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questionsreplies

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  1. Sorry can you tell me more about Kohkong ?

    Is it exactly at border location?

    Where to sleep and where to eat there ?

    Thank you.

    Had Lek/Cham Yeam. Van from Trat Bus Terminal to Had Lek 120 Baht. E-visa is best (https://www.evisa.gov.kh/) if you have the time. Cambodia visa 1500 Baht at the border. Ya, I know that's more than it should be, but such is life. The Immigration Officers apparently need their cut too. Touts may want another 100-300 to fill out the application. Your choice to use or not. Last time I crossed there (about 3 weeks ago) I met a guy on the Cambodia side who told me he was doing a "turn around" visa run. I've personally never tried it, as I have family in Koh Kong, which is why I go there.

  2. It seems that you dunno prs fitness, better than standard hotel gym...

    Dirtycash, your dilemma is one all of us expats face. Since California Wow closed down mid 2012, there hasn't been a good gym in town. Tony has saturated the market with mediocrity (or worse - just being polite) and making it impossible for a decent gym to get a foothold in town.

    I don't like training in dumps. That's something I used to do when in my 20's. I tried for years to train at Tony's. I'm even a lifetime member, but I've given up trying. All the other places mentioned are dumps pretending to be gyms. They have no concept of what good gyms are. I'm envious when I see the gyms people train at back at home these days - for very reasonable prices.

    The only places which are decent are some hotel gyms, like the one I mentioned above, unfortunately they are not heavy duty and very limited in free weights and very expensive for what they are. For example, Fitz Club charges 39K per year. I'd pay that to train at a Gold's Gym, but not a hotel gym. However it is certainly good enough for most levels of training if you don't mind paying the cash and they have a great pool area and tennis courts.

  3. How much did you pay ?

    And can we cross now to go to sanookville ?

    http://www.thaivisa.com/forum/topic/789531-driving-a-thai-car-into-cambodia-car-passport/

    Thank you.

    i have crossed border at Koh Kong province last year. they did not accept the a asean car pass book. they only allowed me the to stay in koh kong province. when i was trying to enter shianoukville with my car i got stopped by the police at the first traffic light and had to pay myself out of the situation.

  4. So the reason why car coating shop charge 20000+ is the prep needed ?

    And do you know the difference between nano coating, quartz coating, ceramic coating, etc...?

    Thanks a lot.

    The thing with claying is, while it cleans the paint (and removes any previous wax too), it also puts tiny scratches in the paint - so needs to be followed up with a polishing (cutting) step to remove those. But then, once you've used a compound to polish paint, you then need to use Isopropyl Alcohol / Eraser type cleaner to remove 100% of the compound residue before applying the wax.

    Before you clay, you need to have as clean a surface as possible too - so that means washing it twice - once before claying, once again after. So overall it's:

    Wash

    Clay

    Wash

    Dry

    Polish

    Chemical clean (IPA / Eraser)

    Wax

    Well, that's the concours level method anyway tongue.png

    If you don't want to go to those extremes, I suppose you could just:

    Wash

    Clay

    Wash

    Dry

    Wax

    There will be detailing centres that do both methods - just make sure you know what you're paying for I guess.

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