Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Guns & roses.......

As i was reading the news today The Star pointed out all the recent gun shooting incidences for the past 2 months. 

I am actually surprised to know that one can easily obtain a gun and actually know how to use it!....Whats happening to this country..i may need to get a gun as well for protection!!


Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Weekend Lessons

Thought ill just give a small update of whats happening. As usual, i found my self driving down south over the weekend.

What happened during my journey??

I think i was just after Seremban, i was on auto cruise at 110km/h and 2 Singaporean drivers started flashing me from the back..as usual i gave them way...but just after few seconds they went past i decided, lets just follow this 2 cars since they are doing a good job clearing traffic for me.

These 2 cars was a fairlady and the new ae86 (Toyota GT 86) .... there were doing an awesome job and i was practically going around 180 - 220km/h...after about an hour following this 2 guys i thought to my self ok its enough stressing the moose, time to slow down...and it was a steady journey after that.

Now with regards to following this 2 cars, the 2 buggers were equipped with semi slick tyres which were pretty much sucking onto the tarmac and spitting out tiny rocks to the back...so me being at their tail...now my moose has tiny dots all over the front portion of the car, including the headlights...sigh....

On top of that, on the way to JB i managed a get a nice big splatter of bird crap on the hood of my car, seeing that my GF's maid was trying to do a good deed by washing it off but unfortunately she ended up scratching the hood badly as i think she used a very harsh brush. Actually after seeing that on the hood i literally got a minor heart attack but managed to calm self down.

Headed to the nearest car wash to polish out the scratches but the wound is too deep. Plastic surgery will be needed for this.

So another add on to the list..dam this list is growing..

ps: sorry no photos taken this time. 

Next things to fix/do:

1. Front Lambda Sensor = RM 600
2. Steering Rack cover = RM 300
3. Belt Tensioner = RM 300
4. Service AC
5. Suspension
6. Bushing
7. All parts related to its arms and suspension
8. Rear passenger power window = RM 1 000 (Better find a used one from the halfcut shop)
9. Tint
10. Multimedia system
11. Rims + Tyre
12. Painting = RM 1500 +- (Hopefully 1 layer of paint will do the job)

Friday, May 10, 2013

BITCH is back...stupid Lambda sensor

From my previous post, you can see the CEL is being a pain in my ass.

After changing some rubber hoses, on the 04/05/2013 i also changed the exhaust gasket along with the turbo gasket.

From that day, the CEL never came back on until yesterday morning. When i saw the light, the amount of words that was running through my mind was just unbelievable!

So after taking some Xanax (just kidding), managed to calm my self down and decided to visit Wyn AGAIN to see whats the problem is this time.

When i went there Wyn was also surprised to see that the CEL is back on (some Chinese cursing words did run trough his lips). 

Plugged the diagnostic tool via the OBD2 and found that its the same error. From the device its shows that the front Lambda sensor's reading is fluctuating. 

As usual image from Google and not mine : - )
It was reading -14.xxx then it jumps to -55.xxx for every 0.5 seconds...and the other sensor at the back has a steady reading of -13.xxx (cant really remember the figures, but you get the idea).

According to Wyn to replace this sensor its going to cost me RM600 ++, which is a Bosch. Original from FA will set me back to RM1k ++ and the only difference is the Volvo logo on it.

So for now, he removed the sensor, gave it a good back scrub and fixed it back. Shall wait and see for how long till the CEL comes back on. 

The idea here is, if it comes back on fast then it may not be the sensor, as it is usually some air leak but if it comes back after some time then it could be the sensor itself - well this is his theory.

So will just have to wait and see what happens, in the meanwhile lunch money need to cut down to accommodate a new sensor as i know sooner or later i will still need to change it.

PS: I also made a call to a volvo supplier to check the price. Sensor cost RM 600. Rear sensor cost RM 580.

Next things to fix/do:

1. Front Lambda Sensor = RM 600
2. Steering Rack cover = RM 300
3. Belt Tensioner = RM 300
4. Service AC
5. Suspension
6. Bushing
7. All parts related to its arms and suspension
8. Rear passenger power window = RM 1 000 (Better find a used one from the halfcut shop)
9. Tint
10. Multimedia system
11. Rims + Tyre

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Surgery Time!!! Turbo and Exhaust gasket replacement

As planned on 04/05/2013, Saturday early morning i took it for surgery at Wyn's. Did call him in the morning and made an appointment.

As per my previous post, the CEL kept coming back and the doctor says its nothing serious but the exhaust gaskets needed to be changed and thats the reason for the error code being thrown on to the dash. More about this here.

Reached there around 10ish, the first thing they did is to open up her front and gave a good blowww with a huge fan...once she is warmed down, with no mercy they started to rip her apart.


Both of them started from top and worked their way down, first with removing all the covers, intake pipes, air filter, air box etc.

They they hoisted her up and disconnected the water and oil linkage to the turbo. While doing this water and oil will come off so they held a container and retained all the fluids to be inserted back.

I did not really pay much attention to what they were doing as i did not want to be disturbing them or get into their way. If i were to stand there and look sure enough my itchy mouth will start asking questions and soon they will be annoyed. 

After about 30 minutes the supplier comes and deliver the goodies...


soon after about an hour the turbo and exhaust manifold is out...time for me to snooze around..first time seeing the blower :-)





Here is the softy 12t turbo, thinking of man'ing him up to a 14t...hmm sounds like alot of money..

and the culprit...


As you can see one of the gasket is broken, well after 9 years of blowing hot gasses over 100 000 km i guess it is time for a replacement.

They also replaced the turbo gasket, no picture of that.

As soon as the sun reached center of the sky, he was all done and fired her up. No issues starting, and it was idling perfectly fine.

The codes were checked again and cleared off.

Wyn did more checks and found that the belt tensioner was making slight sounds of wearing off. Looks like it cant hold the stiffness any longer. So thats in my next list as well.

Me and Wyn took a long test drive and tested out the car. So far all seems good, need to drive it for a couple of days and see if anything pops up.

Damage:

1. Gasket   RM 170 (2 exhaust gasket we not changed, hence the cheaper price)
2. Workmanship RM 250 ( i guess for half day job its ok la)

Total damage RM 420

Worth the damage or not only time will speak.

Next things to fix/do:

1. Steering Rack cover
2. Belt Tensioner
3. Service AC
4. Suspension
5. Bushing
6. All parts related to its arms and suspension
7. Rear passenger power window
8. Tint
9. Multimedia system
10. Rims + Tyre

The above list is in no order but the ones on bold is on priority. 

After a long day, as a reward, she got washed and wiped cleaned dry by 2 hookers....



Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Malaysia Elections: The Dark Forces of Corruption

As Malaysia counts down to its general election, corruption still looms large. Our foreign affairs correspondent, Jonathan Miller, reports on one scandal that has horrified electorates.


For the first time in more than half a century, Malaysia's corruption-tainted ruling coalition - which has held power since independence from Britain - looks like it could be in serious trouble. No political party in the world has been in power for longer than the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO).

But now an opposition victory on Sunday promises sweeping change for nearly 30 million Malaysians and for the foreign investors who have helped transform the country into one of Asia's leading "Tiger" economies... against the odds.

Against the odds because Malaysia is a country where corruption is endemic. Big corruption. The opposition, led by former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim, has campaigned for clean government - and it could yet turn out to be a winning ticket.

Corporate Misbehavior


Malaysia has an appealing edifice of modernity and sophistication.

But when it comes to corporate bribery, that image shatters. The country was last year ranked the world's worst offender in Transparency International's bribe payers' survey. Many Malaysians were shocked by this, though unsurprised... if it's possible to feel both at the same time.

Another survey last year by international corruption watchdog Global Financial Integrity ranked Malaysia as the world's third largest source of illicit financial flows - an estimated US$285bn in capital flight in the decade up to 2010.

An untaxed financial hemorrhage depriving the exchequer of funds that could have been used to improve Malaysians' living standards.

Exposing the culprits


But over the past few years, Malaysians have also seen their corrupt officials exposed, one after another. Some scandals have been about little brown envelopes or vote-buying. Others have been pretty exotic.

One even embroiled the man who is now Malaysia's prime minister in a murky saga involving the mysterious murder of a Mongolian model and alleged kickbacks on French submarines.

"At one point it was a scandal a week," Ambiga Sreenevasan, former president of the Malaysian bar council, told Channel 4 News. "People are truly sick and tired of it, and the sheer amount of money bleeding from the system."

At one point it was a scandal a week. People are truly sick and tired of the sheer amount of money bleeding from the system, Ambiga Sreenevasan

Dato' Ambiga now heads Bersih 2.0 - a group campaigning for free and fair elections - whose name means "clean" in Malay.
Bersih wants an end to corruption and to stop dirty politics. "Since 2008, we've had a strong opposition and they've raked up so much dirt, exposed a lot of misdeeds of public officials. Everyone knew it was happening, but to see the details? It's horrified everyone."
One particular scandal has horrified more than most. It has exposed corruption on a grand scale and has, in Ms Ambiga's view, "disgusted voters."

Case of the 'timber godfather'


At its heart is a greedy politician who has accumulated vast wealth at the expense of the people he was supposedly elected to serve.
This scandal surrounds the godfather of the timber trade, who, for 32 years has plundered the forests of the country's biggest - but second-poorest - state, Sarawak, on the island of Borneo have been plundered.

His family and closest associates were the subject of a spectacular sting operation by environmental investigators from the London-based group Global Witness.
The timber "godfather" just happens to be Sarawak's chief minister, Taib Mahmud.

It has been widely reported in Malaysia that Taib serves as private banker to some of Malaysia's political elite and that his millions help bankroll the ruling party, UMNO. He seems to have has long considered himself untouchable.

Political stranglehold




Sarawak sounds remote - even to many living on Peninsular Malaysia - but it is central to how political patronage works in Malaysia.

Barisan Nasional, UMNO's ruling coalition, has long had a stranglehold on state politics in Sarawak, and Taib's voters there have long-delivered one fifth of BN's seats in the federal parliament. That's just how it works.

And that is why the Taib timber scandal is so important in this, Malaysia's 13th general election. A voters' revolt in Sarawak will have a national impact.
The Global Witness sting revealed the extent of the alleged corruption.

Even the Wikileaks cables included repeated references to him as "highly corrupt" and to his relatives as having cashed in on "most major commercial logging contracts".

In the weeks running up to the general election, the Global Witness video went viral, receiving 1.3 million hits on YouTube (800,000 for the English version, 470,000 for the Malay-language version).
The reason it will have an impact on election arithmetic is that in order to gain power, the opposition needs just 30 more seats in the federal parliament. There are 31 up for grabs in Sarawak and 25 in next-door Sabah.

These two states should not be Malaysia's poorest. First, there's oil - but the east Malaysian states don't apparently see much of the revenue.
Since 2008, we've had a strong opposition and they've raked up so much dirt, exposed a lot of misdeeds of public officials. Everyone knew it was happening, but to see the details? It's horrified everyone. Dato’ Ambiga

Then there are the trees. For the past 30 years their tropical forests have been plundered, causing breathtaking environmental destruction.

Sarawak boasts just half of 1 per cent of the world's tropical rainforest but in 2010 its tropical timber trade comprised a quarter of the world's total hardwood exports.
The native Dayak tribespeople, whose ancestral lands have been destroyed can no longer fish or hunt.

Today just 5 per cent of Sarawak's rainforest remains intact. Despite this, more deforestation still occurs there than anywhere else in the world, according to Global Witness.
This wholesale looting has enriched a tiny elite surrounding chief minister Taib Mahmud.
The native Dayak tribespeople, whose ancestral lands have been destroyed can no longer fish or hunt.
Then, there are the trees. For the past 30 years their tropical forests have been plundered, causing breath-taking environmental destruction.
Sarawak boasts just half of one per cent of the world's tropical rainforest but in 2010 its tropical timber trade comprised a quarter of the world's total hardwood exports.

The native Dayak tribespeople, whose ancestral lands have been destroyed can no longer fish or hunt.
Today just five per cent of Sarawak's rainforest remains intact. Despite this, deforestation still occurs there than anywhere else in the world
This wholesale looting has seemingly enriched a tiny elite surrounding chief minister Taib Mahmud.
The native Dayak tribespeople, whose ancestral lands have been destroyed can no longer fish or hunt.
Taib is Malaysia's longest-serving chief minister and has held power since 1981.
Since then, his relatives, known widely as "Sarawak's royal family", have apparently cashed in on an entire jungleful of tropical hardwood, despite of the fact that he also holds the posts of state finance minister and resource planning, land allocation and environment minister.
The video evidence from the Global Witness investigator posing as a foreign investor features Taib's close associates and family explaining exactly how it's been done.

A representative of one of Sarawak's biggest timber tycoons said the chief minister would receive a multimillion dollar kickback from one deal.

His relatives were caught red-handed trying to sell off land they'd been allocated for a 3,600 per cent markup. They proposed illegal transactions designed to evade Malaysian tax.
The Malaysian anti-corruption commission - which was already investigating Taib - has said it will act on the evidence, as part of its formal investigation into Taib for corruption.
It has raided the offices of one of the lawyers featured in the Global Witness film, who represents some of Taib's family companies.

He who doth protest


Taib himself has dismissed the MACC as "naughty" and accused it of "victimising" him. He's said he won't cooperate with its investigation and says that he never demands or accepts bribes for the grant of leases or licences and that he has not issued any 'directive' illegally to benefit his cousins.
Judging from many of the comments under the Global Witness video on YouTube, many Malaysians just don't buy his protestations.

The video has been translated into Dayak tribal dialects and distributed as VCDs in indigenous upriver communities throughout Sarawak.

News of the sting has been reported in tribal languages on the foreign-based Radio Free Sarawak too.

"The film showed for the first time what people in Malaysia have long suspected, that Chief Minister Taib and his family have grown spectacularly rich through their systematic abuse of his public office," Alex Helan, forests campaigner for Global Witness, told Channel 4 News.

"It has had a profound impact because this kind of corruption is a massive concern for ordinary people in Sarawak and Malaysia more broadly.

This kind of corruption is a massive concern for ordinary people in Sarawak and Malaysia more broadly.Alex Helan

"They are tired of seeing the elite cash in on their natural resources and they want to halt the destruction and hold their politicians to account."

What next?


The scandal will have international resonance - if only because it has now triggered a treasure hunt for the ill-gotten gains, much allegedly being laundered through Taib family companies in the British Virgin Islands, Canada and London.

But will it be enough to turn the tide on Sunday? There's no doubt that it's all sickened many educated Malaysian city-dwelling voters.

The question is whether it has sufficiently disgusted the residents of Sarawak's tribal longhouses. The trees may have gone but it's still a jungle out there. A jungle where dirty money has a habit of delivering votes.

Disclaimer: The above article is not written by me and i dont take ownership of anything on the above. Its merely sharing of information. Everything is obtained from Channel 4.

Monday, May 6, 2013

GE13 - Maybe its just the begining

As of 0400hrs 06/05/2013, the official results for GE13 was out and final. 

Results are as follows:

The above results are also obtainable from GE13 Results.

I believe from all the the social media its obvious that the nation is not happy with the results, and there are many "speculations" where they are saying numerous  things about how the "Blue" party managed to add in additional votes.

Personally im not happy with the results as well and i actually had a strong believe that this round of elections the opposition party will take over the government, but hmmm looks like their "toyol" more power la..

One thing that gets me thinking is, majority shows that they are supporting the opposition party, but somehow BN still won! Well done Najib, after this can do Magic Show!

Maybe things will change in the coming days, dont know how but its a hope!

My baby the journalist had a though time in JB, seeing that its a hot seat this round but all in all, im very proud of her. She has been working her ass off the entire month just to bring us the latest news for GE13, so thank you and to your team :-) 

ps: If ur reading this, im missing you alot!

Friday, May 3, 2013

Lesson of Life - To balance between work and life.

I came across this interesting article this morning, yes this is old news as it happened back in 2009, but heck lets be reminded by this.

SAP India CEO Ranjan Das
What killed Ranjan Das and Lessons for Corporate India           

                                                                                                                            
                                                                        
A month ago, many of us heard about the sad demise of Ranjan Das from  Bandra, Mumbai. Ranjan, just 42 years of age, was the CEO of SAP-Indian    Subcontinent, the youngest CEO of an MNC in India. He was very active in  sports, was a fitness freak and a marathon runner. It was common to see    him run on Bandra’s Carter Road. Just after Diwali, on 21st Oct, he    returned home from his gym after a workout, collapsed with a massive heart attack and died. He is survived by his wife and two very young kids.      
                                                                           
It was certainly a wake-up call for corporate India. However, it was even  more disastrous for runners amongst us. Since Ranjan was an avid    marathoner ( in Feb 09, he ran Chennai Marathon at the same time some of  us were running Pondicherry Marathon 180 km away ), the question came as  to why an exceptionally active, athletic person succumb to heart attack at 42 years of age.                                                          
                                                                                                                     
                                                                           
Was it the stress?                                                        
                                                   
                                                                           
A couple of you called me asking about the reasons. While Ranjan had   mentioned that he faced a lot of stress, that is a common element in most  of our lives. We used to think that by being fit, one can conquer the bad  effects of stress. So I doubted if the cause was stress.                  
                                       
                                                                           
The Real Reason                                                            
                                                                 
                                                                           
However, everyone missed out a small line in the reports that Ranjan used  to make do with 4-5 hours of sleep. This is an earlier interview of Ranjan on NDTV in the program ‘Boss’ Day Out’: Boss’ Day Out: Ranjan Das of SAP  India.                                                                    
                                                                           
                                                                   
Here he himself admits that he would love to get more sleep (and that he  was not proud of his ability to manage without sleep, contrary to what    others extolled).                                                        
                                                                           
The Evidence                                                              
                                                       
                                                                           
Last week, I was working with a well-known cardiologist on the subject of  ‘Heart Disease caused by Lack of Sleep’. While I cannot share the video    nor the slides because of confidentiality reasons, I have distilled the    key points below in the hope it will save some of our lives.              
                                                                         
                                                                           
Some Excerpts:                                                            
                                                                       
· Short sleep duration ( <5 or 5-6 hours ) increased risk for high BP by  350% to 500% compared to those who slept longer than 6 hours per night.    Paper published in 2009. As you know, high BP kills.                      
                                                                           
                                                                       
                                                                           
· Young people ( 25-49 years of age ) are twice as likely to get high BP  if they sleep less. Paper published in 2006.                              
                                                                        
                                                                           
                                                                         
· Individuals who slept less than 5 hours a night had a 3-fold increased  risk of heart attacks. Paper published in 1999.                            
                                                                           
                                                                           
                                                                           
· Complete and partial lack of sleep increased the blood concentrations of High sensitivity C-Reactive Protein (hs-cRP), the strongest predictor of  heart attacks. Even after getting adequate sleep later, the levels stayed  high!!                                                                    
                                                                           
                                                                           
                                                                           
· Just one night of sleep loss increases very toxic substances in body    such as Interleukin-6 (IL-6), Tumour Necrosis Factor-Alpha (TNF-alpha) and C-reactive protein (cRP). They increase risks of many medical conditions,  including cancer, arthritis and heart disease. Paper published in 2004.    
                                                                           
                                                                           
                                                                           
· Sleeping for <=5 hours per night leads to 39% increase in heart disease. Sleeping for <=6 hours per night leads to 8% increase in heart disease.  Paper published in 2006.                                                  
                                                                           
                                                                           
                                                                           
Ideal Sleep                                                                
                                                                           
                                                                           
                                                                           
For lack of space, I cannot explain here the ideal sleep architecture. But in brief, sleep is composed of two stages: REM ( Rapid Eye Movement ) and  non-REM. The former helps in mental consolidation while the latter helps  in physical repair and rebuilding. During the night, you alternate between REM and non-REM stages 4-5 times.                                          
                                                                           
                                                                           
                                                                           
The earlier part of sleep is mostly non-REM. During that period, your   pituitary gland releases growth hormones that repair your body. The latter part of sleep is more and more REM type.                                  
                                                                           
                                                                           
                                                                           
For you to be mentally alert during the day, the latter part of sleep is  more important. No wonder when you wake up with an alarm clock after 5-6  hours of sleep, you are mentally irritable throughout the day (lack of REM sleep). And if you have slept for less than 5 hours, your body is in a    complete physical mess ( lack of non-REM sleep ), you are tired throughout the day, moving like a zombie and your immunity is way down ( I’ve been    there, done that ).                                                        
                                                                           
                                                                           
Finally, as long-distance runners, you need an hour of extra sleep to   repair the running related damage..                                        
                                                                           
                                                                           
If you want to know if you are getting adequate sleep, take Epworth        Sleepiness Test below.                                                    
                                                                           
Interpretation: Score of 0-9 is considered normal while 10 and above   abnormal. Many a times, I have clocked 21 out the maximum possible 24, the only saving grace being the last situation, since I don’t like to drive (  maybe, I should ask my driver to answer that line ).                      
                                                                           
In conclusion:                                                            
                                                                           
Barring stress control, Ranjan Das did everything right: eating proper    food, exercising ( marathoning! ),  aintaining proper weight. But he      missed getting proper and adequate sleep, minimum 7 hours. In my opinion,  that killed him.    

                                                 

If you are not getting enough sleep ( 7 hours ), you are playing with   fire, even if you have low stress.                                        
                                                                           

I always took pride in my ability to work 50 hours at a stretch whenever  the situation warranted. But I was so pooked after seeing the scientific  evidence last week that since Saturday night, I ensure I do not even set  the alarm clock under 7 hours. Now, that is a nice excuse to get some more sleep.                                                                    
                                                                           
Unfortunately, Ranjan Das is not alone when it comes to missing sleep.    Many of us are doing exactly the same, perhaps out of ignorance. Please    forward this mail/article to as many of your colleagues/friends as   possible, specially those who might be short-changing their sleep. If we  can save even one young life because of this email, I would be the  happiest person on earth.