Siegel Corporation manufactures a product available in both a deluxe and a regular model. The company has made the regular model for years; the deluxe model was introduced several years ago to capture a new segment of the market. Since the introduction of the deluxe model, the company's profits have steadily declined, and management has become concerned about the accuracy of its costing system. Sales of the deluxe model have been increasing rapidly. Overhead is applied to products on the basis of direct labour-hours. At the beginning of the current year, management estimated that $2,410,000 in overhead costs would be incurred and the company would produce and sell 10,000 units of the deluxe model and 52,400 units of the regular model. The deluxe model requires 2.8 hours of direct labour time per unit, and the regular model requires 1.2 hours. Materials and labour costs follow: Required: 1. Compute the predetermined overhead rate using direct labour-hours as the basis for allocating overhead costs to products. Compute the unit product cost for one unit of each model. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answers to 2 decimal places.) 2. An intern suggested that the company use activity-based costing to cost its products. A team was formed to investigate this idea, and it came back with the recommendation that four activity cost pools be used. These cost pools and their associated activities follow: Compute the activity rate (i.e., predetermined overhead rate) for each of the activity cost pools. 3. Assume that actual activity is as expected for the year. Using activity-based costing, do the following: a. Determine the total amount of overhead that would be applied to each model for the year. (Do not roun and round your final answers to nearest whole dollar amount.) b. Compute the unit product cost for one unit of each model. (Do not round intermediate calculations and decimal places.)