





9Abu Shantah scooter for sale, located in Al-Darab. First of all, you good people must be wondering why I said 'rare first-class scooter'? Yes, rare and first-class—I dare you to find another one like this with the same features. Read carefully: I repaired it thoroughly. First, I fixed the carburetor for 100 SAR. Second, I repaired the dynamo for 300 SAR. Third, I fixed the gearbox. Fourth, I bought a strong headlight for an Abu Sallah scooter—powerful lighting, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't—but I spent 100 SAR on the light and floor mat of the scooter. The floor mat is waterproof; even if it rains, I can ride normally without any damage. It's sealed and protected with cardboard, except in one case: I already spent 1,000 SAR repairing it. Then I also repaired the charger housing and the charger that connects to the battery, and I bought a new charger. These repairs cost me 200 SAR—yes, 200 SAR in cash only. Plus, whoever buys it will get a gift: 10 free American stickers to attach to the scooter wherever they want. Exactly, completely free. But I'm telling you, knowing full well there isn't another scooter like this in terms of specifications, and worth repairing at this price and condition. And here are its features: I listed it on Haraj—you can go check yourselves and confirm the bids. The bidding started at: 100 200 350 650 1,000 1,100 Bids reached 1,150 SAR—from 100 up to 1,150 SAR. I don't care about the price; I just want someone from Al-Samal to make me an offer, and I'll decide whether I like it or not, because honestly I've already spent 1,000 SAR on it. And secondly, you can see how well-maintained this scooter is—it's pampered, as if it's brand new. People know others who buy scooters just to load cylinders on them—five gas cylinders, piling them up like junk. But this scooter? No way. I went to the nearest store—our grocer is just one minute away from home—and its speed? I forgot to mention, it reaches 100 km/h. Yes. And its charger is fast—takes no more than four hours, maybe three, to fully charge, and lasts long enough to complete your journey. You can travel long distances without it shutting down. Consider it like a car. What do you have? Even in terms of work—how reliable is it? If it shuts down on you on the road, what do you do? Just stop at the nearest shop nearby, no matter which one, have them charge it, then keep going. These features make this scooter legendary. With us today was Abu Safiq, but I meant Abu Shantah—sorry. We hope only Al-Samal comes forward. And you've seen the bids reached 1,100 SAR. So give me a decent price. Everyone place your bid, and I'll choose whoever offers a price I like. I'll say: 'Welcome, may God protect you.' He'll come with two keys—two ignition keys and one key for the bag compartment—but one special part on the floor is broken. Bring it along if he wants to install it himself, fine. And the seat is heat-resistant—yes, impossible to get soaked or damaged by water. Water won't damage it, I swear—even if gasoline spills on it, it won't break. Peace be upon you.
