"For those who like racing, I advise the karting and to do it with love and dedication" - A. Senna. GRM readers tend to regard karting as a fringe and mystical activity. It's just the least expensive and most straightfoward way to the muscle-stretching world beyond 2g. I've raced karts for a few years and would like to pull away the mythology.
I will start by giving and then ignoring three pieces of good advice on purchasing a kart:
1) Buy the newest, best-condition machinery you can fit in your budget, to minimize the deferred maintenance that you must catch up on before entering competition. Strongly consider new equipment even if it means moving down the performance scale, as all kart parts are stressed above the level that allows infinite or even long life.
2) Purchase from a local racer, kart shop, or track, so that spares and knowledge about this particular kart are readily available.
3) Try or rent karts in different classes on practice days, and then choose a kart in the slowest class that you can enjoy when all alone.
However, when a "shifter cart" came up in my local Craigslist three miles away, I went to a big woodshop and saw this 2003 Birel CR32ST (z) with a TM K9B (zz) forlorn under a pile of sawdust. The owner said "the brakes are bad", which usually means "there's a little air in the lines or a soft master cylinder, so you'll need lots of travel and pressure", and pushed me across the parking lot. I was in third gear by the time I discovered that it actually meant "There are no brakes whatsoever, even with the master cylinders bottomed out".
Once I had spun it out safely (zzz) the negotiations started. I saw there was more to be gained by cleaning out the shop than by knocking down the price, so I came home with a shifter kart, kart stand (zzzz), 10 extra wheels and tires, and 4 rain wheels and tires for Challenge money.
z Birel is a large Italian kart manufacturer. "CR32" means "front brakes, R-style frame, 32 mm frame tubes", and "ST" confirms that the kart was made in 2003
zz TM should not abbreviate their name. It stands for "The Monster" which is entirely appropriate. K9B is Kart, 9th engine design, B revision
zzz As safely as a 45-horsepower kart on 10-year-old tires with a sticky throttle and no brakes can be spun out on a random suburban Detroit street
zzzz It is difficult to work on or race a kart without a good kart stand. They don't depreciate from their new price of $180-$270, because they will outlast anyone's time in the sport