I’m finally fulfilling a dream I’ve had since I was 15 years old. When I was a teen, I dreamed of driving around Lake Michigan top-down in a Smart Fortwo Cabriolet. Somehow, despite owning five of these cars and having been a big part of the U.S. Smart community for the past 16 years, none of my cars are actually my teenage holy grail.
It’s time I changed that. I just committed to buying a 2009 Smart Fortwo Cabriolet all the way down in Florida after seeing nothing more than a few pictures. Now, I’m going to drive it over 17 hours home this weekend.
I’ve been going through my expansive car roster and losing the cars that really aren’t “doing it” for me anymore. I sold my holy grail camper, the U-Haul CT13. Then I got rid of my trusty six-speed manual Volkswagen Jetta SportWagen TDI. Less than 12 hours after that, I sold my Volkswagen Phaeton. I even sold my rock, the Volkswagen Touareg VR6.
I’m not done selling things yet, but moving forward I’m only keeping my dream cars and vehicles of practical use to me. The Volkswagen Touareg V10 TDI isn’t going anywhere, and neither is my Saturn Sky Red Line – but my second Jetta SportWagen TDI remains on the chopping block.
So, what am I doing buying a Smart Fortwo across the country? Don’t I already have five of those?
As some of you already know, I fell in love with the Smart Fortwo in 2008 when I was 15 years old. It was entirely by accident, too. My dad had either broken or wrecked his Ford Ranger and my mom heard of these new “smart cars” that were supposed to be a cheap way of getting around. In my head were images of cars that drove themselves or something. After all, “smart” in 2008 meant something like the new world of smartphones and other high-tech devices.
Instead, what I got was a tiny plastic car. Smart Center Lake Bluff, Illinois was an experience I hadn’t seen before. The showroom was assembled like an art gallery and the salesman was dressed in a suit. I’m not talking about the cheap kind of suits you’ll see at a dealership, but a suit you might wear to a gala.
I loved every Smart on the floor. Teenage me was obsessed with how Mercedes-Benz fit all the components of a real car into something that could fit in a broom closet. But Mercedes also didn’t stop there. These cars sported plastic panels like the Saturns of my childhood and they were bold in color both inside and outside. I was fascinated with how Smart covered the whole interior in fabric, I loved the full polycarbonate roofs of the Passion Coupes, and I thought the Tridion Cell was brilliant. It was a safety cage but also a prominent design element. That’s so cool!
I went home with a brochure that day and within maybe a week I had it memorized front to back. I went back to school talking about the 999cc Mitsubishi engine and its ravenous output of 70 HP. I talked about how Fifth Gear slammed an earlier model into a concrete barrier at 70 mph. I was teased relentlessly, but I never gave up my dream of owning one. I even had a Smart shrine sort of thing:
I’ve always had two dream Smarts in my head. The first was a Passion Coupe with red panels, a silver safety cell, and a red interior. I then had the fantasy of having the safety cell wrapped in chrome, because why not. My other dream Smart was a Passion Cabriolet with blue panels, a beige interior, and a silver safety cell.
Smart Center Lake Bluff let me drive that very car in 2009. My heart melted.
I’ve been on the hunt for that feeling ever since then. My first-ever Smart was a brand new 2012 Passion Coupe that I still have in my possession today. It wasn’t my red car, but as it turns out, I adore the sky blue even more.
Then I got a fantastic first-generation 2005 Smart Fortwo Passion Coupe for free. Things got weird in 2016 when the 2012 caught fire and I thought it was a goner. My network of friends in the Smart world helped me score a new 2016 Smart Fortwo Edition #1, and I’ve cherished that car ever since. From there, I’ve also picked up my dream Canadian diesel Smart as well as a beater Smart that I use off-road.
Yet, you’ll note that none of those are convertibles. I tried to fulfill my convertible dream in 2018 by buying a 2005 Smart Fortwo Cabriolet sight unseen from a guy in Pennsylvania. Unfortunately, the car was far more of a project than described and it survived literally just two drives before the transmission tore itself apart. I got my dream and lost it in the span of a week. I kept throwing parts at the car, too, but it just wouldn’t drive.
I haven’t stopped searching for my holy grail Smart. Unfortunately, the world of Smarts changed during the pandemic. It used to be that the majority of Smarts for sale all had low miles and a seller was lucky to get more than maybe $6,000 for one. A high-mile Smart was lucky to clear more than $2,500. It’s how I got my 2008 off-road beater Smart for just $1,400 with 100,000 miles.
Then Covid struck, and Smart prices went up – so did the miles. Now people want $5,000 for a car with high miles or even damage, and it’s honestly frustrating. It seems like there was a point when subsequent owners, maybe the third or fourth owners, put tons of miles on these little cars. So now, I’m finding more Smarts with high miles than Smarts with low miles. It’s great to have tons of proof that Smarts are durable cars, but I’m not paying 5 large for a Smart with over 100,000 miles.
So, I’ve been searching for years for a unicorn. I want a second-generation Smart Fortwo with a convertible top, well-optioned, under 70,000 miles, and a price of no more than around $5,500, just like before the pandemic.
Cars like these are few and far between. I’ve found plenty of cars for the price, but most of them weren’t convertibles. The convertibles I did find either had too many miles, too few options, or some glaring issue I didn’t want to fix. Or, their sellers were just unresponsive.
While Smarts are mechanically good cars, their bodies don’t always follow suit. Remember how I said I loved the 2008’s red and blue colors? Well, Smart was bad at making red, blue, and yellow. Cars with panels in these colors often suffer from catastrophic clearcoat and paint failure, making an otherwise good car look like a junker. So, I’ve had to forget about getting one in my teenage dream colors.
The fabric interiors also don’t appear to age well, as you can see above. The tops of the dashboards fade under the sun and the seats seemingly get permanent stains too easily. So, many of the cars with my favorite red or beige interiors now look quite dingy. To make matters worse, the convertible tops are known for shrinking and failing over time, so there’s an increasing number of Smart convertibles out there that have been “converted” into coupes.
My search for perfection has led me to pass up on so many Smarts. Honestly, I’ve lost count. I came really close with a Smart with black panels, 70,000 miles, a silver safety cell, and a red interior with only very little staining for just $3,800. I passed on it because its convertible top had a bent bow. In hindsight, I could have fixed that.
I also came somewhat close last weekend when I looked at a $6,000 convertible with 50,000 miles that appeared to have new red paint and a perfect red interior. All I had to do was remove all of the bits I didn’t want, like the chrome and that “SPORTS” decal:
As it turned out, the “paint” was actually a poorly applied wrap hiding failed red panels underneath. And the interior was rougher than the pictures suggested. Smart panels are extraordinarily rare in the U.S. nowadays, so whoever buys this car will be stuck with wrapped panels and bad paint.
Then I found what I thought was the grail, a fully-optioned Cabriolet with just 46,000 miles over on Florida’s Longboat Key. It had some rust challenges, including having its brake lines replaced due to the salty air, but it was in otherwise better shape than most Smarts up north. Unfortunately, that car will end up as salvage because of Hurricane Helene.
Then I found it, near Gainesville, Florida. The Smart I’ve been searching for.
This 2009 Smart Fortwo offers a combination of condition and mileage I haven’t seen in good long while. The odometer shows just 28,000 miles, the interior condition appears phenomenal, the convertible top works, the paint is great, and the seller is the original owner, who checked every single option box. Yes, this car is technically the wrong color, but everything else is perfect.
It’s even a bit of a weirdo. In late 2008, Smart USA said that 2009 model year cars would not be able to have automatic headlights or automatic wipers at all due to a manufacturing change. But there’s one caveat: 2009s made in late 2008 still had those options. This is one of those weird carryover cars.
The mileage isn’t necessarily correct. This car has been towed behind an RV and the proper way to tow a Smart requires you to disconnect the battery. Doing so disables the odometer. It definitely has more than 28,000 miles. However, I wrote the guide on inspecting used Smarts and everything suggests this is an honest low-mile car. The leather seats are devoid of the severe cracking high-mileage cars get. The roof hasn’t shrunken, the headlights remain clear, the steering wheel isn’t peeling, the driver seatbelt still retracts, and the dash doesn’t look faded. It doesn’t have any of the signs of a high-mileage Smart.
So, based on me observing a few pictures and chatting with the owner, I committed to buying it. I took out the money, bought a plane ticket, and I’m flying down tomorrow afternoon to buy it. Then, I’ll drive it over 17 hours and 1,100 miles back home.
I figure that it should be somewhat hard to lose in this scenario. I’m paying $5,800 for the car, but it has high options, presents well, and should have a lot less rust than any Smart up north. Worst case, I should be able to make back around what I spent. If the car turns out as expected, then I’ll be as happy as a bedbug in a sleazy motel.
To say I’m pumped is an understatement. Of course, I’m a bit scared things won’t turn out well. It’s also a dice roll buying a car long distance like this. If the car isn’t as you expect, you’re sort of stuck between choosing between the car and finding out how to get 1,000 or 2,000 miles back home. If you choose the latter, you sort of have to just write the plane tickets off, too. At the very least, I might be able to use this trip to stop in a place like Tennessee to see if I can help in the Helene effort in some way.
But for now, I’m dreaming that my dream Smart will be waiting for me in sunny Florida. I’ve been waiting years to find a car like this and hopefully, this is what I’m looking for. Then, I get to embark on an awesome road trip.
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Nightmares are dreams too
I’m not talking about the cheap kind of suits you’ll see at a dealership, but a suit you might wear to a gala.
Why not both?
https://images-stag.jazelc.com/uploads/theautopian-m2en/Fake_It_Make_It_Duke_Party-FINAL-TS.jpg
Lake Michigan circle tour is great. We took the fast ferry back from Muskegon in lieu of Gary In, and Chicago west Michigan is lovely. However there are no people of color. If you go in asparagus season have the deep fried in Occupied Wisconsin (UP). Weirdly amazingly delicious
I’m sure I speak for many in wishing that the car is exactly what you expect and the trip home is eventful, but only good/happy events.
One thing I would check out closely before heading north are the tires, specifically checking those date codes. Since there is no way of really knowing how many miles were put on it as a Toad, they may be very old and might not be happy cruising on the interstate for hours at a time.
I wonder why you say that someone would be stuck with a car with a wrap over failing paint. Wrap can be removed, then either painted or a hopefully better applied wrap job done on it.
I also don’t understand why you claim that the lack of paint/interior fade and unshrunken top means that it is a low mile car. Those things fail from being exposed to the sun, so a low mile car that was always left out in Florida sun can see that damage, while a high mile car that was kept garaged will still present well.
As long as they didn’t hack up the lighting wiring to make it a Toad or butchered up the mounting of the tow bar I’d say you are still ahead. Sure the wheel bearings, transaxle bearings, half shafts, and suspension has more miles on them than indicated but the engine, interior and the rest of the body items have the indicated number of miles on them. I’d rather replace some suspension components or a wheel bearing that deal with an interior that needs refinishing.
A lot of guys have bought and driven cars cross country.
Obviously, a lot of women too.
Congrats on the find! I’ve wanted to do a fly-in, drive-home long-distance trip for quite awhile. Got close with a Texas-located 1968 Cadillac I wanted to use for my wedding, but was sniped at the last second on Ebay.
Next was for a Brasilia listed in Arizona a little while back, but I kept getting sniped by what I’m assuming was the sellers’ alt-accounts. It happened three times where I was outbid just barely past what I was willing to pay at the end, only to have the seller relist and let me know it was back up. I finally gave up. Not sure if it ever did actually sell.
Best of luck on the flight/trip-back, should make for some fun content!
Nothing more magical than flying in and driving back in your dream car. Godspeed.
Turns out I owned your dream car (albeit in white) in 2009! I parted with it in 2012, which turned out to be a good call; two weeks after the sale was completed the dealership I traded it in to called to yell at me for giving them a car with a trashed transmission. [i]Caveat emptor[/i], suckers. That’s what you get for trying to scam me with a rust control module.
I thought a Smart Roadster Brabus would have been your dream car.
Good luck on the drive home.
I have a lot of dream cars and most of them are Smarts. 🙂 Just two more years until I can bring in a Roadster, baybee!
Congratulations! I bought my own dream car (air-cooled 911) sight unseen and drove it back to Chicago from Atlanta. I subsequently did two multi-thousand-mile trips in old cars I first laid eyes upon when I showed up to drive them away. All experiences were great. And I bet yours will be, too! Fly and drive is the way to go.
Best of luck on the trip!
I did something extremely similar two years ago. I had long wanted an RX-8 and finally decided to pull the trigger. The problem was is I was going to make it a daily driver, so I had to search for quite a while for a perfect low mileage candidate. I live outside of Tampa, and ended up finding the one on Hartford Craigslist. It took six weeks of waiting, as the seller had a pre-scheduled trip out west to visit family, but I eventually flew up to Connecticut and bought it sight unseen except for about 7 pictures in the ad. It was owned by a retired school teacher who had basically stopped driving it after she broke both her hip and ankle in successive years, making driving a manual not as desirable. The whole process actually went quite smoothly and I had a lot of fun hitting the open road for the way home. I have fond memories of that trip – definitely an adventure I had never done before.
Hopefully you didn’t take 95 back down and got over to 81 to enjoy the drive down through the mountains. Definitely would have been a round about way for ya, but what better way to enjoy a great driving car?
I remember driving a manual when they first came out and getting that thing rolling was such a hard thing to do for me. The engine is just so smooth and quiet down low that my reference points were all screwed up. Proceeded to take one to my high school junior prom where my date wore this giant poofy dress. Man was that entertaining trying to close the door with that thing in there
This is how I do my drives up the East coast.
I lived in northeastern PA growing up but had family outside of Atlanta. 85 to 81 to 77 to 85. I always avoided 95 like the plague. A lot less traffic and much better views
I’m a Scranton boy, even if I did leave in the mid 1970s.
Bethlehem/Easton area for me. Not too far. Used to live up at Blue Mountain in the winters snowboarding and always took drives up to the mountains in all the remaining months
Ah, 81. Where you can get stuck in horrendous traffic without all the pesky population centers. Mountain interstate plus an inordinate amount of tractor trailers makes for a swell time. It is my very least favorite highway, but then 95 has never been a part of my life. You can have it.
Yeah the random middle of nowhere back ups were never fun, but in 30+ years of driving that stretch, that only ever happened once. Ill take that risk over driving 95 when its pretty much guaranteed to hit at least 3 major backup
I feel like those random stops with no exits around happen more often now that people are always on their phones and they think their cars “drive themselves”
I am between Roanoke and Bristol, so I get to drive 81 all the time. I hate it each of those times.
I would have to say that there really is no good way to get anywhere with a direct route anymore. Any major highway just sucks
My ’08 cabrolet was 8 months old when me and small print loaded up to make the run from Ann Arbor to southern Fla for the Christmas season. So much fun to roll the top back while at speed, We had a great time, no troubles but for the clutch drag some of the early cars demonstrated. It had 115k on it when it was stolen, I still miss it every day.
Hey Mercedes, as someone who lives in Tennessee and has a company that services Asheville, now may not be the best time to try and get through that area. There are very limited roads available, and the folks out there really just need vital supplies / professional support coming through them. 26 and 40 are both closed between TN and NC, so I would recommend not circling through that area. It is extremely admirable that you want to help support the folks impacted, but given the amount of road closures, it may not be for the best.
Thanks for the advice! I’ll almost certainly play it by ear and do what’s the safest. As much as I’d want to help, I also don’t want to get in the way, either.
At the very least, one of my friends is running a food drive with the goal of hauling 5k pounds of stuff down south soon.
Assisting with a food drive would be a huge benefit; and by the time you are in the area, things may be more clear for direct support too! Your willingness to jump in and help out in any way is a testament to your character.
Best wishes on the trip! Personally I like to mix things up between buying cars sight-unseen vs. in-person so that I can focus on different sets of anxieties throughout the process.
Ah, right. That reminds me: I am old.
Yep. I was 53 in 2008.
Plan your route home carefully. Most of the roads you will need to get over the mountains are closed, so you might need to go around east through Virginia or around west through Mississippi.
Just please be careful.
It’s a perfectly cromulent Smart, bravo! If by some twist of fate you can’t drive it home, I’m two hours away with a lightweight, all aluminum, single axle tilt trailer I’d let you borrow. Just sayin’.
This is pretty cool, but I’m also kind of surprised that with all the Smarts you have, there isn’t an electric one in the set. How rare are they?
Electric Smarts aren’t rare at all! Unfortunately, I don’t have a solid way to keep one charged, which means any Smart ED in my possession runs the risk of suffering from the unfortunate HV battery bricking problem.
Edit: Okay, EVs were about 10% of Smart’s US sales, so they’re somewhat “rare” in that sense. But they aren’t hard to find for sale.
FWIW my 2019 smart ED was perfectly content to be charged as needed from a regular wall socket and held its high voltage battery charge no problem. My understanding is that it was only the earlier models that had the bricking issue.
I’m happy for you, Mercedes! That’s a small car for such a big trip, so that feels like an adventure waiting to happen. I’m also happy that we didn’t dilute the holy grail term on this.
The only thing missing is…the reaction of your parents once at the dealership.
I’m assuming they were less than enraptured by the wares on offer? Or do they still own the one they bought new back then, loving taking it to car shows, driving you crazy with their refusal to let you have it, etc.?
Wait a minute, I don’t remember hearing about the Sky Red Line before…
For some reason I really like those despite having never been in one.
They are great, very tight fit if you are tall/large, but drivable. Don’t expect to carry anything larger than a soft pack of tissues, and a small dop bag, and maybe a small soft side suit bag with a single change of clothes. The trunk doesn’t qualify as one.
https://www.theautopian.com/im-mercedes-and-i-own-somewhere-between-17-and-19-vehicles-including-a-bus/
So you did have room for the Hayabusa Smart! I think that would make the loop around the lake a little quicker. 🙂
Depending on where in Florida it shouldn’t be too bad on the cars, salt air can do some stuff if near the shores though, plastic body panels, but double check underneath, good luck!
Good luck with the adventure!
Mercedes, this just confirms what I’ve come to believe about you: you sure gotta lotta Smarts!
Picard and Riker, their faces in their palms.
You Tamarians are a funny lot.
Temba, his arms wide.
Darmok and Jalad on the ocean.
Metaphor!
I’m having Seth Myers flashbacks from a recent show….. Lot of Darmok references flying around this week for some reason!
As for my part, and with an eye towards Mercedes’ great journey…. Mirab, his sails unfurled!
Good luck on your mini adventure 🙂
What route are you taking back?
Fair skies and a following wind on your journey! I hope it’s mechanically uneventful!