November 13, 20241 yr 9 hours ago, JimHuaHin said: However, when Thailand manufactures products, such as motor vehicles, for export to foreign countries which do have stringent safety standards, that is a different story, as the foreign requirements are usually met. Those are all foreign brands manufactured in foreign constructed factories, managed by foreigners, supplied with foreign sourced components, with final product inspected by foreign QC staff.
November 13, 20241 yr A post using profane language has been removed as per these rules: You will not post vulgarities, obscenities or profanities.
November 13, 20241 yr 21 hours ago, bendejo said: Just more Thai bashing, as usual. 😅 And I bet he doesn't even have an NVQ Level 1, How the mind boggles 😶
November 13, 20241 yr 22 hours ago, klauskunkel said: Looks like working for the TISI has become lucrative... What have they done before?
November 13, 20241 yr Popular Post 21 hours ago, lordgrinz said: The joys of living in a third world cesspool, if there are qualified electricians here, then they must be uber-expensive and hard to find, because I have never seen one. They are available with documentation as to their abilities. When I complained 20 years ago to the local owner of the company who built my house about the cable spaghetti in the loft I was told it was 'Thai standard'. By coincidence I mentioned this 'in passing' to a civil servant at our Ampoer in Isaan who told me that in my own village was a highly qualified electrician whose documentation allowed him to wire not only private houses but also hotels and government buildings. I sought out this friendly, humble 50 year old and asked him to inspect my loft, on inspection he burst out laughing when I said I was told it was 'Thai standard', he said it was a fire hazard. In 3 days he alone with an assistant brought it to Thai standard, changed all the cables going down to the plugs and even changed the fuse box with a second hand unit for free. After 3 days there wasn't a cable to be seen in the loft, all in pipes attached to the walls. I paid for all the material and he charged me 1,000 Baht per day for his work, I gave him 5,000 instead of 3,000 which embarrassed him and he tried to refuse the extra money but I was so pleased by the result it was worth it.
November 18, 20241 yr On 11/13/2024 at 9:13 AM, OneMoreFarang said: I mentioned it because it shows the sad situation. Imagine a DIY person goes in there to buy cable. What would he buy if most cables in the shop had an earth wire? And what does he buy if not even one of the cables on offer has an earth wire? My view on that is if you do not have the training/ experience you shouldn’t be involved in electrical installation beyond maybe replacing power points etc. As we know electricity is unfoqrgiving.
November 18, 20241 yr 1 hour ago, StevieAus said: My view on that is if you do not have the training/ experience you shouldn’t be involved in electrical installation beyond maybe replacing power points etc. As we know electricity is unfoqrgiving. I guess that means a big part of Thai "electricians" shouldn't do their job. In principle I agree with that.
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