
JBChiangRai
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Everything posted by JBChiangRai
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Electric Vehicles in Thailand
JBChiangRai replied to Bandersnatch's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
You've obviously never driven one. -
I can't understand people building new petrol stations, the requirement for petrol stations is going to be decreasing not increasing.
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Electric Vehicles in Thailand
JBChiangRai replied to Bandersnatch's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
One of the first things I did with my MG4 is remove all of those tacky badges. I'm a bit old school, if the manufacturer of my T-shirt (or car) wants to advertise their brand, then they can pay me, otherwise it's coming off and I ain't wearing it! Actually, I don't buy any brand name clothes for that reason. Here's a photo of my debadged MG4 and me with my daughter wearing an unbranded T-Shirt at a birthday party last week. -
Fast Charging Vs. Slow Charging:
JBChiangRai replied to placeholder's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
My feeling is that whether Fast Charging damages the battery depends on many factors, battery chemistry, efficiency of cooling, ambient temperature, battery temperature at initiation of fast charging, frequency of fast charging etc. Some cars will precondition the battery if the navigation is used to take you to a DC charger, either cooling the battery if it's hot or warming it if it's cold. LFP chemistry is a far better chemistry for hot climates like Thailand, it has more than double the charge cycles is less likely to a thermal runaway event and whilst it performs poorly in cold climates, it excels in warm climates. Fast Charging produces more heat, so the battery cooling system becomes important, it's why Chevy & Nissan are the worst performers for battery longevity, I don't know of any other manufacturer with their problems. I had a car with NMC battery technology, I kept it for 2 years and sold it recently because the MG4 I bought to keep the miles of my more expensive NMC car turned out to be a lot more fun and consequently I was using it most of the time. Other factors in disposing of my NMC car were that I have an MG Cyberster on order for next year, the NMC technology worried me, it needed new tyres (100k), it's first service (30k), insurance was up for renewal (120k) and warranty was expiring and the manufacturer has a reputation for ruinous repair costs. I was fortunate that I sold it whilst new models have a 12-18 month waiting list and I got about 90% back of what I paid. If the MG Cyberster is not LFP technology then I will have to think hard about whether I want it as it may well be my last car. I am tempted with the Seal 3.8s and the MG4 X Power if it comes to Thailand and has LFP batteries. The Seal will be LFP because that is what their blade technology is. Incidentally, BYD never originally stood for Build Your Dreams, the founder registered it as a name because 3 letters was easy to register, when they decided to get into EV's they tried to come up with words to match the acronym, it hasn't gone down well with customers and they are removing that slogan in most markets. There is one car I won't ever buy and that is a Tesla. They have given the biggest FU to all of their previous customers by massive discounting. Every time they discount outside Thailand IMHO it brings the day nearer to them doing it here. I have "Zero" trust in Tesla. They have practically no corporate governance and everything is done on the whim of one man, it bodes ill for the future. -
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
JBChiangRai replied to Bandersnatch's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
I have an MG4, the idea of it being a British Brand with British design doesn't fly with me. They have a design centre in London, probably staffed with Chinese in supervisory positions and if HQ in China doesn't like the design then it's back to the drawing board, literally. Volvo will be no different, and that's a good thing. I wouldn't buy either brand if they weren't Chinese. -
90 day report whilst using an agent.
JBChiangRai replied to IvorBiggun2's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
I apologise, I did not see the "not". -
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
JBChiangRai replied to Bandersnatch's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
They are both Chinese cars so spec for spec they should be priced similarly. -
I think it's way past it's prime and largely both unusable and irrelevant now. It went downhill when they employed people in Thailand, suddenly places started appearing nailed at the top of the list rather than based on actual reviews. They bought an activity booking company and suddenly their clients got boosted.
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Electric Vehicles in Thailand
JBChiangRai replied to Bandersnatch's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
A Tesla owner in the Uk complains... 'My Tesla cost a mortgage down payment - the tech doesn't work and now it's on clearance' (msn.com) -
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Lithium iron phosphate battery - Wikipedia LiFePo4 batteries do not contain cobalt - period.
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Our EV's don't have any cobalt in their batteries. The charging network is currently superb for the EV's in Thailand.
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90 day report whilst using an agent.
JBChiangRai replied to IvorBiggun2's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
No I didn't say what you did, you said you can do your 90 day report at any office, my friend couldn't he had to drive to the next province where his hookey extension was issued. -
90 day report whilst using an agent.
JBChiangRai replied to IvorBiggun2's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Incorrect, my friend in Chiang Rai was refused, he was told he had to go to the Nan office and do it or use his "fixer" agent who used Nan office. It's probably more accurate to say it depends on the whim of the IO. Said friend died in a motorbike accident and I had to deal with all the paperwork, including taking his death certificate to immigration. I said to the lady (commonly referred to as "The Dragon Lady" here), that he had a hookey visa, she said we know who all those people are. -
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
JBChiangRai replied to Bandersnatch's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
I think it's very difficult for any non-Chinese company to make any inroads into the Thai EV market, with the exception of Tesla. The extra costs involved in manufacturing and sales/import taxes probably makes them uncompetitive. -
My breakers are perfectly normal, nothing eclectic about them at all.
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Far more sensible to switch to an EV I haven't bought any fuel in the last 2.5 years.
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Electric Vehicles in Thailand
JBChiangRai replied to Bandersnatch's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
The Performance version sounds like a great car. I just read this in my morning routine Review: is the new BYD Seal better than the Tesla Model 3? (msn.com) Basically, it is better! -
Fast Charging Vs. Slow Charging:
JBChiangRai replied to placeholder's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
Range anxiety is something I suffered when I was a new EV owner since I never noticed EV Charging stations before, now I see the CS everywhere and it no longer worries me. I wouldn't think twice about jumping in my EV and driving to Bangkok, I wouldn't even bother planning Charging stops, there are that many. I would plan a hotel with free overnight AC charging though. I have used a Fast DC Charger once in 2.5 years of owning EV's and that was to test it for 10 minutes or so. I have used lots of free AC Charging stations in places like Central Mall, Coffee Shops, Restaurants and a hotel. The hotel was the only one I needed as it was an overnight stay before leaving Kampheng Phet for home, the other AC chargers I used because I was there for food/coffee/shopping and they were free (so why wouldn't you!). -
INVT on Grid inverter problem - restarting
JBChiangRai replied to eddysacc's topic in Alternative/Renewable Energy Forum
Most grid-tied inverters will ramp up their output until they either reach the rated capacity and stay nailed close to that or Ramp up their output voltage until they hit the maximum voltage allowed and then error and restart. I suspect yours is the latter. This happens on a weak grid connection because there is insufficient local demand on your side of the transformer.