Here is the unglamorous side of car life in Hong Kong: you need a plan for where the car sleeps and how it moves. Parking is the linchpin. If your building has resident spaces, great; if not, scout nearby car parks, office towers, and estate lots for monthly options. Factor commute patterns too: a space near home and a daily rush-hour hunt near the office is a recipe for stress.
EVs are everywhere lately, and Hong Kong’s dense layout can actually suit them well. Short urban trips make efficient use of batteries, and regenerative braking thrives on stop-and-go traffic. But the real question is charging. If you have a reserved space with reliable power, an EV can be a dream. For apartment living without guaranteed charging, look at your neighborhood’s public options and how often you really drive. The convenience gap between home charging and public queues is what decides satisfaction, not the brochure range number.
Use “conduire” to drive and “rouler” to talk about moving along: “Je conduis,” “On roule a 90,” “Ca roule ?” (All good?). To choose the car over other options, say “prendre la voiture”: “On prend la voiture demain matin.” Parking verbs come in two flavors: “se garer” is common, “stationner” is more formal or appears on signs. “Je me gare ici” vs “Stationnement interdit.” If you are low on fuel: “faire le plein” (to fill up), “mettre de l’essence” (to put gas), “diesel/gazole” for diesel. Breaking down is “tomber en panne,” and roadside assistance is “depannage.”
You do not need to chase the most expensive bottle on the shelf, but you should buy oil that meets your car’s required spec and viscosity. Check the manual for approvals and look for them on the label. Buying by the jug is usually cheaper than quarts. Keep a spare quart in the trunk for road trips, and label open containers with the date so you use them first. Mixing different brands is fine for topping off if the viscosity and specs match, but for a full change, stick to one product. Do not forget the filter; a reputable filter with the correct bypass setting matters as much as the oil. After your change, pour used oil into a clean, sealed container and take it to a recycling drop off or auto parts store. Never dump it. Track your mileage and dates in your phone or a glovebox note so you do not guess at intervals. The goal is simple: use the right oil, change it at the right time, and dispose of it responsibly.
Think of engine oil as the unsung hero under your hood. It does way more than just make parts slippery. First, it lubricates thousands of fast moving metal surfaces so they do not grind themselves into metal glitter. Second, it carries heat away from hot spots that coolant barely touches, helping prevent damaging hot spots and knock. Oil also suspends soot and microscopic debris so the filter can catch it, and it leaves a thin protective film that fights rust and corrosion when your car sits. It even helps seal tiny gaps between piston rings and cylinder walls, preserving compression and power. That is a lot of jobs for one fluid, which is why running low or letting it degrade is costly. If the oil light flashes, that is a low pressure warning, not a friendly reminder, and you should shut the engine down immediately. Keep in mind the filter is part of the system too. A tired filter can bypass and let junk circulate. Take care of both and your engine pays you back with smooth, quiet miles.
Mercari keeps the headline structure simple. In the U.S., there is typically no listing fee, but you pay a selling fee plus a payment processing fee when your item sells. At the time of writing, the standard selling fee is 10% of the sale price. On top of that, Mercari adds a payment processing fee (commonly 2.9% of the sale price plus a small fixed amount per transaction, e.g., $0.50). Shipping is separate: you can choose to pay for shipping yourself or have the buyer pay it, and Mercari offers discounted labels if you ship through them. Your payout options also matter: standard bank transfers are usually free above a minimum threshold, while faster withdrawals (instant pay) may carry a small fee. The overall result is predictable for nationwide shipping: expect roughly the platform and processing fees on the sale price, plus whatever you spend on shipping supplies if you cover shipping. For most sellers, the transparency is a plus—your net is relatively easy to estimate right from the listing.