Jump to content

An Annoyance for Me, What About You


Gonzo the Face

Recommended Posts

Gonzo, free music! Chill out old chap..

As to the mufflers or lack of, it is just “girls gone wild” and cops pleasantly drunk at 1 a.m. I know because farang wife backed into a cops POV at that time and the cop came out of the bar to offer a mai pen rai. He was chill.

you have got to love this country.

  • Confused 1
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

They don't always get away with it. The inspection each year may or may not pull the bike if the exhaust is not compliant, probably a 50/50 chance- trouble is, these guys make their money from the testing of the bike AND the fee for processing your vehicle tax and possibly a cut for doing your insurance, so there is very little incentive to fail a vehicle in the first place and if the exhaust is not ear shatteringly loud it will pass whether it has the relevant stamp or not..

The cops will probably pull it if they think they can make some money, want an exhaust or have been instructed to. If the cops get you and it does not have the Thai compliance stamps on it, you get a 1500 Baht fine and then they either smash  the exhaust, or if they have a sense of humour, they make the owner smash it. and you don't get it back (Chiang Mai Area).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not that long ago having a motor vehicle of any kind was a sign that you were rich or powerful in your community. That thought process hasn't changed. In order that others 'know' you have a vehicle the louder the better. The culture hasn't changed with the times because practically everybody has a motor vehicle these days; loud or not, it just isn't special like when these louders were growing up.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The OP seems to believe that all motor vehicles and motor cycles are tested every year, whereas I understand that the former are tested after 7 years and the former after 5 years and then yearly thereafter.  Without the test certificate, which can unfortunately  just be purchased from unreliable "testers", the car/bike cannot be taxed or insured, but of course that would not worry about 40% of the vehicles on the road.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When I was a kid – admit, it was long time ago – we would mount a piece of cardboard with a pair of clothespins to the pushbike wheel to make it sound like a motor, preferably noisy motor like grown up boy's motorbikes.

 

Today kids dont need to invent their own homemade toy, it's an industri and can be ordered online, and I find the same inventions already made up, but way more noisy now with an exhaust pipe amplification...

 

540144.jpeg

 

540142.jpeg

 

I think it's the same when you grow up, it has to be more noisy now than it was a generation or two before...????

 

Remember:
The difference between men and boys

is the price of their toys

 

And by the way, I tried to head up in the quiet mountain region on the island I live, to get away from roads and the multi-decibel boom-(cannot repeat in Thailand) car-stereo; unfortunately it didn't make much of a change...☹️

 

506083900_065)Tannoy-horse-1ecopy.jpg.a836921651ec48146d0ae1bb588fa108.jpg

 

Over the years I learned, that Thais seem to like noise – there actually is a 1,000 baht fine available by law if a motorbike is noisy, but there seem to be a lot of fines available, but not commonly used – however, it's not my country, so I also learned over the years to accept wannabe-motorbikes (even they still sometimes irritates me) and loud boom-(cannot repeat in Thailand) car-stereo...????

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, Retiredandhappyhere said:

The OP seems to believe that all motor vehicles and motor cycles are tested every year, whereas I understand that the former are tested after 7 years and the former after 5 years and then yearly thereafter.  Without the test certificate, which can unfortunately  just be purchased from unreliable "testers", the car/bike cannot be taxed or insured, but of course that would not worry about 40% of the vehicles on the road.

As the OP, I will tell you what I believe.  There is a loud noise ordinance, whether the noise is created by a brand new vehicle or a 10 year old one is immaterial.  Not only this topic but any one..... if this developing country has desires of reaching  "Developed Country, rather than Developing" status. those with little or lots of self perceived power,    have , themselves to evolve  from

"Me-ists to We-ists"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, IAMHERE said:

Not that long ago having a motor vehicle of any kind was a sign that you were rich or powerful in your community. That thought process hasn't changed. In order that others 'know' you have a vehicle the louder the better. The culture hasn't changed with the times because practically everybody has a motor vehicle these days; loud or not, it just isn't special like when these louders were growing up.

 

PSPOY !

 

pseudoscience post of the year awarded in the categories "confusion of correlation with causation," and "abuse of the concept 'culture'"

 

~o:37;

Link to comment
Share on other sites

40 minutes ago, sfokevin said:

I don’t think this is a Thai or Chiang Mai specific problem... In my home county it is common for men with smaller than average endowment to modify their motorcycles in such a way... :coffee1:

Don't know about the endowment part but where I'm from in the U.S., there are laws on the books about loud exhausts and people still ride around on super loud motorcycles and never get hassled by the police. A lot of police in the area have extremely loud motorcycles and trucks/cars, so that probably has something to do with it. As for the Thai police, they don't really enforce anything so expecting them to enforce this is probably a bridge too far. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Gonzo the Face said:

As the OP, I will tell you what I believe.  There is a loud noise ordinance, whether the noise is created by a brand new vehicle or a 10 year old one is immaterial.  Not only this topic but any one..... if this developing country has desires of reaching  "Developed Country, rather than Developing" status. those with little or lots of self perceived power,    have , themselves to evolve  from

"Me-ists to We-ists"

There's so much to fix I don't think they know where to start. Just a short list:

1. Develop a professional police force.

2. Minimize the rampant corruption.

3. Greatly improve the education system. It's how Japan, Korea, China, India, etc. are able to push to 1st world status.

4. Do something about the obscene wealth inequality. 99%+ of the folks here are extremely poor. When the people have no hope they can become extremely dangerous.

 

At the end of the day, anyone who fixes 1 or 2 of these problems would be in power forever in Thailand.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The brain dead gofers up here in Isaan with their illegally modified exhausts race up and down the new dual carriage way that divides the village. All hours of the day and night. The exhausts noise can be heard for over 2 km. The headman is reluctant to ask the police to sort it out. Perhaps the local police chief should tell the village headmen to inform their villagers, in their morning broadcast, that those with illegal exhausts have until the end of the month to fit legal ones or their bikes will be crushed. Simple self policing. 

The lorries with half an  acre of mirrors and dustbin sized exhausts seem to be untouchable. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.







×
×
  • Create New...