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RamenRaven

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Posts posted by RamenRaven

  1. 2 minutes ago, DrJack54 said:

    Correct. Do nothing.

    The 24 report was done away with for reentry with reentry permit and same  visa 

    Also your 90 day report will reset count starting from reentry date

    When did Thai immigration get rid of the requirement for having to report your address within 24 hours every time you come back to your house, even if it was just a short trip to a hotel in Bangkok, or if you had a re-entry permit? That's news to me.

  2. Just now, ubonjoe said:

    A TM47 form is not needed unless a 90 day report is due. His next report is not due until he has stayed for 90 days after entering the country.

    A TM30 form is not needed unless you enter with a new visa.

    So say I'm on a Thai marriage visa, decide to go on a 2-week trip abroad, and fly back into Thailand.

     

    No need for me to do anything if my 90-day report is not due? I thought you had to report your address within 24 hours every time you come back from traveling.

     

    Sorry for the repetitive question, but I haven't traveled abroad in years due to the pandemic.

  3. Are immigration lines at Suvarnabhumi Airport still really long, like before the pandemic?

     

    Back then I would do this trick:

    Befriend a Thai girl (or girls) on the plane. Walk and chat with her as you get off the plane. Immigration will assume that you're her husband and you can get into the express Thai lane too, or at least a really short one next to it!

  4. Quote

    2. Had an online appointment booked at 10.30am but the officer would not accepted it showing it on my phone so she made me go downstairs and print it off (5 baht), no logic as it why but I wont argue with them.

    Paper, paper, paper.

    Thai government officials need paper only.

     

    Forget about phones.

    They need everything to be printed out, photocopied, and signed with blue ink.

     

    • Haha 1
  5. If you buy a new house with your wife in Thailand. what kinds of documents do you need to take to immigration?

     

    - TM 30 (landlord form)

    - TM 47 (notifying address, same form used for 90-day check ins)

     

    Photocopies of:

     

    - Blue household registration book (tabian baan)

    - Wife's Thai ID

    - Your passport

     

    Anything else?

     

    Or is that unncecessary and you can just fill out the online TM 47 form at https://tm47.immigration.go.th/tm47/#/login ?

     

  6. I'd say 90-95% won't. Theft is relatively low and sporadic in Thailand compared to the US or the Philippines.

     

    But you'd want to watch out for the 1-5% that might.

     

    Most are opportunists who see something expensive sitting right out in front of their eyes, and they might decide to simply take it.

     

    Theft is still possible but it's best to take precautions. A good way to deter would-be thieves is to put up a security camera sign (even if you don't actually have a camera), which you can easily order on Lazada or Shopee.

    • Thanks 1
  7. What are local incomes and salaries actually like in Chiang Mai?

     

    Some people tell me not to underestimate how much Thais are making, and that quite a few Thais earn over 100k baht per month. As a result, farangs making 30k-50k baht per month teaching won't even raise eyebrows.

     

    Others say that's a gross exaggeration, and it's more like 15k-25k per month.

     

  8. Just asked a contractor to fix a low beam to create more stairway headroom.

     

    He said it's made of "faa" instead of "bun" and that he can take 3 cm off it.

     

    What's "faa" (falling tone) and what's "bun/boon"? Can't find the words in Thai dictionaries.

  9. 12 minutes ago, Kwasaki said:

    Low kitchen sink is not a problem just how proffesion the finished work would be. 

     

    The seller having give the go ahead of construction will say all sorts of things other than he didn't think about the height of people today. 

    There's many tall Thai people these days. 

    I wouldn't say that the seller didn't think about the height of people today. I would say that he obviously did, but only 1-2 things slipped past the cracks, namely the kitchen counter and the stairway.

     

    Everything in the house is built higher than in older Thai houses, except for the kitchen sink and stairway.

     

    The bathroom sink is 38 inches or 96.5 cm (they are actually 36 inches or 91.5 cm max in the US), but the kitchen sink is 31 inches or 80 cm. For me, that means washing dishes in the bathroom sink. I was also pleasantly surprised at how the tops of the bathroom mirrors are all 210 cm. Perhaps the seller assumed that shorter Thai women would be doing the dishes, while their tall husbands and sons would be using the bathrooms.

     

    The metal bar for hanging towels is 150 cm high. No bending over to reach for the towel unlike in other Thai homes.

     

    The main electrical switchboard is high up on the wall. The actual switches are 180 cm above the floor.

     

    After moving out from my older Thai-style house, I can now walk around my new house without even having to bend my neck (that is, except for the kitchen sink and stairs), and my posture feels much better now. In many Thai houses, many Western men would have to walk around hunched over to do just about anything.

     

    Only 2 things need to be fixed in my house, but for older Thai houses, I'd have to do around a dozen alterations.

    • Like 2
  10. 16 minutes ago, Myran said:

    Bow your head slightly when walking up that part of the stairs. It takes zero effort and will become second nature within a month.

    Another option is to file off the top of the step (i.e., tread) that's right under the big beam so that the step can be lower. Maybe 3 cm can be taken off?

  11. 5 minutes ago, carlyai said:

    Nice house. ????

    This design pretty typical of townhouse designs. I always wondered why that horizontal beam seems soooo huge. 

    If you can't chip away enough render to give clearance, you may be able to get a structual engineer to assess the structure and narrow the beam size over the stairwell.

    Thanks! There is no "perfect" house, and it's not so bad if you just need 2 things to fix (low kitchen sink and low stairway clearance).

    My older rented house had a few 178 cm doors, 179 cm stairway clearance, and other annoyances, so 187 cm is not so bad, comparatively speaking, but I'd really like to stop worrying about bumping into things.

     

    The problem is that I can't wear slippers or sandals going up this stairway due to the 187 cm clearance. The steps feel like concrete and can be really hard on your feet if you're frequently climbing them barefoot.

     

    The seller said that large beams make the house strong and sturdy so that it can last many years.

     

  12. 1 minute ago, Kwasaki said:

    I would say that can be altered but without looking at the way it's constructed I'd have to see the drawing detail of the section of the house plans. 

     

    If you really want the works done as said you need a structure engineer to schedule the alteration to the ready built structure.

    I'll need to ask the seller to give me the plans.

     

    Judging by the sound of the beam on top, it sounds like concrete.

    Maybe it can be somehow filed off?

  13. 6 minutes ago, Photoguy21 said:

    I will do it for $10,000

     

    Max they can do is to chip 12.5 cm off your leg bones. That means with the max option, I'd be 173 cm.

     

    Still taller than the average Thai male but I'll be able to fit inside market stall umbrellas. ????

     

    https://www.healthline.com/health/height-reduction-surgery

     

    Quote

    The maximum length a surgeon can remove from the femur is about 3 inches (7.5 centimeters) ; from the tibia, it's about 2 inches (5 centimeters).

     

    • Like 1
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