While you can use Get-WMIObject to query for WMI objects and then select the ones you are really after, you can also cast a WMI object path to a WMI object and get to that instance immediately. For example, the following accesses the WMI object representing drive C: and will tell you a ton of interesting details about that drive:
Accessing WMI Instances in One Line
[WMI]'Win32_LogicalDisk="C:"'
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