I thought I had my daily driver all figured out. I kicked the tires and read the reviews and finally took the plunge - I bought my newest, most expensive car to date, a 2018 Fiat 124 Spider. Up until this moment I spent 10 years driving a Saturn Astra. Not exactly a penalty box, but I've putting off treating myself to a truly special driver's car for far too long. And what's not to love about the Fiat Spider? It's a Mazda-built ND Miata with retro Italian styling, a torquey turbo engine, incredible exhaust note, and it comes in colors other than red! But after 5 months of enjoying this saucy gorgeous European model, our love turned sour. Her Fiat-sourced heart had a few too many flaws, and she found herself spending too much time with Tony down at the dealership. You can read all about those woes in my other thread. Needless to say, we will be breaking it off soon.
With the Fiat unable to fulfill my basic needs of getting to work, I needed something dependable, and right now. Sure, my classic El Camino and equally classic Honda CB motorcycle could fill the void, but for how long could I stand that? 50 miles of commute on I-285 in Atlanta during the summer is hard on both of those vehicles, and me. While waiting on AAA to take custody of my soon-to-be ex-car, I came across this Saturn SC2 on our own GRM Forum classifieds.
No, that's not an Eagle Talon, or a Hyundai Veloster, or an extended-cab pickup. It's the last true Saturn - the final year of the S-series before GM muddled up the short-lived unique division. This example even has the one-year-only burnt orange paint. It's got 222k miles, but the owner's father was a 15+ year Saturn technician who cared for it very well. Just look at that interior. It's also lowered on Eibach springs and KYB shocks, wearing 17x7 Advanti Storms with BFG Rivals. Honestly it handles pretty darn well near the limit, which is admittedly not hard to reach. Along with it comes an entire basement full of spare parts, including every body panel in much better condition paint of the same color (not yet picked up), and the best part: a paint-matched period-correct tuner body kit, never installed.
All this for only $1900. You know what that means...it is destined for the GRM $2000 Challenge this October.
But for now, this Saturn will fill the void while I wait on Tony to fix my Fiat (again), then sell that car, then decide what to replace it with. That doesn't mean I can't have some fun with this summer fling.