Tesla imeisha tokens.

But now whats the point? This is alot of work.

Alafu izimiikie pale Kinare Forest Saa tatu usiku.... Teren.. Teren
hehehe, hii haitaki zile trips za "nilitoka kununua gazeti asubuhi saa hii niko Vasha" Hii inataka upange your trips with a calculator

wait Chinese make cheap knock offs
this is the technology that will enable mchinku become a major player in the auto industry. Their government imeshika mkono hiyo industry vilivyo

It gives you warning and the distance it can cover to nearest gas station !
but kenya hakuna network ya charging stations
 
My friend it was featured in a local TV station and the owner is doing tax business, Kenyan are great !
They changed a Toyota into a Tesla? Are you for real?




Tech
[Video] Kenya’s First Fully Electric Land Cruisers


8def39df1e8439e70fef0fb89043903e




By
Teddy Munene


Published
March 12, 2019 - 10:44

Elbilar-Kenya-1-1.jpg

A group of Linköping University students working at a new company in Nairobi have been converting exiting safari vehicles into fully electric, solar powered automobiles able to silently roam in the jungle and get tourists closer to the wildlife than ever before.
Led by Filip Lövström who is studying Energy – Environment – Management (EMM), a master’s programme in engineering at Linköping, OpiBus is a company that is fast rising and now has a work force of over 20 persons, majority of which are Kenyans.
“We’re not trying to ‘save the world’. People’s view of many parts of Africa is deep-rooted; we don’t want to uphold the idea that the locals have to be saved. We’re building up a serious company, and the safari parks are very interested in what we’re doing. The region in general has a huge growth potential that rarely gets any attention. The safari parks see the investment in electric vehicles as a natural step, and we already have several customers booked.”, says Filip Lövström.
Screenshot_20190312_131338.jpg

The company removes the diesel engines and all the parts that are related to internal combustion drive then install pre-assembled boxes that contain all the components for electric drive.
The result is a fully electric safari Land Cruiser like the one below.
IMG_20190312_131038.jpg

IMG_20190312_131039.jpg

IMG_20190312_131040.jpg

Although their activities are currently limited to Kenya, the group plans to expand this technology to other East African nations in the coming years.
Here is a video below courtesy of BBC.


<iframe width="400" height="500" frameborder="0" src=""></iframe>

 
Tech
[Video] Kenya’s First Fully Electric Land Cruisers


8def39df1e8439e70fef0fb89043903e




By
Teddy Munene


Published
March 12, 2019 - 10:44

Elbilar-Kenya-1-1.jpg

A group of Linköping University students working at a new company in Nairobi have been converting exiting safari vehicles into fully electric, solar powered automobiles able to silently roam in the jungle and get tourists closer to the wildlife than ever before.
Led by Filip Lövström who is studying Energy – Environment – Management (EMM), a master’s programme in engineering at Linköping, OpiBus is a company that is fast rising and now has a work force of over 20 persons, majority of which are Kenyans.
“We’re not trying to ‘save the world’. People’s view of many parts of Africa is deep-rooted; we don’t want to uphold the idea that the locals have to be saved. We’re building up a serious company, and the safari parks are very interested in what we’re doing. The region in general has a huge growth potential that rarely gets any attention. The safari parks see the investment in electric vehicles as a natural step, and we already have several customers booked.”, says Filip Lövström.
Screenshot_20190312_131338.jpg

The company removes the diesel engines and all the parts that are related to internal combustion drive then install pre-assembled boxes that contain all the components for electric drive.
The result is a fully electric safari Land Cruiser like the one below.
IMG_20190312_131038.jpg

IMG_20190312_131039.jpg

IMG_20190312_131040.jpg

Although their activities are currently limited to Kenya, the group plans to expand this technology to other East African nations in the coming years.
Here is a video below courtesy of BBC.


<iframe width="400" height="500" frameborder="0" src=""></iframe>


Listen or read here! My contention is the assertion by @Kasaman that they converted a Toyota into aTesla. No they didn't. They converted a diesel engine Toyota into a Toyota electric car.
 
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