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ExpatOilWorker

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Everything posted by ExpatOilWorker

  1. Absolutely brilliant πŸ‘, you solved the enigma. Thanks 😊. The short slider (full flush) is near impossible to adjust when installed as it is wedged behind the overflow tube. It was in the top position when installed, which oddly enough is the lower setting for the full flush, but the flush volume is good and I don't have any leaks, so I will leave it that way.
  2. We need to build a sustainable future for the next generation, by pumping $100 oil πŸ˜‰ . We are not there yet, neither with the sustainable future, $100 oil nor a (fully) change in my attitude πŸ˜€, but I am in good company and enjoying the holiday 🌴 🏝.
  3. The rolling stock from China seem to work well in Thailand or are there also issues with them, just to a lesser degree than in Africa? A Crumbling Metro Reveals Failed Promise of China’s Billions in Africa https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-04-12/addis-ababa-ethiopia-metro-s-decline-shows-china-s-step-back-from-africa
  4. Range anxiety is a thing of the past and was real for the first EVs with unreliable range. Top Gear did a few segments where the trio was driving along with 200 km range and then 30 km later, range had dropped to 20 km. With few to no charging stations around, they have to run a power cable out a hotel window to charge over night. There is no range anxiety or any other kind of anxiety with the cars you guys are driving now and the current charging station infrastructure.
  5. Back to the drawing board. #2.5, the main level lever, definitely regulate the half flush. Since the fill level is set by a separate float unit, it is still a mystery what the small max/min indicator is suppose to do. It could be that it regulate the flush valve opening and thus sets the flush flow rate. I will time a couple of flush in different settings.
  6. I think you are right. It probably acts as a stopper for the half flush, while the full flush empties the everything in the cistern. Sadly, the manual gloss over this detail.
  7. Anyone know what the small min/max adjuster does? The main adjuster #2.5 is of course to adjust the water level and thereby the the total flush volume, but it also has a smaller #2.6 level adjuster, what is that doing?
  8. Let me try to explain implicit subsidy, so even you understands it. A farmer produce a mango πŸ₯­ for $1 + $1 in distribution and supermarket profit and we have a $2 mango πŸ₯­. Evey is happy 😊, but then the government implement a $8 mango πŸ₯­ tax. $10 mangoes don't sell well and in an election year the government set up a mango fund and subsidize each mango with $4. $6 mangoes sell well and soon the mango fund is $10 billion in debt. The government still got $20 in tax or $10 billion net mango tax, since they are liable for the mango fund. That is implicit subsidy. Explicit subsidy is when the government pay 15,000 baht for rice it later sell for 5,000 baht. Oil is a huge cash cow for all governments, including the Thai government taxing 30 baht diesel ⛽️.
  9. The EVangelists are committed to the cause. They will install a couple of cheap Chinese solar panels, demand the neighbor trim his mango tree so there is no afternoon shade on the panels, spin the meter (illegally) backwards, and monitor everything on an app 24/7, so they only use 299 units and maximize every public baht they can squeeze out of the system. Long live the (green) revolution!!!
  10. You do know what Implicit subsidy is, right? Governments around the world, including Thailand πŸ‡ΉπŸ‡­ are making billions on dino juice tax, including diesel, even at the current 30 baht. Meanwhile, closer to the subject of EVs: Starting from January to April 2023, the Thai government earmarked THB 75 billion for electricity subsidies to soften the impact of energy prices. Discounts for electricity bills will be allocated to households that consume a maximum of 300 units of electricity per month and reside in the areas covered by the services provided under the concessions contract of the Royal Thai. The subsidies are distributed by the Provincial Electricity Authority (PEA) and the Metropolitan Electricity Administration (MEA).
  11. Good read. Final sales may land at only half of the 53,000 cars booked at the Bangkok International Motor Show. The price war is not going to end very soon," said Naruedom Mujjalinkool at Krungsri Securities. https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Automobiles/Thai-car-production-faces-tough-year-despite-rising-EV-bookings
  12. Regulations are also favoring EVs. Starting 2025 diesel cars are not allowed in Paris, Mexico City, Madrid and Athens. Already some older diesel cars have to pay an emissions tax to enter London. That said, I sincerely doubt that will ever happen to Bangkok.
  13. What is happening here? Is BYD subsidizing electricity and if so why? What is in it for BYD to hand cash back to existing customers? Bundle "free" electricity as a sale promotion on a new car makes sense, but not after the deal is done. I don't recall BMW ever gave me a jerrycan full of fuel!!!
  14. Extreme low speeds, less than 10 km/h, is a range killer, as per the below. https://www.geotab.com/blog/ev-range-impact-of-speed-and-temperature/
  15. Right, so if the car is consuming 1.3 kWh for propulsion (10 km @ 7 km/kWh) and the AC is separately using 1 kWh, then the overall milage for EVs drops significantly in hot weather and slow moving Bangkok city traffic, similarly to the case of extreme cold weather and highway speed. @Pib probably has the number, but just like ICE, EVs certainly also have a 20-80 km/h sweet spot in terms of fuel efficiency.
  16. Rain arrived in Koh Tao, but just enough to make the ground wet.
  17. That is very interesting, although not relevant for Thailand, that EV range is so temperature sensitive. How much of an effect is Bangkok traffic and the summer β˜€οΈ heat on the Atto 3's range? 10 km/h is not uncommon for a morning/afternoon commute. Assuming 7 km/kWh driving milage, suddenly the AC consuming 1,000 W play a big factor.
  18. 248 visits to immigration in the 62 years you have been here. Did you enjoy every single trip?
  19. You still shower??? I stopped brushing my teeth last week to save water πŸ’§. We are not there yet, but we are using shower water to flush the toilet and I have a 50 m3 (almost empty) storage tank.
  20. We are all just guessing, but that is the fun part. I think BYD got themselves into a bit of a pickle. They sold around 40,000 cars under the EV3.0 and 3.5 agreements. As I understand it, they now have to match those sales numbers with domestic produces cars in 2024 or 1.5x in 2025. With falling overall auto sales, the only option for BYD is to dump prices. To make matters worse, some potential EV buyers might skip the showroom and look at the growing second hand market.
  21. Expect the price war to continue in Thailand. China has a (over)-supply problem. https://www.ft.com/content/496f3bfa-9f0c-4145-9024-188572a280fd Imported vehicles are piling up at European ports, turning them into β€œcar parks” as automakers and distributors struggle with a slowdown in sales and logistical bottlenecks including the lack of truck drivers.
  22. Speed kills, but luckily πŸ˜‰ no lives were lost and only the EV's range was killed at m highway speed. The above 420 km range is reduced to 163 km at a constant 120 km/h. Both the Atto 3 and Seal 🦭 take a massive +60% reduction in range at speed. Not sure if the ORA funky cat is the same model as the good cat, but it is doing surprisingly well for it's fairly poor aerodynamic.
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