Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Birdstrike!

(Due to some possible legality problem, this post has to be removed. Thanks)

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Fuel price

The price of petrol has changed significantly in the last 6 months. Oil price has dropped from USD 150+ to around USD 50 today.

More significantly the petrol price in Malaysia has changed considerably. 2 weeks after I bought my Toyota Camry the RON97 petrol in Malaysia was increased from RM1.92 to RM2.70. Back then the government were telling us that they're subsidizing the petrol. Now the petrol price has been lowered; currently selling at RM1.80, and even that is actually above the world market price. So the government is actually taxing us in petrol nowadays.

I think it is about time for a major policy change. Not only for fuel price, but regarding car price as well.

1. Sell fuel at market price, plus some tax. Something around 10 to 20 sen per liter. Either the government can set the market price, according to world price of oil to be determined daily or at most weekly; or let the retailers sell at their own price.

2. Abolish road tax, since now the fuel is being taxed. If required maybe a nominal tax can be imposed, but not to be based on engine capacity.

3. Reduce tax on cars to a flat rate based on the original price. The practice of taxing cars based on the engine capacity should be abolished forever.

By doing these the people will have the choice of buying and driving cars that are much better than what Malaysians are used to be driving today. We also can buy more fuel efficient cars for daily use; or buy a fuel guzzler sports car and have it parked most of the time.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

The Cinemas of Perlis

There are no cinemas operating in Perlis today.

But there were cinemas in the state before. There was one in the mining town of Kaki Bukit, and another one in the rice fields of Simpang Empat. But those were as told by my elders; haven't see them myself.

But there was definitely a Cathay cinema in the port town of Kuala Perlis.

There were 3 cinemas in Kangar, the capital. The oldest was Empire; the building has been demolished back in the 80s.


The youngest was Sri Mahkota. It was build in the early 1970s and closed in the 80s. It is now a supermarket.



The most popular back then was Kapitol. I remember watching a few movies there years ago in my childhood years. Jaws, Malay movie Laksamana Do Re Mi and and some Hindi movie as well. This was the last cinema to close; not sure of when but this building is now a lecture hall for Unimap, the state university of Perlis.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

ASPUTRA 82 Hari Raya Open Day 2008

The ASPUTRA 82 open house was held in Dr Azmi Ayub's house in Kota Damansara on Sunday 26th of October 2008.

Among those who were there:

Dr Azmi Ayub (host)
Hatta Hussin (organizer)
Latif Jamin
Che Zurina (Latif's wife)
Mustafa
Marina
Amirul Sharifuddin
Khairul Ikmal
Norhalimi (Md Gee)
Farid
Joe Pinto (....er, sorry, can't remember your real name)
Rosniza Hussin (my wife)
and myself.

My apologies if there is anybody else that I missed.

And many thanks to Dr Azmi for hosting the gathering. Bring back many colorful memories of our days at Sekolah Menengah Tuanku Syed Putra.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Selamat Hari Raya Aidil Fitri

Selamat Hari Raya Aidil Fitri to all. Maaf zahir dan Batin.

Drive safely and safe flights always.

As for me, I'm celebrating right here at Salak Tinggi. No balik kampung to Perlis for me this year. Will be working again on the 3rd, this time going to Jogjakarta for real.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

First ATR-72 for MASwings

MASwings recently took delivery of their first ATR-72-500. Registered 9M-MWA, she first landed in SZB on September 2nd, then to BKI on September 8th. There was a launching event on September 12th, coverage which can be seen in MalaysianWings forum.

I visited MWA in BKI on the 10th, after the aircraft finished a proving flight to MYY.

The flight deck looks quite old-fashioned.


Nice curving 6-bladed propellers.

Leather seats.


IFE panel.

Exterior view. Higher-resolution picture here.

Cabin view. Higher resolution picture here.

This is the first of seven ATR-72 ordered by MASwings to replace their 7 Fokker 50s. They will operate within Sabah and Sarawak together with the Twin Otters.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Update on the kittens.

Sorry to announce the death of Tamtam yesterday. He fell ill the night before, and although utmost care was given by my children, he died early in the morning before we had time to go to the vet.

Tamtam was buried under the mango tree.

And my children were still grieving, especially my son Ridzwan who is very attached to the kittens.

Friday, August 29, 2008

Corruption in Malaysia

So much has been talked about the ACA nabbing the corrupt Puspakom officers. It is simply bribery, probably the easiest to identify and handled.

But there is another type of corruption, such as the MPSJ buying laptops at double the price. This is the overcharging corruption. I think this is more prevalent and harder to tackle as it normally involved those in power.

And come to think of it, those privatized monopolies are corrupt practice themselves. Think of Puspakom, Fomema, Indah Water and many other, created to siphon money from the public doing things that were previously done by government agencies or could be handled directly by the public. It is simply abuse of power by the authorities.

Just a thought from a man on the street.

Flying the Malaysian Flags

A lot has been said about how few flags is being flown this Merdeka season.

I have no comments on flying the flag at homes, shops and offices. But I have a reason why there is less flags flown on cars.

For info I've never put on those little flags on my car. Never ever.

Last year petrol was RM 1.92 pr liter. This year it is RM 2.55, and RM 2.70 just weeks ago. Those flags on your moving vehicles cause a lot of drag, and drag will mean you will use up more fuel. More hydrocarbon burnt. Not exactly a good thing for the environment, or your pocket.

There are still lots of those little flags on cars and taxis. And big ones on trucks. Maybe for he trucks especially, the drivers don't pay for the fuel from their own pocket. And I'm quite sure the majority of the taxi and truck drivers didn't score A1 on Physics.

Just my thoughts.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

The cats

I opened up the hood of my car, and guess what was inside?

I don't know how they get inside the engine compartment with the hood closed. Must be from the underneath.

The kittens were born on 6th of July 2008.

Ggirl, a female.
Boboy, a male.
Tamtam, a male.
Bubu, a female.

And finally Cing the mother. She was a stray and was adopted by my children. Cing is a good mother, and very protective of her kittens.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Biggest Aircraft in KLIA

So what is the biggest aircraft to land at Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KUL / WMKK)?


The Boeing 747 is one of the biggest aircraft in the world. You can see them everyday.


Airbus A380 is currently the biggest passanger aircraft in the world. Prototype number 1 visited KUL in November 2005. Singapore Airlines send their A380 for training flights here early this year and Malaysia Airlines will receive theirs beginning in 2011.


Cargo aircraft can be bigger. The Antonov 124 has been seen here a few times, delivering oversized cargo.


The biggest aircraft to land in KUL is also the biggest aircraft in the world. It is the one and only Antonov 225 Mriya, delivering a helicopter for LIMA 2007.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

The black dugong

As the replacement for the Satria GTi, today I took delivery of a Toyota Vios S.


This car is powered by a 1.5 liter (actually 1497 cubic centimeter) inline 4-cylinder 1NZ-FE engine producing 80 kW/109 ps @ 6000 rpm and 141 nM/14.4 kg-m of torque @ 4200 rpm. It is supposed to be a very fuel-efficient engine. I will post the fuel consumption later once figure is available. Transmission is a 4-speed automatic.

This car will be used mostly for local and short distance driving therefore I don't expect to see amazing fuel consumption figure for this one. But expect to see me around KLIA in this one when I go spotting.


For long distance driving, the Camry will be more appropriate. It is more stable on the highway, and comes with 5 speed auto transmission. And it is equipped with cruise control, which makes driving on the highway much more pleasurable.

Why do I call it black dugong? Obviously because it is black, and the front end reminds me of the dugong. Similar to the Airbus A380, especially this one.

Actually the Vios belongs to my wife; it is of the same color as her first car, a Ford Laser which was used from 1990 until 1992. Registration was CS 8600, I don't know if it is still around.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

JOG - KUL flight

(Disclaimer: this post is about a base check, done in a flight simulator for the purpose of pilot training)

The first day
.

It was a rainy day in JOG / WARJ (Jogjakarta). MH 856 was about to depart for KUL with ZFW of 49 tonnes. At the prevailing temperature and QNH, with minimum fuel I barely made the maximum takeoff weight, and that is for runway 27 and flap 15. Even with 5 kt headwind for runway 09 the max takeoff weight was below the planned ZFW + minimum fuel, so no choice, really.

After airborne suddenly the GPWS goes "terrain, terrain" so I took evasive action, press TOGA and pull the nose up. Clear of the terrain there was another problem: a military traffic was ahead, slightly below and climbing. Suddenly the TCAS shouted "pull up" which means once again I had to take evasive action while my FO communicates with the ATC. Clear of the conflict I check with the cabin, no injury so we continue with the flight.

Reaching cruise altitude of FL320 we settle down for the flight. Suddenly the master caution lights up. The right aircond pack is having problem. We carried out the non-normal checklist but the problem persists. We end up shutting down the right pack. We are now down to a single pack operation but since the pressurization are maintained, we elect to stay at FL320.

Soon we have another problem. Now the left bleed was having problem. Once again the NNC was carried out, but here is the catch: it calls for shutting down the left bleed and pack, but if we shut down the left pack we'll be unpressurized. And at FL320 if you become unpressurized you'll have to do emergency descend quickly, or else hypoxia will take over. It will be another Helios.

But wait. On the right side we have pack problem. On the left we have bleed problem. The solution? Use the right bleed to power up the left pack. problem averted.

Chugging along past Jakarta, another problem comes along. One of the CSD had high oil temperature. Once again, the NNC. It calls for the CSD to be disconnected. Therefore for another source of electricity we had to start up the APU. Too bad, as soon as it was started the APU had a fault condition. NNC again, and the APU had to be shut down.

With only a single source of electrics remaining, the only thing to do was to land at the nearest suitable airport. Our location was such that CGK / WIII (Jakarta) was the nearest so after checking the weather and finding that it was suitable, we decided to divert there. No problem except while on approach to runway 25L in CGK there was some windshear and strong tailwind; I ended up having to carry out a missed approach and come again on a visual circuit.

Landing was uneventful except just before I turn off the runway the nosewheel collapsed. Do I need to evacuate? Evacuation is not a risk-free action after all, after checking with tower that there is no fire or immediate danger, I decided not to evacuate but disembark using the stairs instead.



Day 2

At JOG again. Again, another heavy takeoff with strong crosswind. Flap 15, runway 09.

My first attempt to takeoff, I was approaching V1 when my FO calls "Engine Failure". Feels the aircraft veers to the right. I calls "Abort", close the thrust levers, disengaged the autothrottles, deploy the speedbrakes and maximum braking. Managed to have aircraft under control and stop before the end of the runway.

2nd attempt. This time the engines were fine, up to V1 at least. There was about 10 kt difference between V1 and Vr, and that is when the left engine fails. Too late to abort, I have to continue the takeoff. Aircraft managed to climb but very slowly; the right engine is not giving any thrust at all. As previously discussed for engine failure procedures, we followed the escape route. At 6.7 DME to JOG VOR, we turn to a left heading of 225. This escape route will bring us away from the high terrains around the airport and bring us over the sea. It took the eternity to get to 600 ft RA, where the engine failure recognition was carried out. Yes, the right engine has seized. So we shut it down, using the NNC as the guide.

Check out he weather at JOG, it was marginal. Plus the glide slope was unserviceable. But we didn't have much choice; we climbed to 4000 ft and join the holding pattern at 8.0 DME JOG, radial 276. We carried out the checklist applicable for a single engine landing. Ready, we carried out the LOC DME approach for runway 09.

The rain must be getting heavier because as we descend towards MDA, nothing can be seen outside. At the MDA of 750 ft, still nothing so a missed approach was carried out. A single engine missed approach. At 1500 ft we turn left, head towards the JOG VOR, and from there proceed to the 8 DME holding fix again. Again, more checklists. Entering the holding pattern, we were told by ATC that the weather was improving and the glideslope was serviceable again. So we carried out the ILS approach. I sighted he runway just above minima so the single engine landing was carried out successfully.

So we were back at Yogyakarta again, and then it was my first officer's turn to go through all those all over again.

Between June and December of this year, all B734 pilots flying for Malaysia Airlines will go through the same situation at JOG. Most will make it.

And I will have to go through something similar every 6 months for the rest of my career.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Last day with the GTi

Today (Thursday July 10th) we drove the GTi to Bandar Seri Permaisuri, Cheras for bank settlement as well as handing over the car to the new owner. The car was sold for RM 36k, of which RM 18k was for bank loan settlement. The rest will be the down payment for the Vios.



The car is now with its new owner, Hj. Zakaria of Terengganu. Most likely it will be registered for his son. Anyway I think they will be a very good owner, better than I've ever been.

Here Hj Zakaria is getting into the car, and this is my last sight of WKR 734.

We took the train home.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

The end of an era.

Tomorrow my Satria GTi will be handed to the new owner. With it, an era of motoring is coming to a close.

I've always believe there are 3 general type of car for a normal person: a big family car, an economical small car and a fun sporty car.

Since 1999 we've been a 2-car family. At that time we had the Proton Putra and a Perodua Kancil, for a sporty type and an economical one. In 2003 we changed to a Waja for the family type, as the kids get bigger, and the Satria GTi for a sporty type.


Now the family car is getting bigger, in the shape of a Toyota Camry. But it is nor as nimble nor economical for short sectors, therefore I'm getting a Vios as the second car. But I can't afford to keep the Satria GTi, financially as well as parking space and utilization. After all, 2 cars are already under utilized; with 3 cars one might not get started for days.


The only thing is there will be no more sporty car for me, and no more manual transmission car as both the Vios and the Camry are automatics. No more high-revving spirited driving; something that I rarely do anyway even with the Satria GTi.

Well, I'm getting old....

D-8 Summit

While the developed nations are having their G-8 summit in Japan, there is a D-8 summit here in Kuala Lumpur. D-8 comprises eight developing Muslim nations -- Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia, Nigeria, Pakistan and Turkey. It was set up in 1997 as an economic alliance with the objective of improving the position of Muslim developing countries in the global world economy through the diversification of their economies by creating new opportunities via increased trade relations. In the process, they hope to improve the standard of living of their people.

Indonesia send in a Garuda A330 as the presidential plane, while Iran and Pakistan send in their VIP aircraft as well.
Pakistani A310.



Iranian B707.


As usual I am not interested in the meeting itself, but those aircraft are rare indeed.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Happy 3rd Birthday MalaysianWings

Our aviation forum MalaysianWings recently celebrates our third anniversary. There was a meeting / spotting session on Saturday 28th of June in KLIA and ATC tower visit on Monday June 30th.

I was unable to attend the spotting session on Saturday as I was in BKI that day, but was able to join the tower visit. It was an nice thing to be up there and seeing those people I talk to all the time through the aircraft radio. Thanks DCA for the oportunity.

For further comments and picture log in to the MalaysianWings forum......

Thursday, June 26, 2008

My car for sale

After over 5 years it is time to get refreshed. My Proton Satria GTi is now for sale.



I am asking for RM40k for this 2003 model. It was a second car, with only 42000 km on the odometer. It is generally in good condition.

I'm getting a more practical second car, a Toyota Vios to supplement the Toyota Camry.




Note: SOLD! Looks like the car will move to Terengganu....

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Malaysia Airlines to replace the B737-400 with B737-800

It was reported quite a few months ago that MH will replace the B734 with B738, with the B739 as a possible option.

A good move. For us spotters, there will be more variety as AirAsia (AK) has over 100 A320 on order, with almost 40 delivered. Also, that closed the possibilities of AK trying to sell their surplus A320 to MH. Given their political connection, that has always been a possibility, and f that happens someone will make a tidy sum of money, at taxpayer and MHs employees and passangers' expenses, of course.

MH used to wet-lease 2 B738 from Travel Services in 2006 as their long-range narrow-body program. The lease lasts only for about 3 months. The aircraft were OK-TVC and OK-TVD.

Anyway, many airlines has been operating the B738 to KUL.

This is a Hong Kong Airlines B738, photographed in KUL this morning. Over the years I've photographed quite a number of this type, in KUL as well as in other stations. This is my collection of B738 on Airliners.net.

Click here for more info on the B738.

Malaysia Airlines B737 seats

They used to look like this for business class. Then they changed to the purple seats and now they're changing again to bright red seats.

For the economy class, the classy-looking greenish seats is being progressively changed to a mixture of colors.

Some people lik it. I don't. What do you think?

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Of fuel price and related items

So petrol price has been increased to RM2.70 per liter.

Is it fair? Depends. Not in the current situation. Actually I don't mind paying market rate for petrol. The problem is that I don't pay market rate for cars, the tax is too high and the road tax is just plain illogical.

If I have my way, I'd go with a token amount of tax for cars, maybe 10% of the selling price. Road tax should be abolished and replaced by fuel tax. Our current road tax is not fair because it is based on engine capacity. I'd say it better be based on fuel consumption. So those who use more petrol should pay more, not those who happens to have a "big" capacity engine. A fuel guzzler should pay more, not subsidized more. Those who owns big capacity-engined cars are not necessarily rich and those driving cars below 2000 cc are not necessarily of lower income. Compare between a 10 years old Camry or Accord against Mercedes-Benz C200K or BMW 318i.

Of similar note, the RM625 rebate given by the government for cars below 2000 cc (or 2500 cc for pickups) is one of the most unfair and stupid decision made by the current government recently. Again, poor people drive a MB C200K, rich men drive a Camry 2.2?

Somebody must be sleeping.....

Intro

Something about myself.

My name is Mohamad Radzi Desa. I am a B737 pilot with Malaysia Airlines, being a captain on the B737-400 fleet since 2000. Yes, it has been a long time but I still enjoy the hectic life of the B737. I would like to go to a widebody fleet but....

A330: I don't like the flight pattern.
B777: No vacancy.
B747: Nice fleet for now, but in a few years it will be a purely cargo fleet. Been there once (on the B742), and once is enough.

My hobby is photography. Namely, aviation and macro photography. I am not good at photographing people.

For aviation photos, you can see my works at Airliners.net and Jetphotos.net. My macro works can be seen at Flickr.

That's all for now.....