Wednesday, October 6, 2010

my civic ej8 4 door






This is my car. I bought last year (Dec 2009) from a very nice malay gentleman at Bandar Saujana Putra ( Mr.Ahmad Azli from Terengganu). Not really a new car coz registered in 1998 but i really like the design and car i admired during my study.

The price still quit high (RM38K) but at that time it still considered reasonable price for that type of car. I sold my Proton Wira 1.5 manual year 2000 to my younger brother. hopefully he can manage my "ex" gentlely. hehe..

Most of the part and accessories still a standard car. future plan is to change the engine becoz it fell not very powerful. maybe the "B" series engine such as B16a or B16b is seem suit with my driving style..

Hopefully my dream come true...amin..
(to be continue.. i will explain about the thing that i replace/upgrade soon.. )

update until Dec 2010:

*Integra DC2 stereng (RM380)
*Integra DB8  front and rear seat with red stiched (RM1100)
*EK3 virs front and rear disc brake with knuckle (RM750)
*Front bumper beam EK (RM100)
*EK4 yellow round fog lamp spec 96 (RM210)
*Grounding cable (RM?)
*EK3 rear anti roll bar complete arm (RM280)
*Sport spring brand RGT (RM370 complete set)
*EK3 complete rear bodypart with wiring, bonnet, bumper, spoiler, and lamp (RM2500) i just use the rear bumper only..hehe.. the other is for spare part.
*EK3 fuel tank with fuel pump (RM80) need to replace the leak old one.
*EK9 type R red stiched gear console with cup holder (RM180)
*EK9 type R gear knob (RM150)
*EK4 meter auto (RM350)
*EK9 sun visor with mirror both side (RM180)
*EK3 Virs door visor complete (RM160)
*EK3 power window motor complete 4 windows (RM280) for spare part
*EK3 virs floor mat blue stripe (RM150)
*EK3 seat belts complete (RM150)
*A pair head lamp stanley (RM250)
*Mugen twin loop (replica) exhaust bought new (RM400) with installation



..most of that part i bought from the several runners around my place whose i know from internet... the other part from trusted runners from other place..so far i quit satisfied with those upgrade.. my next plan is to change the engine coz the engine currently have some overheating problem.. i need to top-up water into radiator every week becoz the water level tend to decrease fast than it supposed to... i tried to change the radiator cap once but the issue still happen..


continued.. (26/5/2011)

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Salar de Uyuni


a very interesting picture that i had received from my hometown fren few months ago. regarding that emel this pic taken from somewhere in Bolivia (Uyuni - one part of Bolivia). some facts about Bolivia that i find out from web are:-

Bolivia , officially Republic of Bolivia, republic (2005 est. pop. 8,858,000), 424,162 sq mi (1,098,581 sq km), W South America. One of the two inland countries of South America, Bolivia is shut in from the Pacific in the W by Chile and Peru; in the E and N it borders on Brazil, in the SE on Paraguay, and in the S on Argentina. Sucre is the constitutional capital and seat of the judiciary, but La Paz is the largest city, political and commercial focus of the nation, and the administrative capital and seat of government.

Land and People

Bolivia presents a sharp contrast between high, bleak mountains and plateaus in the west and lush, tropical rain forests in the east. In the southeast it merges into the semiarid plains of the Gran Chaco . The Andes mountain system reaches its greatest width in Bolivia. Two cordilleras, the western one tracing the border with Chile and the eastern running north and south across the center of the country, are divided by a high plateau ( altiplano ), most of it 12,000 ft (3,660 m) above sea level—barren, windswept, and segmented by mountain spurs.

Despite the harsh conditions the altiplano is the population center of Bolivia. Many sections for want of drainage have brackish lakes and salt beds, notably the extensive Salar de Uyuni in the south. In the north are Lake Titicaca , which Bolivia shares with Peru, and Lake Poopó . This region, world famous for its breathtaking scenery, was the home of one of the great pre-Columbian civilizations. Well known are the ruins of Tiahuanaco .

The eastern mountains, consisting of three major ranges, rise to the cold, forbidding heights of the Puna plateau (as high as 16,000 ft/4,880 m) and in the north to the snowcapped peaks of Illimani (21,184 ft/6,457 m) and Illampú (21,276 ft/6,485 m). In these mountains lies the source of the exploited wealth of Bolivia—its minerals. Tin is by far the most important product, but silver was once the chief metal, and tungsten, copper, wolframite, bismuth, antimony, zinc, lead, iron, and gold are also mined. The names of some mining towns, notably Potosí and Oruro, are world famous.

From the mountains, headstreams cut eastward, carving deep gorges and fingerlike valleys. In these valleys are some of Bolivia's garden spots—Sucre, Cochabamba, and Tarija . Santa Cruz de la Sierra and La Paz are the two main cities of tropical Bolivia. In the eastern foothills headstreams gather to form the Beni, the Guaiporé, and the Mamoré (tributaries of the Madeira, in Brazil), which flow through the torrid, humid yungas , covered with dense rain forests, and inhabited mainly by indigenous South Americans. The region is the most fertile in the country, yielding cacao, coffee, and tropical fruits, and in the early 20th cent. was a major source of wild rubber and quinine. Some of the more accessible valleys, with luxuriant scenery and a pleasantly warm climate, have become popular Bolivian resort areas.

Of the indigenous people, about 30% are Quechua and 25% are Aymara, but the citizens of European descent (some 15% of the people) or mixed European and native ancestry (about 30% of the population) have historically maintained economic, political, and social hegemony. Spanish, Quechua, and Aymara are Bolivia's official languages. A few indigenous groups have remained isolated from European culture. Most of the population is Roman Catholic, although many people of indigenous descent retain the substance of their pre-Christian beliefs. There is also an evangelical Protestant minority.

Economy

Despite the importance of its tin, silver, and other mines and its large reserves of natural gas and crude oil, Bolivia is one of the poorest nations in Latin America and still lives by a subsistence economy. A large part of the population makes its living from the illegal growing of coca, the source of cocaine; a government eradication program begun in the late 1990s has depressed the economy in those areas where coca-growing was important. Soybeans, coffee, cotton, corn, sugarcane, rice, and potatoes are the other major crops; timber is also important. Industry is limited to mining and smelting, petroleum refining, food processing, and small-scale manufacturing. The tin industry has received increasing competition from SE Asia, and as a result several tin mines have closed. Although Bolivia has much hydroelectric potential, it is underutilized.

Bolivia's mineral wealth furnishes the bulk of its exports, although natural gas, soybeans, and crude petroleum are also important. Petroleum products, plastics, paper, aircraft and parts, foods, automobiles, and consumer goods are imported. Brazil, Argentina, the United States, and Peru are the chief trading partners. Bolivia is a member of the Andean Community, an economic organization of South American countries.

Government

Bolivia, which has had more than 190 revolutions and coups since it became independent in 1825, is governed under the constitution of 1967 as amended. The head of state and of government is the president, who is elected for a single five-year term. The bicameral legislature, the National Congress, consists of an upper Chamber of Senators and a lower Chamber of Deputies. The 27 senators and 130 deputies are all elected for five-year terms. Administratively, Bolivia is divided into nine departments.

World Map of Bolivia



Bibliography

See H. Osborne, Bolivia: A Land Divided (3d ed. 1964); W. E. Carter, Bolivia: A Profile (1971); J. V. Fifer, Bolivia: Land, Location, and Politics Since 1825 (1972); D. B. Heat, Historical Dictionary of Bolivia (1972)

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

i'm a blogger boyyy noww!!!!

yeahh!! finally.. after a many many trillion times and efforts.. i manage to create this new blog.. eventhough i'm a super lazy to write ( or type on computer keyboard).. and also a very shy and reserve person ...hahaha.(ye ke?).^_^

hopefully.. i can update this blog as frequent as i can... wish me luck ok...