For over four decades I have been a rail and bus photographer.
However, during this time I have aimed the lens at other subjects, be they different transportation, scenery, buildings and other bollocks.
Given these do not really fit the scope of my other sites, I felt compelled to set up a new site so as to inflict my other photographic garbage upon the world.
While primarily Philippine and Australian content, there will be the occasional forays into Fiji and Hong Kong. Perhaps other locations should the current pandemic ever allow it.
So sit back and enjoy, or hate, even be indifferent. That choice is purely up to you.

Official Home Of the 'Brad N Virls Adventure Series' - Images are copyright, so contact us if you would like to use any photos on your site/video! (We don't bite)


Tuesday, 26 August 2025

EASTLAKE DEMOLITION COVERAGE - COMING SOON

 

The Redevelopment Of The Old Eastlakes Shopping Centre.

Following on from the closure of Woolworths, and as such the whole mall, I've had the desire to cover the whole process as the site is transformed into a modern retail and residential complex.

Video coverage on my YouTube channel here.

Rather that a hundred endless posts covering each visit, the aim is to include numerous visits over a few blog entries, looking at the amazing changes along the way.

Stay Tuned.

Eastlakes Shopping Centre - 2021

The Grand Eastlakes

The New Foodt3pp Filipino Store





Tuesday, 5 August 2025

RANDOM PHILIPPINE AVIATION GUFF - 90s TILL TODAY

 



Greetings, ladies, gents, and miscellaneous upright-walking life forms,

Over the years, I’ve managed to accumulate a rather unhealthy number of aviation photos from my many jaunts to the Philippines. It turns out that snapping planes, while enduring mindless automatons (security guards), on an airport perimeter fence is a hobby. Who knew?

Now, here's the problem: these photos span over a decade of trips, and organizing them all by date is roughly as fun as herding cats with commitment issues. Still, I figured it's time to put all this guff onto the internet — if only to justify the amount of storage space they’ve consumed and to entertain you for a few minutes.

Full disclosure: I am not an aviation photographer. My natural habitat involves trains, train stations, and occasionally cursing at delayed departures. I can tell an Airbus from a Boeing (usually), and I’m reasonably confident helicopters are the loud ones that hover. Beyond that, I wouldn’t recommend asking me technical questions unless you're looking for wildly speculative answers or creative lies.

Anyway, with that disclaimer out of the way, brace yourself for an onslaught of airplane photos. This series will be delivered in several gloriously average installments, brought to you courtesy of my fifteen (yes, fifteen) trips to the ever-intriguing, occasionally chaotic, always photogenic archipelago known as the Philippines.

You’ve been warned.

Oh, and note that all these shots were at the 'Manila International Airport', or 'Ninoy Aquino International Airport' if you feel a need to use that name.


A wonderful greeting seen by thousands of passengers arriving at the airport in Manila.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Above and below.
Philippine Airlines - A330-300 - RP-C3331
Now scrapped.
According to planespotters.net on May 25th 2000 an armed man attempted to hijack the plane and tried to force it's return to Davao.
  When the pilots refused, he demanded they lower their altitude so he could jump out. He did so, but his homemade parachute failed and he fell to his splattering end.
Photos: Brad Peadon



Cathay Pacific - B777-300ER - B-KPD
Still active with Cathay Pacific.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Philippine Airlines - A330-300 - B-KPD
Now scrapped.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Malaysian Airlines - B737-800 - 9M-MLG
Now with Firefly, the airline not the sci-fi series.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Tiger Airways - A320-200 - 9V-TAQ
2013: Became Tigerair.
2017: To Scoot until withdrawn in 2020.
2020: Stored briefly in Alice Springs, then Singapore.
Now scrapped (2014).
Photo: Brad Peadon


Cathay Pacific - B747-400 - B-HOY
2013: Withdrawn and ferried to the USA for scrapping.
Now scrapped.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Eva Air - B747-400M - B-16403
Now scrapped (2014 Victorville).
Photo: Brad Peadon


Korean Air - B777-300 - HL-7533
Still active at 26 years old.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Philippine Airlines - A319-100 - RP-C8603
2015: To Aurora Airlines in Russia.
2021: CBD Aviation in China.
Now scrapped (2021).
Photo: Brad Peadon


Asiana Airlines - B767-300 - B-KPD
2022: ANA Trading Corporation
Now stored at Victorville.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Thai Airways - A330-300 - HS-TEB
2015: Withdrawn and stored.
Now scrapped (2020 in USA).
Photo: Brad Peadon


Cebu Pacific - ATR 72 - RP-C7258
Only 8 months old at time of photograph.
2015: Cebgo
2015: Cebu Pacific operated by Cebgo.
2023: Hi Air (South Korea).
Stored 5 month later and still listed as such.
Now scrapped.
Photo: Brad Peadon


A fuel truck.
That's all I have for you on this.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Cebu Pacific - A320neo - RP-C3239
Currently listed as parked and only 6.2 years old.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Sunlight Air - ATR 72 - RP-C6638
2001: New to Bangkok Airways.
2018: ATRiam Capital (France)
2019: Sunlight Air (Philippines)
Now listed as stored at Clark.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Cebu Pathetic - ATR 72 - RP-C7284
Still in service and operated by Cebgo.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Cebu Pathetic - A320neo - RP-C4159
2023: Avolon (Ireland)
2023: Cebu Pacific
2025: Listed as stored in Alice Springs.
Photo: Brad Peadon


AirSWIFT - ATR 72-212A - RP-C7202
2018: Delivered
Still in use.
Photo: Brad Peadon

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Video Above: Planes of Taguig in Manila.
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Onyo Artocillo, Royce Paglinawan, Kuya Pia, David Xuereb.
& the usual idiotic security guards.

planespotters.net