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.
Owning or accessing a car in Hong Kong really pays off when you use it intentionally. Early-morning drives to Shek O or Big Wave Bay with boards and buddies, late-night returns from the airport with heavy luggage, or spontaneous detours to a new cha chaan teng out in the New Territories become easy. Family life also gets simpler when you can bundle school runs, groceries, and weekend activities into a single loop without watching bus timetables.
A few small rules go a long way. Gender first: “voiture” is feminine, so adjectives agree. Say “une vieille voiture,” not “un vieux voiture.” In the plural with a preceding adjective, “des” often becomes “de”: “de vieilles voitures.” Articles matter with prepositions: “aller en voiture” (to go by car), “monter dans la voiture” (to get in), “descendre de la voiture” (to get out). To leave the car somewhere, “laisser la voiture” works fine: “Je laisse la voiture au parking.”
At the rental desk: “Je voudrais louer une voiture,” “Vous avez une automatique ?,” “Quel est le prix par jour ?,” “L’assurance est incluse ?,” “Je rends la voiture dimanche.” Parking and charging: “Ou puis-je me garer ?,” “C’est payant ?,” “Ou sont les bornes de recharge ?,” “Je peux recharger ici ?” On the road: “Quelle est la limite de vitesse ?,” “Y a-t-il des peages ?,” “Comment aller a la prochaine sortie ?” Emergencies: “J’ai eu un accident,” “Ma voiture ne demarre pas,” “J’ai creve un pneu,” “Pouvez-vous appeler une depanneuse ?”
Viscosity is a fancy word for thickness, and those numbers on the bottle tell you how thick oil is at cold and hot temperatures. In 5W-30, the 5W rating describes cold flow in winter conditions, and the 30 describes hot operating viscosity once the engine is warmed up. Lower first numbers mean easier cranking and faster oil flow on cold starts, which is when most wear happens. The second number matters for protection at temperature; too thin and you may not maintain a strong film, too thick and you waste fuel and slow circulation. This is why you should follow what the manufacturer specifies on the oil cap or in the manual. Modern engines with tight clearances and variable valve timing often call for 0W-20 or 5W-30. Older or high performance engines may need 5W-40 or 10W-30. Climate and driving style play a role, but the safe move is to use the recommended grade and make sure it meets the required approvals listed for your engine.
Conventional oil comes from refined crude. It works fine in many cases, but it can break down faster at high heat and thicken more in cold weather. Synthetic oil is engineered for stability, with more uniform molecules that resist oxidation, keep their viscosity across a wider temperature range, and flow faster on cold starts. That is why many modern engines, especially turbocharged ones, require full synthetic. A synthetic blend splits the difference and may offer better protection than conventional at a lower price than full synthetic. High mileage oils include seal conditioners to help older engines minimize small leaks and reduce consumption, plus a slightly beefier additive pack to clean and protect. None of these categories is a magic cure, but the right match prevents problems. If your car calls for synthetic, stick with it. If it is older and leaves a spot on the driveway, a high mileage synthetic or blend can help. Above all, make sure the oil meets the specs the manufacturer requires for your engine and emissions system.
Carousell started as a hyper-local marketplace where you snap, list, and meet up to trade—often with no platform fee on cash meetups. Over time, Carousell added Carousell Protection, an escrow-style checkout that lets buyers pay in-app and receive delivery, which makes long-distance deals safer. That convenience comes with a transaction fee paid by the seller, and the exact rate depends on your country and sometimes the category. In many markets, think of it as a small percentage of the sale price (often a low single-digit percent) and sometimes a small fixed component; but the specifics can vary. Some categories (like Cars, Property, or Jobs) may involve listing or success fees that are separate from ordinary item sales. Carousell also leans on paid visibility—Bumps, Spotlight, and subscription tools like CarouBiz—to help your listings stand out. Those are optional marketing costs, not transaction fees, but they can become part of your real cost of sale if you rely on them. Bottom line: Carousell can be fee-light for local cash deals, but escrow-and-ship sales introduce variable platform fees by market.
Let’s pressure-test the fee structures with three common cases. For a low-priced item (say, a $30 top), Mercari’s fees scale with price: 10% selling fee plus payment processing, so you are down a few dollars before shipping. If you offer free shipping, that cost further eats into a small margin. On Carousell, a meetup sale may net the full $30 (no platform fee), but if you use Carousell Protection and ship, you will lose a small percentage (and any fixed component) plus shipping. On a midrange gadget around $120, Mercari remains predictable—your fees are proportional to price. On Carousell, the percent fee still applies if you use Protection, but a face-to-face deal could still be fee-free. For a $600 premium item, the difference can widen. Mercari’s percentage fees grow with the ticket size, while Carousell Protection still charges a percent (and possibly a cap in some markets), but local, in-person deals could again be fee-free. The practical takeaway: Carousell rewards local meetups; Mercari rewards shipping reach with predictable costs.