n3 We also note that if the debtor can show that he or she intended to redeem the collateral but was prohibited from doing so by the creditor's lack of notice, the debtor could possibly recover damages for the loss of use of the collateral. In this regard, UCC @ 1-106 (1), official comment 1 (1978), provides that damages need not be calculable with mathematical accuracy. See Comment, The California Article 9 No Deficiency Rule: Undermining the Secured Party's Security, 34 Hastings Law Journal 153, 173 (1982); 6G, Willier & Hart, UCC Reporter-Digest @ 9-504, A124 (Matthew Bender & Co.). It should also be noted, however, that in reality a debtor who has defaulted on a loan will be only seldom in a strong enough financial position to redeem the collateral, since OCGA @ 11-9-506 requires that the debtor must first satisfy the debt secured by the collateral. See Comment, supra, 34 Hastings Law Journal, at 159, fn. 29; 6G, Willier & Hart, supra at A124.