I was sitting on the couch last night and realized that it would be 3 years ago today (that is, today's today, not yesterday's today, which today would be yesterday) the Little Blue Go Kart arrived in my driveway, 192 miles on the odometer and gleaming Eternal Blue. As of today, 38,843 miles read on the odometer as it sits outside in the parking lot of the office I now go to, on average, once a week. Another oil change was done at 35,000 back in April...for those keeping track that means 5,000 miles put on it between last September and this April. Back in 2018 when I signed the papers, I was banging on that many miles every fiscal quarter.
After 3 years, I'm averaging 36.6 mpg over 121 fill ups. Average fuel cost per mile is 6.6 cents. One unscheduled maintenance activity, that failed front wheel bearing, covered under warranty.
Well, until a few weeks ago. I was traveling for work, perusing southern Georgia, and happened to notice I'd picked up a hitchhiker.
Well, shoot. The OEM tires were getting pretty thin, and I'd planned on replacing them before this coming winter anyway. Unfortunately, I was in a little town in rural GA with 3 tire shops, all of which had plenty of options for big honking truck tires but not so much for the 205/60R16 roller skates my little sporty car wears. I was 700 miles from home, so the factory donut wasn't going to cut it, and there was no way I was going to patch a sidewall puncture and trust it at 80 mph on the interstate. So I punted, found the cheapest single tire (Mastercraft!) anyone had in stock, and had them toss it on.
I mean, it's fine. It's round, black, and holds air. I may buy another OEM wheel when I get the new tires, and just keep this one as a full-size spare. I'll have to see if it'll fit in the spare tire cavity under the hatch floor. That wheel had a bit of curb rash on it, anyway.
When I got home, I decided to deal with the notice the MVA had sent me in the mail. 3 years- time for the first emissions test. Luckily, Maryland makes this super easy for modern cars. You drive up to the self-service kiosk, dip your card, hook up the cable to the OBDII port, and the computer spits you out a report. $10 and 10 minutes later, I was passed and out of there. It was really convenient that the kiosk was open 24/7, meaning I could take care of it before work.
It really has been a great car. Short trips or long hauls, just me or the entire family, or loaded up with chicken feed, garden supplies, and paint. Hauling transmissions for the LeMons car or lumber for the garage or pipe for an emergency plumbing repair. The interior is dirty but holding up well (I've been meaning to take it in for a good detail one of these days; I tend to vacuum it out every few months but it could use some more attention) and so far it's incurred 2 small dings and 3 scratches- two of which were the result of children riding their bicycles too close to it. It gets a bath every few months as well; again it's probably well overdue for an exterior detail.
In 2 years it'll be fully paid off, and as of now I've no intention of replacing it. My biggest decision right now is what new tires to get for it. I'm leaning towards something like a Grand Touring deal from Michelin, or possibly Pirelli. Something quiet, good-wearing, and a little stickier than stock. Fuel economy may suffer; I don't really care. These OEM Bridgestone Ecopia LRRs are...fine...but if I'm going to keep this car, I want something I'm confident in.