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digbeth
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Posts posted by digbeth
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looks like Tesla has managed to get locations outside of malls and be near the road/highways for once
the supercharger in Central like Pattaya is ridiculous, making it to the top floor of the carpark in a destination where most hotels have AC chargers to use overnight and not worth a detour through traffic and up the carpark if you're heading out further like Rayong
The one in Huahin while in a mall is right on the entrance, The Chumporn Garage is interesting, being a new player, not existing petrol station operator or mall now what's to be seen if he can build a business (rent) around the charger
It's understandable that Tesla can't get permit from the electric company for stand alone connection and it's easier to go piggybacking off existing supply like malls, but other operator manage to get DC charger in petrol stations fine,
There are many Thai roadside business from coach stops restaurants to souvenir shops that has the location suitable for DC charger that don't need to be in petrol stations
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On 4/14/2024 at 7:53 PM, josephbloggs said:
It seems the Ethiopian system fell in to disrepair once the original contracts with the Chinese expired and the maintenance was taken back "in house" to save money. I don't think anyone can blame the Chinese or the rolling stock for that. As you alluded, Thailand has been running Chinese rolling stock for a long time (since 2010) with no incident as they are well maintained.The maintenance problem in Thailand is defendant on if it's the private sector or government running the line, when SRT ran the Airport Link it fell into disrepair pretty badly and they couldn't commercialize the stations and that was Siemens rolling stock built in Germany,
The Redline is Japanese system throughout, the Japanese probably won't let it fall into disrepair much as a lot is riding on becoming the standard suburban rail for Thailand, but the sorry state of the stations are showing - escalator that broke barely a year into service because they can't procure maintenance contracts to dirty toilets
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cremation only should be around 30-40,000 at the most expensive Bangkok temples, what's expensive is the nightly service with the sala rental, the monk fees, flowers, catering
there are Christian denominated cremation site but most Christian churches just move the body to Buddhist crematorium after the service at their church
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18 minutes ago, newnative said:
Yes, of course, if foreign quota is still available a condo held in Thai name can be purchased in foreign quota. I think you will find, though, that in places like Pattaya with high concentrations of foreigners, a number of the most desirable condo projects popular with foreigners no longer have foreign quota available. So, the 'scenario' comes into play fairly often here.
The situation can be different in other areas, including Bangkok. When my spouse and I bought our Bangkok condo it was in a very desirable center city project steps away from an MRT station. But, its location and quality also appealed to plenty of Thai buyers, as well, and when we bought the re-sale in 2019 there was lots of foreign quota still available. Since the project opened in 2013 and there was still FQ available in abundance in 2019, this project will likely not run out of FQ anytime soon.
For most new builds in Bangkok 3-7 years back Thais would be queueing to buy off-plan on launch day and could even flip the deposit for profit
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could it be that because it's hotter here and it takes more time to cure?
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1 hour ago, PJ71 said:
Unless it's changed since December then this is totally incorrect.
Have you seen how many people drive throughout Thailand? Have you not noticed than since 1985?
The system's working since January, to renew road tax means all outstanding tickets is brought up to be paid
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11 minutes ago, impulse said:I'll confess ignorance... How is a condo allocated to the "foreign quota"?
Does the developer declare it when he first offers them for sale? Is it first come, first served, closing when 49% are bought by foreigners? Or are they pre-allocated?
If I own a "foreign quota" condo, can I sell it to a Thai? If I do sell to a Thai, is it still in the foreign quota? Once a condo is part of the foreign quota, is that cast in stone, or can the status change?
I can see where being in the foreign quota may make a condo easier to sell (perhaps at a higher price), but I'm not clear on how that works if a Thai person wants to buy a condo from a foreigner. Does that then open the possibility for another condo in the project to be bought by a foreigner if it results in less than 49% foreign ownership?
First come first served, it's maintained per building so not attached to a specific room
so you can, and if you sell to a Thai, the foreign quota for that condo became available for others, the Juristic Manager would know if the quota is used up or not.
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Is the 'potential' higher resale value be worth more than the worse exchange rate if you were to transfer the funds in through proper means that can provide FET to satisfy the land office? vs just using money already in Thailand or transferring in though other means that won't have FET?
The condo being in Thai name doesn't mean you won't be able to sell into foreign quota later if the condo's quota isn't all used up
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only reason to want foreign quota is to sell later on, you'd have more opportunity and price if the condo is still in foreigner quota
but are there anyway for a Thai to hold on to foreign quota? I don't think so, short of using her foreign identity to but the condo with associated paperwork like FET
if the occupancy is not filled up it may be still possible to transfer to foreigner while the 49% is not met, but this can't be guaranteed won't be filled by the time you want to sell.
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9 hours ago, FarangFB said:
I believe Jomtien immigration has a particular approach to this one, read about it many times and they do demand it.
How would they know if you've been 'out'
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you have to activate online or at atm to set a daily limit for online shopping, but in my experience they rarely work,
I think they only work with payment gateway that support Visa/Mastercards 3D payment where they send you an OTP, which in western world is rare
even contactless for Bangkok Bank's MasterCard Debit cards don't work in shops most of the time
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1 hour ago, DrJack54 said:Why is that an issue.
My bank also requires my pp for simple withdrawal.
No issue.
If you can avoid being reported to 'checked in' at a hotel you can save yourself the trouble of re-reporting yourself when you're home, for the immigration office that insist on it
say you had a weekend away and the hotel reported you moved there say in Phuket or whatever and you didn't report that you 'moved' back to your usual place, would this be a problem when you present the initial TM30 at immigration that might not match where they had you last in their system?
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I would ask her that I have many other activities that I was going to be doing to myself and I would rather not be taking a job from a Thai and does she offer such service
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Some hotels won't let you check in with just Thai driver license now, 'policy is for passport'
What exactly is required of them in order to report T.M. 30? the passport number on driving license might not be current is understandable
for hotels that is this strict about reporting I doubt pink ID card would be acceptable too, it's not like they can put you down as a Thai person checking in
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On 4/5/2024 at 2:37 PM, scorecard said:
Always surprises me when I read negative reports / comments about bum gun / sprays.
So easy, so quick, achieves good level of cleanliness, no paper to dispose of.
Years back my oil refining employer at Map Ta phut brought in 20 specialised western engineers, all on 2 - 3 year contract, all provides with close to new 3 - 4 western bedroom style houses all with several bathrooms.
All new engineers arrived within about 2 days, taken straight to their houses then taken to Foodland in Pattaya for a big shop up all paid for by the company.
All bought several giant packs of toilet rolls.
Within 48 hrs a big deputation of wives of the new engineers arrived at the company HO at Map TA phut. Their demand was that all the disgusting spray contraptions be immediately removed and taken away.
All attempts by the longer-term western staff to explain that the bum sprays weren't disgusting and were in fact very practical, easy to use and produced very clean bottoms totally not accepted by the new wives protest group.
A Thai English speaking engineer joined the discussion and mentioned that 99% of the houses, condos, apartments owned / occupied by Thai people across all of Thailand had these bum sprays and Thai people saw them as useful and produced good cleanliness. His comments not accepted.
Another Thai employee then suggested that the company quickly create a team of people to very quickly replace all the sprays with new, also not accepted.
Thai manager then mentioned that the company didn't own the houses involved and the rental contracts mentioned that house occupants / the company paying the rents were prohibited from making any type of alterations to plumbing or anything else.
Thai engineer then suggested the company buy a large quantity of black plastic bags the right size and put each hose and spray into a black bag and tie it to the existing wall plumbing fittings so as to as much as possible put the black bags out of sight.
This was agreed. But it was discovered later that some of the farang wives had demanded that their husbands remove the hose and spray, and they did.
What's the objection? they don't have to use it if it's there, or are they afraid they'll be enjoying themselves with it?
I know in malls and such that don't have them is that some thais spray it on the floor to clean their feet or whatever and it's a big mess with people walking out with wet shoes
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Yes, there is no such thing as 'Thai Quota' but if you're advertising a room for sale, would you put down 'not in foreigner quota' or 'thai ownership only' in your description?
When 'foreigner quota' is an already understood concept, 'Thai Quota' while inaccurate if you're being pedantic is an easy shorthand
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50 minutes ago, GroveHillWanderer said:
Actually, although Legionnaire's can theoretically be transmitted via air conditioning, it wouldn't normally be found in your typical home or even hotel air conditioning.
It requires firstly a contaminated water source and then the inhalation of aerosolized water droplets from this contaminated source.
That's not a scenario typically found in most air conditioning systems.
As the article below puts it:
CAN AIR CONDITIONING CAUSE LEGIONNAIRES’ DISEASE?
I think what fuels the idea that air conditioning is a danger for contacting this disease is that the first diagnosed mass outbreak of Legionnaire's came via centralised air conditioning vents in a system that used a big water tank on the roof of the building, with cooling towers that then sent chilled air (still containing aerosolized water droplets) throughout the building.
As I say, that's not a typical configuration for most AC systems.
While they're not in homes, water chiller tower are used in malls in Thailand, but even then the chilled water are never aerosolized indoors, they pass through the cold split unit in sealed pipes
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having grown up in CoE, I find evangelicals at ECB fits the description you are looking for better than proper Anglican church
the american-styled service takes a bit to get used to the pomp of Anglican church though
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those who know wouldn't tell you,
if you're an outsider how much can you 'research' like sit on the beach and observe the power dynamics of the beach vendor on who pays whom and talk to who appears to be the big boss?
or start hustling and see who shows up and offer to 'clear' things for you
even if you approach someone who say they can sort it for you, how will you not be scammed?
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most time of the year it doesn't work in Thailand, on the few days that humidity is low enough it'll be cold 'winter' that you won't need them
you can keep putting ice in the water box and it'll actually lower the temperature
outdoors or really well ventilated room is the only place they can be tolerated
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even if the whole building collapse for some reason like fire or earthquake and after clearing away the rubble, the land is sold to a new developer, you get a cut of that sale, that's a lot more than what you'd get if you try to own lands through other means in Thailand
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On 3/29/2024 at 10:50 AM, newnative said:
Just a clarification. I've seen 'Thai quota' mentioned several times. There is no 'Thai quota'. Thais can have 100% ownership in a condo project. There is ownership in Thai name, ownership in company name, and ownership in foreign quota, which is 49%. As others have mentioned, it's best to check with the juristic to see how much of the foreign quota of a project is still available, and if that percentage available is enough to cover the size of the condo you are interested in.
What do you call a room that's selling in a condo that's had the foreign quota all filled up? for conventions and ease of communication, 'thai quota' is reasonable description
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Unusually ran away from finance or book used as collateral with loan
you get a photocopy of the blue book you can use to pay for the annual road tax, as long as you used it away from the domicile of the seller where the repo guys would come looking, worse is it's reported stolen to the police and any roadside stop means you kiss whatever you paid goodbyeIf you use it as farm vehicle and such it's probably fine
you (the seller) can report the blue book stolen to get replacement if it's not registered with a finance company, but then that's another charge of perjury if ever found out.
\If these sellers can't afford to make the monthly payments to the bank, they're unlikely to be enterprising enough to scam you further, but for certain motorcycles it used to be that after you've paid and receive the อำ้รแสำ they'd tip the repo guy or the police to come pick up the vehicle from you, rinse and repeat with other unsuspecting victims
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GPX Drone - seen many around Bangkok years back when they first came out, lots of food riders use them too - but then they start disappearing, bad service/warranty and no parts issue?
unless you know what you're doing, have a garage you can take to - better stick with the well known brands like Honda and Yamaha
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Minivan passengers pass out from suspected carbon monoxide poisoning
in Isaan News
Posted
These vans are likely running LPG, you won't smell the exhaust like diesel