidiaries  as of December  31, 1999,  and the
results  of their  operations  and their  cash  flows for the year then ended in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.





/s/ KPMG LLP
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA
March 15, 2000


<PAGE>


                          PLM FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
                           CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
                             As of December 31, 1999
                 (in thousands of dollars, except share amounts)






                                   ASSETS

Cash and cash equivalents                                  $     13,276
Restricted cash                                                     988
Receivables (net of allowance for doubtful accounts
  of $49 at December 31, 1999)                                      764
Receivables net, from affiliated entities                         2,962
Equity interest in affiliates                                    18,145
Other assets, net                                                 1,055
                                                            ------------

  Total assets                                              $    37,190
                                                            =============

                      LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY

Liabilities:
  Senior secured notes                                     $     20,679
  Accounts payable                                                  436
  Other accrued expenses                                            884
  Deferred income taxes                                           1,313
                                                           -------------
Total liabilities                                                23,312
                                                           -------------
Shareholder's Equity:
  Preferred stock (20,000 shares authorized, none outstanding
    as of December 31, 1999)
  Common stock (10 million shares authorized,
    1,000 shares issued and outstanding at paid-in amount)       10,959
  Retained earnings                                               2,919
                                                            ------------
    Total shareholder's equity                                   13,878
                                                            ------------
Total liabilities and shareholder's equity                 $     37,190
                                                           =============







       See accompanying notes to these consolidated financial statements.


<PAGE>




                          PLM FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
                        CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF INCOME
                          Year Ended December 31, 1999
                            (in thousands of dollars)




       Revenues
       Management fees                                         $    8,167
       Acquisition and lease negotiation fees                       1,354
       Partnership interests and other fees                           658
       Operating leases                                             3,598
       Other                                                        1,271
                                                             ------------
         Total revenue                                            15,048
                                                             ------------

       Costs and expenses
       Operations support                                           3,412
       General and administrative                                   4,758
       Depreciation and amortization                                1,181
                                                            -------------
         Total costs and expenses                                   9,351
                                                            -------------

       Operating income                                             5,697

       Interest expense                                            (2,304)
       Interest income                                                 67
                                                            -------------
       Income before income taxes                                   3,460

       Provision for income taxes                                   1,392
                                                            -------------
       Net income                                              $    2,068
                                                           ===============










       See accompanying notes to these consolidated financials tatements.


<PAGE>



                          PLM FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
            CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY
                      For the Year Ended December 31, 1999
                            (in thousands of dollars)




                                                                     Total
                                   Common         Retained        Shareholder's
                                   Stock          Earnings           Equity
                                 -----------------------------------------------


  Balances, December 31, 1998   $     10,959   $       851     $       11,810

  Net income                              -          2,068              2,068
                               -------------------------------------------------

  Balances, December 31, 1999   $     10,959   $     2,919     $       13,878
                               =================================================

























       See accompanying notes to these consolidated financial statements.


<PAGE>


                          PLM FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
                      For the Year Ended December 31, 1999
                            (in thousands of dollars)



Operating activities
Net income                                                          $     2,068
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash
  provided by (used in) operating activities:
   Depreciation and amortization                                          1,181
   Loss on disposition of assets                                              4
   Reduction of residual value interests                                    958
   Amortization of offering costs                                         2,835
   Increase in receivables                                                 (128)
   Increase in receivables from affiliated entities                         (18)
   Decrease in other assets                                                  49
   Increase in accounts payable                                             656
   Decrease in other accrued expenses                                      (233)
   Decrease in payable to Parent                                           (509)
   Deferred income tax                                                   (1,892)
                                                                  --------------
      Net cash provided by operating activities                           4,971
                                                                  --------------

Investing activities
Purchase of transportation equipment and capitalized improvements          (248)
Sale of transportation equipment                                         16,412
Purchase of assets held for sale                                        (21,805)
Proceeds from the sale of assets held for sale                           21,805
Purchase of property, plant, and equipment                                 (462)
                                                                  --------------
      Net cash used in investing activities                              15,702
                                                                  --------------

Financing activities
Decrease in restricted cash                                                 123
Borrowings under warehouse credit facility                               46,608
Repayment under warehouse credit facility                               (46,608)
Repayment of senior secured notes                                        (7,520)
                                                                  --------------
      Net cash used in financing activities                              (7,397)
                                                                  --------------

Net increase in cash and cash equivalents                                13,276
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year                               --
                                                                  --------------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year                            $    13,276
                                                                  ==============

Supplemental information - cash paid during the year for:
Interest                                                            $     2,541
                                                                  ==============
Income taxes (Notes 1 and 9)                                        $     1,392
                                                                  ==============
                                                                  ==============

See accompanying notes to these consolidated financial statements.


<PAGE>


1.   SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

BASIS OF PRESENTATION

In the opinion of management, the accompanying consolidated financial statements
contain all  necessary  adjustments,  consisting  primarily of normal  recurring
accruals,  to present  fairly the  results of  operations,  financial  position,
changes in shareholder's equity, and cash flows of PLM Financial Services,  Inc.
and its wholly-owned  subsidiaries  (FSI or the Company).  The subsidiaries are:
PLM Transportation Equipment Corporation (TEC) and its subsidiary, TEC Acquisub,
Inc. (TEC Acquisub); and PLM Investment Management,  Inc. (IMI). All significant
intercompany  accounts and transactions  among the consolidated  group have been
eliminated.

On February 1, 1988, the capital stock of FSI, PLM Railcar Management  Services,
Inc.,   Transportation  Equipment  Management,   Inc.,  and  the  transportation
equipment  and  other  assets,  subject  to  related  liabilities,  of 21 public
partnerships  (PLM  Transportation  Equipment  Partners I through VIIA and VIII)
sponsored by FSI were acquired by PLM International,  Inc., (PLM  International,
PLMI,  or the Parent) a newly  formed  Delaware  corporation,  in return for its
stock,  cash, and contingent cash rights to additional cash. As a result of this
exchange   (Consolidation),   FSI  became  a  wholly-owned   subsidiary  of  PLM
International.

These financial statements have been prepared on the accrual basis of accounting
in accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles.  This requires
management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of
assets and liabilities  and disclosures of contingent  assets and liabilities at
the date of the financial  statements,  and the reported amounts of revenues and
expenses  during the reporting  period.  Actual  results could differ from those
estimates.

EQUIPMENT

Trailer  equipment held for operating  lease is stated at cost.  Depreciation is
computed on the straight-line  method down to the equipment's  estimated salvage
value,  utilizing  the estimated  useful lives  between 10 to 12 years.  Salvage
values for trailer equipment are 20% of original equipment cost.

In accordance  with Financial  Accounting  Standards  Board (FASB)  Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 121, "Accounting for the Impairment of
Long-Lived  Assets and for  Long-Lived  Assets to Be  Disposed  Of," the Company
reviews the  carrying  value of its  equipment at least  quarterly  and whenever
circumstances  indicate  that  the  carrying  value  of  an  asset  may  not  be
recoverable.  If  projected  undiscounted  future cash flows and fair values are
lower  than  the  carrying  value of the  equipment,  a loss on  revaluation  is
recorded based upon the estimated fair value of the asset.  There were no losses
on revaluations of equipment recorded during 1999.

Repairs and maintenance costs are usually the obligation of the Company.  Repair
and maintenance expenses were $0.2 million for 1999.

INVESTMENT  IN  AND  MANAGEMENT  OF  EQUIPMENT   GROWTH  FUNDS,   OTHER  LIMITED
PARTNERSHIPS, AND PRIVATE PLACEMENTS

FSI earns revenues in connection with the management of the limited partnerships
and private placement programs. Equipment acquisition and lease negotiation fees
are generally  earned  through the purchase and initial lease of equipment,  and
are generally recognized as revenue when the Company completes substantially all
of the services  required to earn the fees,  typically  when binding  commitment
agreements are signed.


<PAGE>


1.   SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued)

INVESTMENT  IN  AND  MANAGEMENT  OF  EQUIPMENT   GROWTH  FUNDS,   OTHER  LIMITED
PARTNERSHIPS, AND PRIVATE PLACEMENTS (CONTINUED)

Management   fees  are  earned  for  managing  the  equipment   portfolios   and
administering  investor programs as provided for in various agreements,  and are
recognized as revenue as they are earned.

As compensation for organizing a partnership investment program, the Company was
granted an interest  (between 1% and 5%) in the earnings and cash  distributions
of the  program,  in which PLM  Financial  Services,  Inc.  (FSI) is the General
Partner. The Company recognizes as partnership  interests its equity interest in
the earnings of the  partnerships,  after adjusting such earnings to reflect the
effect of allocations of the programs' gross income allowed under the respective
partnership agreements.

The Company also recognizes as income its interest in the estimated net residual
value of the  assets of the  partnerships  as they are  purchased.  The  amounts
recorded  are  based  on  management's  estimate  of  the  net  proceeds  to  be
distributed  upon disposition of the  partnerships'  equipment at the end of the
respective  partnerships.  As assets are  purchased by the  partnerships,  these
residual value  interests are recorded in other fees at the present value of the
Company's share of estimated disposition proceeds. FSI has not recorded any such
residual  income  since 1997 at which point the  partnerships  had  invested all
original capital.  Special distributions  received by the Company resulting from
the sale of equipment are treated as  recoveries  of its equity  interest in the
partnership   until  the  recorded   residual  is  eliminated.   Any  additional
distributions received are treated as residual interest income.

FSI is also entitled to reimbursement from the investment programs for providing
certain administrative services.

In accordance with certain  investment program and partnership  agreements,  the
Company received  reimbursement  for offering costs incurred during the offering
period.  The  reimbursement was between 1.5% and 3% of the equity raised. In the
event  offering  costs  incurred by the Company,  as defined by the  partnership
agreement,  exceeded  amounts  allowed,  the excess costs were capitalized as an
additional  investment in the related  partnership and are being amortized until
the  projected  start  of  the  liquidation  phase  of  the  partnership.  These
additional  investments  are  reflected as equity  interest in affiliates in the
accompanying consolidated balance sheets.

INVESTMENT IN AND MANAGEMENT OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY

From May 1995 through May 1996, Professional Lease Management Income Fund I, LLC
(Fund I), a limited  liability  company with a no front-end fee  structure,  was
offered as an  investor  program.  The  Company  serves as the  Manager  for the
program.  No  compensation  was paid to FSI or any of its  subsidiaries  for the
organization  and syndication of interests,  the  acquisition of equipment,  the
negotiation  of  leases,  or the  placement  of debt.  FSI  funded  the costs of
syndication  and offering  through the use of operating cash and has capitalized
these  costs  as its  investment  in Fund  I.  The  Company  is  amortizing  its
investment in Fund I over eight years to the beginning of the liquidation period
of Fund I in 2003.

In return for its investment, FSI is generally entitled to a 15% interest in the
cash  distributions  and  earnings  of Fund I,  subject  to  certain  allocation
provisions. FSI's interest in the cash distributions and earnings of Fund I will
increase to 25% after the investors have received  distributions  equal to their
invested capital. FSI is

<PAGE>


1.   SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued)

INVESTMENT IN AND MANAGEMENT OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (CONTINUED)

entitled to monthly fees for equipment management services and reimbursement for
providing certain administrative services.

FSI also  recognizes as income its interest in the estimated net residual  value
of the assets of Fund I purchased  with the  proceeds  from the  offering of the
Fund.  The  amounts  recorded  are  based on  management's  estimate  of the net
proceeds to be distributed  upon  disposition of the program's  equipment at the
end of the  program.  As assets are  purchased by Fund I, these  residual  value
interests  are recorded in  partnership  interests and other fees at the present
value of FSI's share of estimated  disposition  proceeds.  Special distributions
resulting  from the sale of equipment  received by FSI are treated as recoveries
of its equity interest in the program until the recorded residual is eliminated.
Any additional distributions received are treated as residual interest income.

RESIDUAL INTERESTS

The Company has residual  interests in equipment owned by the managed  programs,
which are  recorded  as equity  interest  in  affiliates.  As  required  by FASB
Technical  Bulletin  1986-2,  the  discount  on  the  Company's  residual  value
interests in the  equipment  owned by the managed  programs is not accreted over
the holding  period.  Residual  interests  in  equipment  on finance  leases are
included in investment in direct finance  leases,  net. The Company  reviews the
carrying  value of its residual  interests  quarterly or whenever  circumstances
indicate that the carrying  value of an asset may not be recoverable in relation
to expected  future market  values for the equipment in which it holds  residual
interests for the purpose of assessing recoverability of recorded amounts.

INCOME TAXES

The Company  recognizes income tax expense using the liability method.  Deferred
taxes are recognized for tax consequences of "temporary differences" by applying
enacted  statutory tax rates  applicable to future years to differences  between
the financial  statement  carrying  amounts and the tax bases of existing assets
and  liabilities.  FSI is  included  in the  consolidated  federal  and  certain
combined state income tax returns of PLM International.  FSI provides income tax
expense using a combined federal and state tax rate applied to pre-tax earnings.
FSI's tax  provision  is  calculated  on a separate  return  basis.  The current
provision of $1.4 million for 1999 was paid to PLM International.

Deferred  income taxes arise  primarily  because of differences in the timing of
reporting transportation equipment depreciation, partnership income, and certain
reserves for financial statement and income tax reporting purposes.

CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS

The Company considers highly liquid investments  readily  convertible into known
amounts of cash with original maturities of 90 days or less as cash equivalents.

2.   RESTRICTED CASH

Restricted  cash  consists  of  a  collateral   account  subject  to  withdrawal
restrictions  per the senior  secured notes  agreement.  The agreement  requires
substantially all management fees,  acquisition and lease negotiation fees, data
processing fees, and partnership distributions to be deposited into a collateral
bank account,  to the extent  required to meet certain debt  requirements  or to
reduce the outstanding note balance (refer to Note 8).

<PAGE>


2.   RESTRICTED CASH (continued)

Management  fees can be  withdrawn  from the account  monthly if the  collateral
account  amount  is at  certain  defined  levels.  All of the  cash is  released
quarterly when the principal and interest payment is made.

3.   ASSETS HELD FOR SALE

During 1999, the Company  purchased and sold $21.8 million in marine  containers
to affiliated programs at cost, which approximated their fair market value.

The Company had no equipment held for sale as of December 31, 1999.

4.   EQUITY INTEREST IN AFFILIATES

As of December 31, 1999, FSI was the General Partner or manager in 11 investment
programs.  Distributions  of the programs are  allocated as follows:  99% to the
limited partners and 1% to the General Partner in PLM Equipment Growth Fund (EGF
I), PLM Passive Income Investors 1988, and PLM Passive Income Investors 1988-II;
95% to the limited  partners and 5% to the General  Partner in EGFs II, III, IV,
V, VI, PLM Equipment  Growth & Income Fund VII (EGF VII); 85% to the members and
15% to the manager in Professional  Lease Management Income Fund I (Fund I). Net
income is  allocated  to the  General  Partner  subject  to  certain  allocation
provisions.  FSI also  receives a  management  fee on a per car basis at a fixed
rate each month, plus an incentive management fee equal to 15% of "Net Earnings"
over $750 per car per quarter from Covered Hopper Program 1979-1.  The Company's
interest  in the cash  distributions  of Fund I will  increase  to 25% after the
investors have received distributions equal to their invested capital.

Summarized   combined  financial  data  as  of  December  31,  1999,  for  these
affiliates,  reflecting straight-line depreciation,  is as follows (in thousands
of dollars and unaudited):

 Financial position at December 31, 1999:

    Cash and other assets                                       $   40,129
    Transportation equipment and other assets,
      net of accumulated depreciation of $163,926 in 1999          473,973
                                                               -------------
        Total assets                                               514,102
      Less liabilities, primarily long-term financings             118,409
                                                               -------------
          Partners' equity                                      $  395,693
                                                               =============
  PLM International's share thereof,
      Recorded as equity interest in affiliates:               $   18,145
                                                               =============



<PAGE>


4.   EQUITY INTEREST IN AFFILIATES (continued)

  Revenue from equipment leases and other                      $   165,682
      Equipment depreciation                                       (68,650)
      Equipment operating expenses                                 (14,605)
      Repairs and maintenance expenses                             (20,863)
      Interest expenses                                             (8,938)
      Minority interests                                            (8,403)
      Other costs and expenses                                     (16,387)
      Reduction in carrying value of certain assets                (10,397)
      Cumulative effect of accounting change                          (132)
                                                               --------------
          Net income before provision for income taxes         $    17,307
                                                               ==============
     FSI's share of partnership interests
          and other fees                                       $       658
                                                               ==============
      Distributions received                                   $     4,448
                                                               ==============

Most of the limited partnership agreements contain provisions for allocations of
the programs' gross income.

While  none of the  partners,  including  the  general  partner,  are liable for
partnership  borrowings,  and  while the  general  partner  maintains  insurance
against  liability  for bodily  injury,  death and  property  damage for which a
partnership may be liable,  the general  partner may be contingently  liable for
nondebt claims against the partnership that exceed asset values.

5.   EQUIPMENT HELD FOR OPERATING LEASES

As of  December  31,  1999,  there  was no  transportation  equipment  held  for
operating leases.  During 1999, the Company purchased trailers for $0.2 million,
disposed of  trailers of $16.4  million.  During  1999,  the Company had trailer
equipment  operated in  short-term  rental yards  operated by PLM Rental Inc., a
wholly  owned  subsidiary  of PLM  International,  Inc.,  doing  business as PLM
Trailer Leasing.  Per diem and short-term rentals consisting of utilization rate
lease payments  included in revenue  amounted to  approximately  $1.9 million in
1999.

6.   OTHER ASSETS, NET

Other  assets,  net  consists  of the  following  as of  December  31,  1999 (in
thousands of dollars):

  Furniture, fixtures, and equipment, net of accumulated
    depreciation of $928                                      $      532
  Prepaid expenses                                                   328
  Software, net of accumulated amortization of $49                    98
  Loan fees, net of accumulated amortization of $135                  97
                                                              -----------
      Total other assets, net                                 $    1,055
                                                              ===========

7.   WAREHOUSE CREDIT FACILITY

This $24.5 million facility,  which is shared with Equipment Growth Fund VI (EGF
VI),  Equipment  Growth & Income Fund VII (EGFs  VII),  and  Professional  Lease
Management  Income Fund I (Fund I),  allows the  Company to  purchase  equipment
prior to its designation to a specific  program or prior to obtaining  permanent
financing.  Total borrowings for trailer equipment are limited to $12.0 million.
Borrowings under this facility by the other eligible borrowers reduce the amount
available to be borrowed by the Company.  All borrowings under this facility are
guaranteed by the Company.  This facility provides 80% financing for assets. The
Company can hold  transportation  assets under this facility for up to 150 days.
Interest accrues at prime or LIBOR plus 162.5 basis points, at the option of the
Company. The weighted-average interest rates on the

<PAGE>


7.   WAREHOUSE CREDIT FACILITY (continued)

Company's  warehouse  credit  facility was 6.72% for 1999. On December 10, 1999,
the Company  amended FSI's  warehouse  credit facility to extend the facility to
June  30,  2000.  As of  December  31,  1999,  the  Company  had  no  borrowings
outstanding  under this facility and there were no other borrowings  outstanding
under this facility by any other  eligible  borrower.  As of March 17, 2000, the
Company had no  borrowings  outstanding  under this  facility by other  eligible
borrowers.  There were no other  borrowings  outstanding  under this facility by
other  eligible  borrowers.  The Company  believes it will be able to renew this
facility on substantially the same terms upon its expiration.

8.   SENIOR SECURED NOTES AGREEMENT

The Company has a floating rate senior secured note agreement, which allowed the
Company to draw down on this facility up to $27.0 million  through June 1997. In
1998,  the Company's  senior secured notes  agreement was amended,  allowing the
Company to borrow an additional  $10.0 million under the facility.  During 1999,
the Company repaid $7.5 million on this facility. The facility bears interest at
LIBOR plus 240 basis  points.  As of December  31,  1999,  the Company had $20.7
million outstanding under this agreement.  As of March 17, 2000, the Company had
$18.8  million  outstanding  under  this  agreement.  The  Company  has  pledged
substantially  all  of  its  future  management  fees,   acquisition  and  lease
negotiation  fees,  data  processing  fees,  and  partnership  distributions  as
collateral  to the  facility.  The  facility  required  quarterly  interest-only
payments  through  August  15,  1997,  with  principal  plus  interest  payments
beginning  November  15,  1997.  Principal  payments of $1.9 million are payable
quarterly through termination of the loan on August 15, 2002.

The note agreement contains financial  covenants related to net worth and ratios
for leverage.  In addition,  there are  restrictions on payment of dividends and
certain  investments,  as defined.  The Company is not in  compliance  with this
covenant as virtually all of the pledged equipment are trailers.  The lender has
verbally waived this covenant and is expected to waive it in the future.

As of December 31, 1999, the Company estimates that the fair market value of the
$20.7 million  floating rate senior secured notes  approximates  the outstanding
balance due to the floating rate of interest.

Scheduled  principal  payments on the senior  secured notes are (in thousands of
dollars):

                         2000         $      7,520
                         2001                7,520
                         2002                5,639
                                      -------------
                           Total      $     20,679
                                      =============

9.   INCOME TAXES

The provision for income taxes for the year ended  December 31, 1999 consists of
the following (in thousands of dollars):

                           Federal         State         Total
                           -------------------------------------------

  Current                $    2,606     $      678     $  3,284
  Deferred                   (1,523)          (369)      (1,892)
                         ===========================================
                         $    1,083     $      309     $  1,392
                         ===========================================

Amounts are based upon  estimates and  assumptions as of the date of this report
and could vary  significantly  from amounts shown on the tax returns  ultimately
filed.



<PAGE>


9.   INCOME TAXES (continued)

Components  of the  deferred  tax  benefit  are as follows  for the year  ending
December 31, 1999 (in thousands of dollars):



Partnership income and other interests                             $    1,727
Transportation equipment, principally differences in depreciation        (151)
State taxes                                                               102
Other                                                                     214
                                                                 ===============
    Total                                                          $    1,892
                                                                 ===============


The tax effects of temporary  differences that give rise to significant portions
of the  deferred  tax  (assets)  and  liabilities  as of  December  31, 1999 are
presented below (in thousands of dollars):


Partnership interests                                              $    2,673
Transportation equipment, principally differences in depreciation      (1,187)
State taxes                                                              (295)
Other                                                                     122
                                                                  ==============
    Total deferred tax liabilities                                 $    1,313
                                                                  ==============

Amounts  reported  on the  federal  and  state  income  tax  returns  of FSI and
subsidiaries  are included in the  consolidated tax returns filed by the Parent.
The above amounts have been computed on a separate company basis.

Management has reviewed all established tax  interpretations  of items reflected
in its consolidated tax returns and believes that these  interpretations  do not
require valuation allowances as described in SFAS No. 109.

10.  TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES

PLM  International  and its various  subsidiaries,  including  FSI,  incur costs
associated  with  management,  accounting,  legal,  data  processing,  and other
general and administrative activities.  Direct costs are charged directly to the
Company as incurred.  Indirect costs are allocated among FSI, PLM International,
and other  subsidiaries of PLM  International,  using an allocation  method that
management believes is reasonable when compared to business activities.

FSI charged the investment  programs for certain  reimbursable  expenses allowed
for in the partnership agreements. FSI was reimbursed approximately $2.0 million
for these expenses in 1999.

FSI directs  cash  transfers to and from PLM  International  and  affiliates  to
reimburse  expenses  paid by one member of the group for the benefit of another.
Income taxes,  general and administrative  expense allocations and cash advances
between  PLM  International  and FSI affect the net  receivable/payable  from/to
Parent and affiliated entities.


<PAGE>



11.      LITIGATION

PLM International,  the Company and various of its wholly owned subsidiaries are
named as defendants  in a lawsuit  filed as a purported  class action in January
1997 in the Circuit Court of Mobile County, Mobile,  Alabama, Case No. CV-97-251
(the Koch action).  The named plaintiffs are six individuals who invested in PLM
Equipment  Growth Fund IV (Fund IV), PLM  Equipment  Growth Fund V (Fund V), PLM
Equipment  Growth Fund VI (Fund VI), and PLM Equipment  Growth & Income Fund VII
(Fund VII) (the  Partnerships),  each a California limited partnership for which
the Company's wholly owned subsidiary,  PLM Financial Services, Inc. (FSI), acts
as the General  Partner.  The  complaint  asserts  causes of action  against all
defendants  for  fraud and  deceit,  suppression,  negligent  misrepresentation,
negligent  and  intentional  breaches  of  fiduciary  duty,  unjust  enrichment,
conversion,   and  conspiracy.   Plaintiffs  allege  that  each  defendant  owed
plaintiffs  and the class  certain  duties due to their  status as  fiduciaries,
financial  advisors,  agents,  and  control  persons.  Based  on  these  duties,
plaintiffs assert liability against  defendants for improper sales and marketing
practices,  mismanagement of the Partnerships, and concealing such mismanagement
from investors in the  Partnerships.  Plaintiffs seek  unspecified  compensatory
damages,  as well as punitive damages,  and have offered to tender their limited
partnership units back to the defendants.

In March 1997,  the  defendants  removed the Koch action from the state court to
the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama,  Southern
Division  (Civil  Action No.  97-0177-BH-C)  (the  court)  based on the  court's
diversity jurisdiction. In December 1997, the court granted defendants motion to
compel  arbitration of the named  plaintiffs'  claims,  based on an agreement to
arbitrate  contained in the limited  partnership  agreement of each Partnership.
Plaintiffs appealed this decision,  but in June 1998 voluntarily dismissed their
appeal pending settlement of the Koch action, as discussed below.

In June 1997, the Company and the affiliates who are also defendants in the Koch
action were named as defendants in another  purported  class action filed in the
San Francisco  Superior Court, San Francisco,  California,  Case No. 987062 (the
Romei  action).  The plaintiff is an investor in Fund V, and filed the complaint
on her own  behalf and on behalf of all class  members  similarly  situated  who
invested in the Partnerships.  The complaint alleges the same facts and the same
causes of action as in the Koch action, plus additional causes of action against
all of the  defendants,  including  alleged  unfair and deceptive  practices and
violations of state  securities law. In July 1997,  defendants  filed a petition
(the  petition)  in federal  district  court under the Federal  Arbitration  Act
seeking to compel  arbitration  of  plaintiff's  claims.  In October  1997,  the
district court denied the Company's  petition,  but in November 1997,  agreed to
hear the Company's motion for reconsideration. Prior to reconsidering its order,
the district  court  dismissed  the  petition  pending  settlement  of the Romei
action,  as  discussed  below.  The state court  action  continues  to be stayed
pending such resolution.

In February 1999 the parties to the Koch and Romei actions  agreed to settle the
lawsuits,  with  no  admission  of  liability  by any  defendant,  and  filed  a
Stipulation  of Settlement  with the court.  The  settlement is divided into two
parts,  a  monetary  settlement  and  an  equitable  settlement.   The  monetary
settlement  provides  for  a  settlement  and  release  of  all  claims  against
defendants  in  exchange  for payment for the benefit of the class of up to $6.6
million.  The final settlement  amount will depend on the number of claims filed
by class members,  the amount of the administrative costs incurred in connection
with the  settlement,  and the amount of attorneys' fees awarded by the court to
plaintiffs'  attorneys.  The Company will pay up to $0.3 million of the monetary
settlement,  with  the  remainder  being  funded  by an  insurance  policy.  For
settlement  purposes,  the monetary  settlement class consists of all investors,
limited partners, assignees, or unit holders who purchased or received by way of
transfer or assignment  any units in the  Partnerships  between May 23, 1989 and
June 29, 1999. The monetary settlement,  if approved, will go forward regardless
of whether the equitable settlement is approved or not.


<PAGE>


11.  LITIGATION (continued)

The equitable  settlement  provides,  among other things, for: (a) the extension
(until  January 1, 2007) of the date by which FSI must complete  liquidation  of
the Partnerships'  equipment, (b) the extension (until December 31, 2004) of the
period  during  which FSI can  reinvest the  Partnerships'  funds in  additional
equipment,  (c)  an  increase  of up to  20% in the  amount  of  front-end  fees
(including  acquisition and lease negotiation fees) that FSI is entitled to earn
in  excess of the  compensatory  limitations  set  forth in the  North  American
Securities  Administrator's  Association's  Statement of Policy;  (d) a one-time
repurchase  by each of  Funds  V, VI and VII of up to 10% of that  partnership's
outstanding units for 80% of net asset value per unit; and (e) the deferral of a
portion of the  management  fees paid to an  affiliate  of FSI  until,  if ever,
certain  performance  thresholds have been met by the  Partnerships.  Subject to
final court approval, these proposed changes would be made as amendments to each
Partnership's  limited  partnership  agreement  if less than 50% of the  limited
partners of each Partnership vote against such amendments.  The limited partners
will be provided the opportunity to vote against the amendments by following the
instructions  contained in  solicitation  statements that will be mailed to them
after being filed with the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission.  The equitable
settlement  also  provides  for  payment of  additional  attorneys'  fees to the
plaintiffs' attorneys from Partnership funds in the event, if ever, that certain
performance  thresholds  have  been  met  by  the  Partnerships.  The  equitable
settlement class consists of all investors,  limited partners, assignees or unit
holders who on June 29,  1999 held any units in Funds V, VI, and VII,  and their
assigns and successors in interest.

The court preliminarily  approved the monetary and equitable settlements in June
1999. The monetary settlement remains subject to certain  conditions,  including
notice to the monetary class and final  approval by the court  following a final
fairness  hearing.   The  equitable   settlement   remains  subject  to  certain
conditions, including: (a) notice to the equitable class, (b) disapproval of the
proposed  amendments  to the  partnership  agreements  by less  than  50% of the
limited  partners  in one or more of  Funds V, VI,  and  VII,  and (c)  judicial
approval  of the  proposed  amendments  and  final  approval  of  the  equitable
settlement by the court following a final fairness  hearing.  No hearing date is
currently  scheduled for the final fairness  hearing.  The Company  continues to
believe  that the  allegations  of the Koch and  Romei  actions  are  completely
without  merit and intends to continue to defend this matter  vigorously  if the
monetary settlement is not consummated.

The Company is involved as plaintiff or defendant in various other legal actions
incidental  to its  business.  Management  does  not  believe  that any of these
actions will be material to the financial condition of the Company.

12.  SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY

The  Company  has  20,000  shares  of  preferred  stock  authorized,   and  none
outstanding as of December 31, 1999.

The Company has 10 million shares of common stock  authorized,  and 1,000 shares
issued and  outstanding  at paid-in  amounts as of December 31, 1999.  All 1,000
shares are owned by the Parent.

13.  OFF-BALANCE SHEET RISK AND CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK

Off-Balance Sheet Risk: As of December 31, 1999, management believes the Company
had no significant off balance-sheet risk.

Concentrations of Credit Risk:  Financial  instruments which potentially subject
the Company to  concentrations  of credit risk consist  principally of temporary
cash investments and transactions  with affiliated  entities.  Concentrations of
credit  risk with  respect to trade  receivables  are  limited  due to the large
number  of  customers  and  their  dispersion  across  different   business  and
geographic  areas. The Company's  involvement with management of the receivables
from  affiliated  entities  limits  the  amount of credit  exposure  from  these
entities.



<PAGE>


13.  OFF-BALANCE SHEET RISK AND CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK (continued)

As of December 31,  1999,  management  believes  the Company had no  significant
concentrations of credit risk.

14.  PROFIT SHARING AND 401(k) PLAN

Since February 1996, the Company has participated in the PLM International, Inc.
Profit  Sharing and 401(k)  Plan (the  Plan).  The Plan  provides  for  deferred
compensation  as described in Section  401(k) of the Internal  Revenue Code. The
Plan is a contributory plan available to essentially all full-time  employees of
the Company.  In 1999,  employees  who  participated  in the Plan could elect to
defer and contribute to the trust  established under the Plan up to 9% of pretax
salary or wages up to $10,000.  The Company matched up to a maximum of $4,000 of
employees' 401(k)  contributions in 1999 to vest in four equal installments over
a four-year period. The Company's total 401(k) contribution was $0.1 million for
1999.

During 1999, the Parent accrued discretionary profit-sharing contributions equal
to approximately 2% of pretax profit. Profit-sharing contributions are allocated
equally among the number of eligible Plan participants. The Company's portion of
the total profit-sharing contributions was $0.1 million for 1999.

15.  EFFECTS OF YEAR 2000

To date,  the Company has not  experienced  any  material  Year 2000 issues with
either its internally developed software or purchased software.  In addition, to
date the Company has not been  impacted by any Year 2000  problems that may have
impacted our customers and  suppliers.  The amount the Company has spent related
to Year 2000 issues has not been material.  The Company continues to monitor its
systems for any potential Year 2000 issues.







<PAGE>




                          PLM FINANCIAL S<TABLE>
<CAPTION>



                                   ASSETS

                                                                                           March 31,        December 31,
                                                                                             2000                1999
                                                                                           --------------------------------------

<S>                                                                                    <C>                <C>
Cash and cash equivalents                                                              $      8,199       $    13,276
Restricted cash                                                                                 645               988
Receivables (net of allowance for doubtful accounts
  of $34 at March 31, 2000 and $49 at December 31, 1999)                                        425               764
Receivables from affiliated entities                                                          4,248             2,962
Equity interest in affiliates                                                                18,165            18,145
Transportation equipment held for operating lease                                             2,454                --
  Less: accumulated depreciation                                                                (38)              --
                                                                                      ---------------------------------
                                                                                              2,416                --
Other assets, net                                                                               873             1,055
                                                                                      ----------------------------------

  Total assets                                                                         $     34,971       $    37,190
                                                                                      ==================================

                                           LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY

Liabilities:
  Senior secured notes                                                                 $     18,799       $    20,679
  Accounts payable                                                                              388               436
  Other accrued expenses                                                                        916               884
  Deferred income taxes                                                                         942             1,313
                                                                                      ----------------------------------
    Total liabilities                                                                        21,045            23,312
                                                                                      ----------------------------------
Shareholder's Equity:
  Preferred stock, 20,000 shares authorized, none outstanding                                    --                --
  Common stock, 10 million shares authorized,
    1,000 shares issued and outstanding at paid-in amount                                    10,959            10,959
  Retained earnings                                                                           2,967             2,919
                                                                                      ----------------------------------
    Total shareholder's equity                                                               13,926            13,878
                                                                                      ----------------------------------

Total liabilities and shareholder's equity                                             $     34,971       $    37,190
                                                                                      ==================================




</TABLE>




       See accompanying notes to these consolidated financial statements.


<PAGE>



                  PLM FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                        CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
                      For the Three Months Ended March 31,
                            (in thousands of dollars)
                                    UNAUDITED

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                    2000           1999
                                                                                               ---------------------------

       Revenues:
         <S>                                                                                    <C>           <C>
         Management fees                                                                        $    1,984    $   2,153
         Partnership interests and other fees                                                          281          290
         Acquisition and lease negotiation fees                                                         19          461
         Operating lease income                                                                         76          912
         Other                                                                                         330          351
                                                                                               ----------------------------
            Total revenues                                                                           2,690        4,167
                                                                                               -----------------------------
       Costs and expenses:
         Operations support                                                                            757          871
         General and administrative                                                                  1,298        1,053
         Depreciation and amortization                                                                 132          417
                                                                                               -----------------------------
           Total costs and expenses                                                                  2,187        2,341
                                                                                               -----------------------------

       Operating income                                                                                503        1,826

       Interest expense                                                                               (431)        (587)
       Interest income                                                                                  13           24
                                                                                               -----------------------------
       Income before income taxes                                                                       85        1,263

       Provision for income taxes                                                                       37          518
                                                                                               -----------------------------

       Net income                                                                               $       48    $     745
                                                                                               =============================


</TABLE>










                        See accompanying notes to these  consolidated  financial
statements.


<PAGE>


         C-19


                  PLM FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY
                      For the Year Ended December 31, 1999
                        and the Three Months Ended March
                       31, 2000 (in thousands of dollars)
                                    UNAUDITED



                                                                      Total
                                     Common         Retained       Shareholder's
                                     Stock         Earnings          Equity
                                   ---------------------------------------------


  Balances, December 31, 1998     $     10,959    $     851     $     11,810

  Net income                                 -        2,068            2,068
                                  ----------------------------------------------

  Balances, December 31, 1999           10,959        2,919           13,878

  Net income                                 -           48               48
                                  ----------------------------------------------
  Balances, March 31, 2000        $     10,959    $   2,967     $     13,926
                                  ==============================================



























       See accompanying notes to these consolidated financial statements.


<PAGE>


                          PLM FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
                      For the Three Months Ended March 31,
                            (in thousands of dollars)
                                    UNAUDITED

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                                      2000             1999
                                                                                ---------------------------------------
Operating activities
<S>                                                                             <C>                 <C>
Net income                                                                      $            48     $      745
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash
  provided by (used in) operating activities:
   Depreciation and amortization                                                            132            417
   Equity income (less than) in excess of cash received                                    (244)            82
   Amortization of goodwill related to the investment programs                              224            709
   Decrease (increase) in receivables, net                                                  339            (65)
   (Increase) decrease in receivables from affiliated entities                           (1,286)           178
   Decrease in other assets                                                                  90            170
   Decrease in accounts payable                                                             (48)           (11)
   Increase in other accrued expenses                                                        32              5
   Decrease in payable to Parent                                                             --           (509)
   Deferred income tax                                                                     (371)          (364)
                                                                                ---------------------------------
      Net cash (used in) provided by operating activities                                (1,084)         1,357
                                                                                ---------------------------------

Investing activities
Purchase of transportation equipment and capitalized improvements                        (2,454)          (138)
Sale of transportation equipment                                                             --          2,372
Purchase of assets held for sale                                                             --        (13,801)
Proceeds from the sale of assets held for sale                                               --          6,960
Purchase of property, plant, and equipment                                                   (2)          (378)
                                                                                ---------------------------------
      Net cash used in investing activities                                              (2,456)        (4,985)
                                                                                ---------------------------------

Financing activities
Decrease (increase) in restricted cash                                                      343           (371)
Borrowings under warehouse credit facility                                                1,200         17,126
Repayment under warehouse credit facility                                                (1,200)        (5,855)
Repayment of senior secured notes                                                        (1,880)        (1,880)
                                                                                ---------------------------------
      Net cash (used in) provided by financing activities                                (1,537)         9,020
                                                                                ---------------------------------

Net (decrease) increase in cash and cash equivalents                                     (5,077)         5,392
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year                                           13,276             --
                                                                                --------------------------------
                                                                                $         8,199          5,392
                                                                                =================================

</TABLE>











       See accompanying notes to these consolidated financial statements.


<PAGE>



1.   GENERAL

In the opinion of management,  the accompanying unaudited consolidated financial
statements  contain all necessary  adjustments,  consisting  primarily of normal
recurring  accruals,  to present  fairly PLM  Financial  Services,  Inc. and its
wholly-owned  subsidiaries  (FSI  or the  Company's)  financial  position  as of
December 31, 1999 and March 31, 2000,  statements of income for the three months
ended March 31, 1999 and 2000, statements of changes in shareholder's equity for
the year ended  December  31, 1999 and the three months ended March 31, 2000 and
statements  of cash flows for the three  months  ended  March 31, 1999 and 2000.
Certain  information  and  note  disclosures   normally  included  in  financial
statements prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting  principles
have been  condensed or omitted  from the  accompanying  consolidated  financial
statements.  For further information,  reference should be made to the financial
statements  and notes  thereto  for the year ended  December  31, 1999 which are
included with the materials mailed with this proxy statement.

2.   WAREHOUSE CREDIT FACILITY

This $24.5 million facility,  which is shared with Equipment Growth Fund VI (EGF
VI),  Equipment  Growth & Income Fund VII (EGFs  VII),  and  Professional  Lease
Management  Income Fund I (Fund I),  allows the  Company to  purchase  equipment
prior to its designation to a specific  program or prior to obtaining  permanent
financing.  Total borrowings for trailer equipment are limited to $12.0 million.
Borrowings under this facility by the other eligible borrowers reduce the amount
available to be borrowed by the Company.  All borrowings under this facility are
guaranteed by the Company.  This facility provides 80% financing for assets. The
Company can hold  transportation  assets under this facility for up to 150 days.
Interest accrues at prime or LIBOR plus 162.5 basis points, at the option of the
Company. The  weighted-average  interest rates on the Company's warehouse credit
facility was 6.72% for 1999.  On December 10, 1999,  the Company  amended  FSI's
warehouse  credit  facility  to extend  the  facility  to June 30,  2000.  As of
December 31, 1999,  the Company and other  eligible  borrower had no  borrowings
outstanding  under  this  facility.  The  Company  has been  notified  that this
facility  will not be renewed  upon its  expiration.  Currently,  the Company is
setting up a new credit facility and will be obtained by June 30, 2000.

As of March 31, 2000, the Company and other eligible borrowers had no borrowings
outstanding under this facility.

3.   SENIOR SECURED NOTES AGREEMENT

The Company has a floating rate senior secured note agreement, which allowed the
Company to draw down on this facility up to $27.0 million  through June 1997. In
1998,  the Company's  senior secured notes  agreement was amended,  allowing the
Company to borrow an additional  $10.0 million under the facility.  During 1999,
the Company repaid $7.5 million on this facility. The facility bears interest at
LIBOR plus 240 basis  points.  As of December  31,  1999,  the Company had $20.7
million outstanding under this agreement.  The Company has pledged substantially
all of its future management fees,  acquisition and lease negotiation fees, data
processing  fees, and partnership  distributions  as collateral to the facility.
The facility required quarterly  interest-only payments through August 15, 1997,
with principal plus interest  payments  beginning  November 15, 1997.  Principal
payments of $1.9 million are payable quarterly  through  termination of the loan
on August 15, 2002.

The note agreement contains financial  covenants related to net worth and ratios
for leverage.  In addition,  there are  restrictions on payment of dividends and
certain  investments,  as defined.  The Company is not in  compliance  with this
covenant as virtually all of the pledged equipment are trailers.  The lender has
verbally waived this covenant and is expected to waive it in the future.

As of March 31, 2000,  the Company  estimates  that the fair market value of the
$18.8 million  floating rate senior secured notes  approximates  the outstanding
balance due to the floating rate of interest.

3.   SENIOR SECURED NOTES AGREEMENT (continued)

Scheduled  principal  payments on the senior  secured notes are (in thousands of
dollars):

                    Remainder of 2000            $      5,640
                    2001                                7,520
                    2002                                5,639
                                                 ============
                    Total                        $     18,799
                                                 ============

4.   TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES

PLM  International  and its various  subsidiaries,  including  FSI,  incur costs
associated  with  management,  accounting,  legal,  data  processing,  and other
general and administrative activities.  Direct costs are charged directly to the
Company as incurred.  Indirect costs are allocated among FSI, PLM International,
and other  subsidiaries of PLM  International,  using an allocation  method that
management believes is reasonable when compared to business activities.

FSI charged the investment  programs for certain  reimbursable  expenses allowed
for in the partnership agreements. FSI was reimbursed approximately $1.2 million
and $0.6  million for these  expenses  for the three months ended March 31, 2000
and 1999.

FSI DIRECTS  CASH  TRANSFERS TO AND FROM PLM  INTERNATIONAL  AND  AFFILIATES  TO
REIMBURSE  EXPENSES  PAID BY ONE MEMBER OF THE GROUP FOR THE BENEFIT OF ANOTHER.
INCOME TAXES,  GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE  EXPENSE ALLOCATIONS AND CASH ADVANCES
BETWEEN  PLM  INTERNATIONAL  AND FSI AFFECT THE NET  RECEIVABLE/PAYABLE  FROM/TO
PARENT AND AFFILIATED ENTITIES.

<PAGE>



                                   APPENDIX D

                                   VOTING FORM

                                     FUND V

         IF YOU APPROVE OF THE AMENDMENTS TO THE PARTNERSHIP  AGREEMENT,  YOU DO
NOT NEED TO COMPLETE AND SUBMIT THIS FORM.  YOU NEED DO NOTHING TO INDICATE YOUR
APPROVAL,  BUT CAN VOTE IN FAVOR OF THE  AMENDMENTS  AND RETURN THIS FORM IF YOU
WISH.  THIS FORM NEED BE USED ONLY BY PERSONS  WHO WISH TO VOTE  AGAINST  ONE OR
MORE OF THE AMENDMENTS TO THE PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT.

         The undersigned limited partner hereby votes as follows with respect to
the proposed amendment(s) of the Partnership Agreement,  as more fully described
in the solicitation statement dated __________________, 2000.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of units held by voting limited partner: ________________________________
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            Yes       No      Abstain

         Amendment No. I                     ___       ___       ___
         Amendment No. II                    ___       ___       ___
         Amendment No. III                   ___       ___       ___
         Amendment No. IV                    ___       ___       ___
         Amendment No. V                     ___       ___       ___
         Amendment No. VI                    ___       ___       ___
         Amendment No. VII                   ___       ___       ___
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Address of Limited Partner:___________________________________________


Social Security or Taxpayer Identification No.:_______________________

I/we hereby certify that the foregoing information is complete and accurate.



Print or type  name of  limited  partner(s)  as it  appears  on the most  recent
account statement.

_______________________________________________________________
Signature of Limited Partner                         Date

_______________________________________________________________
Signature of Co-Owner                                Date

<PAGE>


         YOU MUST  PROVIDE ALL OF THE  INFORMATION  REQUESTED  ABOVE IN ORDER TO
SUBMIT A VALID VOTE AGAINST ANY OF THE AMENDMENTS TO THE PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT.

         The deadline for  submission  of this No Vote is  ____________________,
2000.

         VOTING NOTICES SHOULD BE SENT TO:

                             Gilardi & Co.
                             1115 Magnolia Avenue
                             Larkspur, CA  94977








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