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NoFakie

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by NoFakie

  1. To take over the new car warranty when buying second hand, there is paperwork, a small fee, and I think the car has to go to a dealer of the manufacturer. If you don't do it, you don't get it. I bet loads of people don't, and many U car dealers don't go out of their way to help you do it. It would mean the manufacturer looking at the car they've just sold.

     

    If you pay for the s/h warranty yourself, you can buy an older car which will be much cheaper. Japanese wiki says most new car warranties in Japan are five years, though it does depend on the manufacturer. We got our three year warranty on a car that was 10 years old with 135,000km on it. It was about a fifth of the price it was when new. A two year old second hand car with three years of the original new car warranty left on it would about three times what we paid, which is a lot to pay for very minor changes in design.

     

    When buying second hand, a car with options like leather seats, a sunroof, premium sound etc. may only be 50,000 yen than the base model. When new, that would cost ten times that. In terms of price second hand, white (pearl) cars are worth the most, followed by black.

  2. Diesel X Trail is the cheapest, decently sized SUV to run by miles. About 9-10 yen a km for fuel. A bit plasticy inside, if that matters. I think you can get one for about 1.3 million or so.

     

    If you or the mrs is a bit of a worrier, a fair few s/h cars at a fair few dealers can be bought with a three-year, unlimited mileage warranty. New ones often only come with a five year one, so you can save a fortune buying used and still have peace of mind. Basically what happens is that you pay extra and the money minus commission goes to an insurance company that handles the warranty, not to the used car dealer themselves. On an SUV I reckon a three year warranty is going to be somewhere between 70,000 and 100,000 (based on 5-million-when-new-but-now-about-1.5 million Harrier Hybrids I've been looking at). One of the companies offering an extended warranty is the Car Sensor used car website. The hybrid Alphard we bought last year had a brakes problem this year that took Toyota two goes to fix, and I think it would have cost upwards of 250,000 if we had had to pay. We bought it from a Toyota U car dealer and got their three-year warranty called the "long run hosho". After this experience, I don't think I'd pay very much for a s/h car without a warranty, even though I have bought privately from complete strangers (i.e., not even dealers) in the past.

     

    fwiw, if you're looking for space, you'd get more out of a van than an SUV. I bet most of the vehicles you'll see in Car Danchi videos aren't SUVs.

  3. They probably are stupid to be honest. Its just that having less money wisens them up a bit.

     

    You can take loads of things older Japanese people used to be into and stick "banare" on the end of them. kuruma, ski, beach, onsen, tabi, terebi, kekkon.

    With domestic tourism, things maybe aren't as bad as they could be with the cashed up baby boomers all hitting retirement about now.

    Give it 10-15 years though and most of them won't be genki enough for bus trips to Kyoto, Kamakura etc. and the new generation of retirees will be fewer, have less cash, and will be more likely to have living parents to look after.

    There's going to be a lot of people sucking air through their teeth and saying "kibishii". As an optimist, I'd like to think that people who made some effort to make their area more attractive will have fared better than those who didn't.

  4. It sounds like the new new newest Ipad thing has a soft SIM, to help you switch providers when you feel like it. I don't know how important not having a physical SIM card is, considering that many companies including Apple already sell unlocked, "SIM free" phones and tablets, but if it makes it easier to switch providers, then bring it on! Stick the same tech in the phones please!

     

    The new Nexus phone I was tempted to wait for has been announced and is supposedly $650 off contract, so I don't suppose I would have got one anyway. Google have gone high end with it, and though it sounds really good and is $200 or so less than the Iphone 6+, it's still a big bump up from the $400 or so for the previous Nexus. Maybe its because the profit margins are much bigger at the high end.

     

    I signed up with a different one, but starting this month, the sim provider Iijmio will give you a phone number and 2GB a month for 1600 yen. Bump it up to 4GB a month for Youtube and its 2200. That's on the docomo network.

  5. Domestic tourism is also way down over the past twenty or so years.

    With the population shrinking and aging and having less money, there are winners and losers, and will be more in the future.

    Any tourist town would be wise to clean its act up if it wants Japanese people to keep going there, to say nothing of overseas tourists.

    Calling yourself "yumei" for some reason, however spurious, and dishing up the same soba and soft creams as everywhere else won't cut it. People aren't that stupid.

  6. Oooh I'm on the warpath today.

     

    Ito yokado- advertising their new milk carton size as if it's a good thing. 900ml instead of a litre! Thank you!

     

    ...did I mention it's the same price as it was before?

     

    On. My. Fooking. List.

     

    Google and Apple are Big Brother, we're fighting some people for something no-one understands in Eurasia, and now Ito Yokado milk is Winston Smith's chocolate ration! This is 1984!

  7. We've been to that one, it's a bit of an experience. The baths themselves are great, right down by a river, and most of them are mixed bathing. There was some bizarre 1970s touristy thing going on though, with bears in little cages and a number of shops selling bric-a-brac type souvenirs once you've paid to get in.

     

    I've never snowboarded in Gunma but I'd like to give it a try.

  8. Posted this in the phone thread as its the same kind of thing:

     

    TV last night. Some obasan running a small eating place in Kyoto, being asked to remove their big sign outside. Replacing it would cost 100man (really?!?) and the town won't help. But it's a new rule to take down signs and make the city pretty rather than full of advertising noise. "To make it more appealing to foreign tourists".

     

    Some dude commented on it would be a shame if Japan was changed due to the pressure of foreigners. It's like the default bullshit isn't it. Don't suppose Japanese people themselves want nice looking towns, oh no.

     

    Any eatery, however crap, in a touristy part of Kyoto will have access to thousands of hungry suckers every day willing to pay 800 yen for sansai soba or nisshin soba you can make for under 200 yen with factory made noodles and cutting open some retort packets. Even a small place could make a million yen in the autumn leaves month alone.

  9. If you pay $2000 a month, there is no waiting list for child care in Japan. In fact, if you pay that much, you can go to an elite institution that is hard to get your kids into. An international one, or some other one for talented kids.

     

    There are waiting lists for the $350 childcare facilities (here meaning ones for threes and under) because many local authorities don't want to provide any more than they do already. Given that almost every two-bit local authority in Japan will have numerous community centers, culture centers, music halls, sports halls, etc. with the national government stumping up a good chunk of the cash, it is notable that they are happy to sit there and not build more childcare facilities even though there are waiting lists, as well as other parents who see they have no hope of getting childcare and don't even try.

     

    So childcare is $350 or whatever (I think its actually cheaper for many) but only because it is heavily subsidized to the level that local authorities don't want to provide it because it is them who provide the subsidy. It is subsidized to that level because women's pay is so low. There are millions of women working but remaining as dependents on their husbands, so they don't have to pay into the health or pension. That's a massive 1.3 million yen a year, about 107,000 a month. One yen over the limit and you pay all of the health care and pension yourself. Many get paid even less, I think its 1.07 million a year, because at that amount you avoid income tax too.

     

    So if you're a working mother with a well-paid job and can get your kid in, its :) :), all the way. Cheap!

     

    If you're a working mother with a low-paid job and can get your kid in, its still :) , because you'll come out ahead, maybe to the same extent as a working mother in the West for the two or three years she'll need childcare. Once her kid goes to school and the childcare fee burden is over, many salaries in the West will put her miles ahead.

     

    Note that one of the biggest obstacles to working mothers doing well-paid career jobs is the ridiculously long hours those jobs expect you to put in. Women may be low paid, but blokes aren't getting it easy either.

  10. Anyone who can afford a foreign holiday to come to Japan can pay for their own bloody wifi! :grandpa:

     

    I sometimes think Japan is more keen on lots of tourists coming and saying "Japan! Sugoi!" so it can sit back in some complacent "utsukushii kuni, Nihon" glow than actually trying to make some money off them to pay for stuff. Like health care for the 25% of the population over 65. Or the Olympics even.

  11. If its any consolation, every penny not spent on the "nihon - sugoi!" gaijin is a million or so not spent on some arsehole talento from Yoshimoto etc.

     

    Its basically the same approach as reality tv. Why pay celebs if people will still watch when you point your cameras at folks you don't have to pay.

     

    The other classic cost-cutter programmes are the ones where they just show YouTube clips for about an hour with some talento pulling facial expressions in a little box in the corner of the screen. They'll shows clips even at 240 pixel resolution. The NHK man then has the cheek to come around and ask you pay for that.

  12. Getting a regular phone number off a sim for a short time is tricky for non-residents. Prepaid sims for data aren't though.

     

    The government also says its going to provide lots of free wifi for tourists (presumably paid for by mugs who live here) so maybe someone who knows about can comment. I think you have to show your passport and collect a card at various tourist info places.

  13. Your plan sounds great! Maybe one of the ski schools at a resort will do something like that, possibly one of the ones close to Nagano City on a locals-only basis. It's the kind of thing you find out about from other parents rather than websites, because they don't like tourists knowing local kids are getting a cheaper deal.

     

    A school-based ski club will be more intense than once a week! They'll enter lots of races too, where parents have to go and help out and generally hang around all day.

  14. After a year, I've finally worked out how to get my phone and iPod playing through my Toyota stock navi.

    The setting on the navi is for "video", but its hidden in the "audio" menu, not the "tv" one. The connection is through the old fashioned yellow red white video jacks.

    Its a bit quiet on the standard music player, but gets sufficiently rocking with PowerAmp on Android which has a built in preamp.

  15. I must say I find those great big hulking vehicles pretty horrendous myself!

     

    What is the appeal.... just lots of space?

     

    If it's space, that's probably the wrong reason to buy a proper SUV, because the ground clearance means they are not that big inside. A people carrier of the same length/height will be much roomier.

     

    Everything is a trade-off in car design. SUVs original purpose was "go anywhere", but that's all been diluted with various degrees of styling and ride comfort which reduce the ability to "go anywhere". Obviously there are places where you don't need an SUV, and a lot of the bad rep they've got is the "Chelsea tractor" thing, people driving the big, flashy ones in town as a pose. As a genuine problem, as a pedestrian or cyclist, I don't think you'd want to be hit by an SUV. You'd be better off being hit at knee/thigh height by a regular car.

     

    I think we'll get an SUV next, a Harrier Hybrid. Its one of the smaller and more stylish ones, so no real offroad performance, but still 4wd for the snow, 12-13km/l, leather seats, and 0-60 in under 7 seconds. I just need to find a million yen somewhere.

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