New and Used Car Talk Reviews Hot Cars Comparison Automotive Community

The Largest Car Forum in the Philippines

Page 38 of 83 FirstFirst ... 2834353637383940414248 ... LastLast
Results 371 to 380 of 828
  1. Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    1,488
    #371
    used second-hand vehicles daw. hindi surplus parts. "surplus" does not automatically mean "second-hand". our cheap cars need cheap parts to keep it cheap. para sa mahihirap na katulad namin.
    Last edited by OyiL; June 17th, 2010 at 02:32 PM.

  2. Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    45,927
    #372
    Quote Originally Posted by OyiL View Post
    used second-hand vehicles daw. hindi surplus parts. "surplus" does not automatically mean "second-hand". our cheap cars need cheap parts to keep it cheap. para sa mahihirap.
    DUH

    surplus hindi 2nd hand?

    Japan surplus means Japan used

    kaya pag sinabi Japan surplus parts, used na yan galing Japan

    galing ang mga parts na yan sa mga kinatay na sasakyan

    pag sinabi mo cheap parts pwede cheap parts na brand new (either made in Taiwan or China pero usually China)

  3. Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    385
    #373
    Quote Originally Posted by romski123 View Post
    uuuhm gh kulit mo naman e. Sabi ko nga ok lang ang 2nd hand car sales as long as from the local market galing.

    Sabi na ngang ang nakakaaffect sa formal auto industry is smuggling . Kasi nangyari na nga during the heyday of SUBics.

    The auto industry is at a comfortable growth now, theirsales are growing, WAG LANG PAYAGAN ULI ANG SUBICS. Ok?

    Yun lang ang government legislation na importante ngayon, wag payagan ang smuggling.
    For the junk yard dogs...Pakibasa yung post ni romski123...Ang kukulit...
    Last edited by ocanursjr; June 17th, 2010 at 03:19 PM. Reason: missing letter...

  4. Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    45,927
    #374
    ^^^

    hey overseas worker drones, backread niyo mga posts ni jpdm

    di lang used car imports ang gusto niya ma-ban
    Last edited by uls; June 17th, 2010 at 03:22 PM.

  5. Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Posts
    22,702
    #375
    Quote Originally Posted by OyiL View Post
    used second-hand vehicles daw. hindi surplus parts. "surplus" does not automatically mean "second-hand". our cheap cars need cheap parts to keep it cheap. para sa mahihirap na katulad namin.
    Our transport infrastructure is heavily reliant on surplus cars.

    That's why the government exempts trucks and buses from the importation ban.

    Almost all of the buses plying our roads are Japanese surplus. (the rest are Korean... ) Some adventuorous companies (tourist companies, schools, businesses that only need one or two buses) drop money on brand new Chinese buses... only to find them a poor substitute.

    Ambulances and fire-trucks are exempt from import bans. Nearly all of our fire-trucks are surplus.

    The majority of cargo trucks, as uls pointed out, are surplus.

    Ban everything on the road that is a Japan surplus import, and our public utility transport and cargo infrastructure will collapse, even if you leave in the jeepneys which only use surplus motors and the "rebuilt" buses which are manufactured around surplus Japanese ladder-frames and engines.

    Kaya nga sobrang selective yung ban ng government. Which is why the ban still doesn't help the local manufacturing sector that much. Why? Ano yung pinakamadaling gawin? Siyempre... cargo trucks and buses (weld a kahon onto da back of the backbone... pinished!). And yet, they allow fully-built units to be imported... so why will people buy remanufactured? Why not buy one that's already built, and cheaper?

    And yet, even if you let them go on building bodies around surplus engines, there is no growth for these builders into foreign markets. Nobody outside the country will pay for rebuilt surplus from the Philippines... unless it's something like a vintage car restoration, like the group that built Fiat 500s out of Clark or MDJuan's Willy's replicas.

    If you want the local manufacturing sector to grow, you have to ban everything... vehicles and parts. Use Japanese-style registration restrictions to force people to chage their old cars and bus companies to drop their gigantic rolling coffins off a cliff (Hey, it worked with taxi-companies). With the volume inherent in the bus/jeepney market, it's possible to get economies of scale if you limit the number of manufacturers supplying these (a government car company, perhaps?).

    There you go. A thriving local, locally-owned, car industry. Using parts and engines that are already available on the market and with a big customer base. Sure, private car owners will feel bad about having to retire their seven to ten year old cars due to punishingly high registration costs and the expense of maintenance... sure, a lot of bus carriers and jeepney operators will go out of business... sure, the cost of cargo will go up, making the cost of living go up... sure, everyone will feel poorer... but we'll have a local car industry that is strong and thriving.

    Seriously... Bus operators and Jeepney operators will recover... but here's the question: Sinong mas malakas sa Kongreso? The hundreds of thousands of operators and drivers, or the dozens of small local manufacturers?
    Last edited by niky; June 17th, 2010 at 04:36 PM.

    Ang pagbalik ng comeback...

  6. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    29,354
    #376
    Just want to say...

    Reality always wins over unfounded optimism.

  7. Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    45,927
    #377
    i'm not done

    majority of heavy machinery, construction and earthmoving equipment here in the Phils. is JAPAN SURPLUS

    what kind of equipment were used to dig the foundations of the buildings around us?

    JAPAN SURPLUS EXCAVATORS

    all that dirt that needs to be hauled away are scooped up by JAPAN SURPLUS LOADERS

    and carried off in JAPAN SURPLUS DUMP TRUCKS

    the roads you see

    they were built using Japan used bulldozers and motor graders and vibro-rollers

    the mining industry -- except for a few companies that can afford new equipment from Monark (Caterpillar) and Maxima (Komatsu), the rest all use JAPAN SURPLUS earthmoving equipment

    every structure you see

    all the cities in the country

    they were built using Japan used equipment

    so don't give me that crap about Japan used imports being all junk

    if it's all junk, then the Philippines was built using junk

    Ban all Japan used imports?

    that i gotta see

    push the country back to the stone age

    some academic who can only post newspaper articles and go trying to push his vision of everything brand new

    new cars and trucks... brand new everything

    out-of-touch with reality

    no real world experience

    CAN THE CREDIT SYSTEM OF THE COUNTRY SUPPORT THAT BRAND NEW VISION OF YOURS?

    can a low wage earner walk into a bank and come out with an approval for a car loan?

    hey, tell the banks to lend everyone money so you'll have your everything-brand-new Philippines

    BTW, get rid of all the PUJs and OTJs and rolling pieces of ethnic junk transport crap you're so proud of

    di bagay mga yan sa everything-brand-new Philippines

  8. Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    379
    #378
    Quote Originally Posted by ghosthunter View Post
    It would be interesting to see how long older cars will stay running.

    Those with cars 8 years and older in age can relate to this because I am sure most of you have purchased "surplus" car parts to fix something on your car.

    Have you ever purchased surplus car parts to fix/repair your car?
    http://tsikot.yehey.com/forums/showthread.php?t=71343

    it'll be like Cuba. They still have 50's model cars and they still run.

    We can focus on music, dance and cigars

  9. Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Posts
    2,854
    #379
    Quote Originally Posted by roberto_minosa View Post
    I'm all in for the importation ban! No more junkyards...so no more OTJs, PUJs, "XLTs", whatnot. Let's see how long those 4BAs and 4Ks run without spare parts.
    Hindi rin...OJTs, PUJs and XLTs should be forced to use new engines. If the article below is true, old jeepneys are not allowed anymore to register.


    [SIZE=3]Here comes jeepney’s replacement, the Beep[/SIZE]

    by Roy Pelovello
    June 17, 2010
    Manila Standard


    http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A0oGdFc78h...09/november/11


    ABOUT half of the 400,000 jeepneys in the country may no longer be allowed to ply their routes next year following stricter registration standards, an official said yesterday.


    Alberto Suansing, chairman of the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board, made the statement at the launching of the Beep, a combination bus and jeep, as an alternative to the jeepney, a modified version of the Jeep used by the US military during World War II.


    The Beep was inspired by the European Gruau Microbus and is a project of Almazora Motors Corp. and Mitsubishi Motors Philippines.



    “The [Land Transportation Office] has come up with new regulations on the inspection of motor vehicles, and we expect many public utility vehicles will not meet the requirements,” Suansing said.


    “I would say almost 50 percent of the jeepney population will be affected.”
    The LTO will require public utility vehicles—jeepneys in particular—to have speedometers, hand brakes, headlights and wipers, among other things, according to Joel Donato, head of the agency’s Motor Vehicle Inspection Service.



    “We are implementing these requirements with the start of registration in January 2010,” he said.


    Suansing said [SIZE=3]jeepney owners failing to comply with the new rules should start thinking of buying brand-new replacements—including the Beep.[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=3]
    [/SIZE]
    A brand-new jeepney with a surplus engine costs around P450,000, and a new one with a new diesel engine is priced around P600,000.


    By comparison, a Beep costs around P1.6 million. The Beep’s body is designed and manufactured by Almazora Motors, while the chassis with its brand-new FUSO Canter light-duty truck engine is supplied by Mitsubishi Motors Philippines. Mitsubishi says the engine complies fully with Philippine emission and safety regulations.



    The Beep can carry 26 passengers, with seating for 18 including the driver and standing for eight.


    “The first consideration here is safety. Some of [the jeepneys] are accidents waiting to happen, and then you have environmental concerns,” Suansing said, adding the LTO’s new requirements dovetailed with his agency’s goal of reducing the number of jeepneys on the streets and replacing them with the Beeps.


    Almazora’s vice president for vehicle sales, Dante Santos, said the Beep could be the answer to Metro Manila’s worsening traffic and pollution problems.



    He cited a government report saying jeepneys contribute 50 percent of the pollution in the area, and that the traffic flow there is choked “by oversized jeepneys with an excessive turning radius that usually clog the U-turn slots.”


    Around 70,000 of the estimated 400,000 jeepneys in the country ply routes in Metro Manila.


  10. Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    2,848
    #380
    Quote Originally Posted by uls View Post
    i'm not done

    majority of heavy machinery, construction and earthmoving equipment here in the Phils. is JAPAN SURPLUS

    what kind of equipment were used to dig the foundations of the buildings around us?

    JAPAN SURPLUS EXCAVATORS

    all that dirt that needs to be hauled away are scooped up by JAPAN SURPLUS LOADERS

    and carried off in JAPAN SURPLUS DUMP TRUCKS

    the roads you see

    they were built using Japan used bulldozers and motor graders and vibro-rollers

    the mining industry -- except for a few companies that can afford new equipment from Monark (Caterpillar) and Maxima (Komatsu), the rest all use JAPAN SURPLUS earthmoving equipment

    every structure you see

    all the cities in the country

    they were built using Japan used equipment

    so don't give me that crap about Japan used imports being all junk

    if it's all junk, then the Philippines was built using junk

    Ban all Japan used imports?

    that i gotta see

    push the country back to the stone age

    some academic who can only post newspaper articles and go trying to push his vision of everything brand new

    new cars and trucks... brand new everything

    out-of-touch with reality

    no real world experience

    CAN THE CREDIT SYSTEM OF THE COUNTRY SUPPORT THAT BRAND NEW VISION OF YOURS?

    can a low wage earner walk into a bank and come out with an approval for a car loan?

    hey, tell the banks to lend everyone money so you'll have your everything-brand-new Philippines

    BTW, get rid of all the PUJs and OTJs and rolling pieces of ethnic junk transport crap you're so proud of

    di bagay mga yan sa everything-brand-new Philippines


    To change everything to brand spankingly new means cost. Big cost to everyone, which at the bottom of the food chain consumers take the full blunt of. The PUJ for example, if it was replaced with an all-new vehicle, can the driver and operators live with a P7 minimum fare charge? NO!
    If you increase the minimum fare, how much of a burden would that be to the commuting public whose salary is way way way below the international standards... an amount which business men and employers are reluctant to give or cannot afford...

    Siguro dapat lakihan muna salary ng Ordinaryong tao, para maging economically sound and feasible yang ganyan. It takes such a huge amount to establish a motor company that can compete internationally, say $2 Billion for starters? Bakit wala sa mga billionaires and politicians start it?

The 2010 MVDP: Feat. the "Filipino Car" or Philippine Brand Vehicles