Rubber is great when a car is new. It isolates noise, smooths out small bumps, and keeps costs low. Over time, though, rubber gets tired. Heat, oil, and ozone harden it, then it cracks and squishes out of shape. Polyurethane holds up better, especially in parts that flex constantly, like sway bar bushings and shifter bushings. The headline benefit is control. Firmer bushings reduce unwanted movement, so the suspension and drivetrain do what you ask, not what worn rubber allows.
If you are polyU-curious but not ready to press bushings all weekend, start with low-drama swaps that deliver high payoff. Sway bar bushings are an easy win: measure your bar diameter, grab polyurethane bushings with the right internal size, use the supplied silicone-compatible grease, and torque the brackets properly. The result is an immediate reduction in body roll delay and a crisp initial turn-in feel. End links with polyU inserts are another quick job that reinforces that effect.
Book early for peak seasons like school holidays, summer, and long weekends; inventory tightens fast in smaller towns and islands. Airport pickup is convenient but often pricier; compare with downtown depots if your timing allows. Australia sells unleaded (often 91 or E10), premium grades, and diesel; check your fuel cap label and keep the receipt from your final refill. In remote areas, stations can be far apart or close early, so top up sooner than later. Download offline maps, because reception drops outside cities, and carry a paper map if you are going bush. Check that the spare tire, jack, and tools are present; ask about roadside assistance. For 4WD or gravel routes, lower speeds, avoid driving in heavy rain, and never cross flooded roads. Sun is fierce year-round: bring water, sunscreen, and a hat for even short stops. Be patient with parking rules and speed cameras; they are strict and common. If you rent an EV, plan charging stops with an app and keep a buffer in case a site is busy. On return day, allow extra time for traffic, queues, and a quick wash if the car is dusty.
Australia rewards curiosity, and a rental car is the easiest way to follow it. Trains and buses connect the big cities, but once you want to detour to a beach cove, a trailhead in the hinterland, or a cellar door down a country lane, you will be glad you have your own wheels. Distances are real here, yet roads are well maintained and signage is clear, so a road trip feels straightforward as long as you plan your legs. A car buys you sunrise at a headland, unhurried lunch in a small town bakery, and the freedom to stop when a lookout appears around the bend. Families get trunk space and car-seat options, couples get flexibility, and solo travelers get control over time and rhythm. If you are chasing seasonal moments, like wildflowers in Western Australia or whale migrations on the east coast, driving lets you adapt with the weather. The trade-off is responsibility: you will need to factor in fatigue, fuel, and long stretches with limited services. With that in mind, renting is often the sweet spot between convenience and adventure.
Buyers convert when delivery is easy. Offer multiple options by default: tracked shipping, a popular locker network, and 1–2 public meet-up spots near transit. Spell out costs and timelines clearly in the listing so there is no guesswork. For shipping, pack like it will be tossed: bubble wrap, corner guards, taped seams, and a quick photo of the box before handoff. Share the tracking code promptly in chat and mark as mailed within the app to trigger buyer confidence and any protection features.
Maximize every buyer touch. Organize your shop into mini-collections (streetwear sizes M–L, Switch games under $20, mid-century decor) and link related items in each description. Offer bundle deals with simple rules: Buy any 2, save 10%; any 3+, save 15%. Include small add-ons that improve the main purchase (screen protectors, cables, hangers, plant pots). In chat, propose a ready-made bundle with the discounted total so the buyer only has to say yes. After a sale, send a short thank-you message with care tips and a gentle ask for a review; good reviews compound future sales.
Nothing ages faster than a car that’s uncomfortable. Put seats high on your car28 list: you want supportive bolsters, adjustable lumbar that hits the right spot, and headrests that don’t push your neck forward. Check the driving position; can you rest your elbows naturally and see the road without hunching? Ride quality matters more than you think—tune for the roads you actually drive, not just a smooth test loop. A quieter cabin with good sound insulation is worth it on every commute.