1995 Toyota 4runner Sr5 Sport Utility 4-door 3.0l on 2040-cars
Denver, Colorado, United States
Selling a 1995 Toyota 4 Runner, purchased in Houston, TX in 2007, V-6, Auto, 4x4, auto windows, sun roof, tinted windows (all except windshield), aluminum alloy rims with pretty much new tires, custom exhaust, K&N air filter (stock air filter replaced). Tow package, alarm system as well. Body has faded paint with some hail damage, along with some dents in various locations, front windshield and sunroof have cracks, drivers side door mirror is a auto store similar style mirror . I started the engine about 4 weeks ago, started right up, but there is coolant draining out of the exhaust. Bought a block test kit which indicated negative as far as head gasket being a problem. I ran this test 3 to 4 times and it failed to turn green/yellow. The rear differential gasket needs to be replaced as it leaks. The odometer is also in need of repair and I would guess the mileage at about 200K. Because of the amount of coolant expelling out of the exhaust, it needs to be towed. For the most part it has been a fantastic truck, very dependable, easy to work on, and find parts @ a salvage yard. Has been garaged for about a year. This truck needs to be checked out before it can be used on a daily basic's. It is going to need some work. The vehicle and clean title is located in Lakewood, CO 80226.
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Toyota 4Runner for Sale
- 2000 model limited edition white with silver trim with gold trim + all options
- 1988 toyota 4runner sr5 sport utility 2-door 3.0l
- 1995 toyota 4runner 5 speed transmission(US $5,000.00)
- 2006 toyota 4runner limited sport utility 4-door 4.0l 2wd(US $14,800.00)
- New tires, quiet ride, three row seating, tow package sr5
- 1990 toyota 4runner 4wd 5 speed 22re 4 cylinders rare
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Auto blog
Jim Lentz exposes more details behind Toyota's move to Texas
Fri, 02 May 2014Toyota's North American CEO Jim Lentz has already given us a rough idea of what prompted the company's surprise move to the Dallas suburb of Plano, TX from its longstanding headquarters in Torrance, CA. A new story from The Los Angeles Times, though, delivers even more detail from Lentz on the reasoning for the move, what other cities were considered and why the company's current host city wasn't even in the running.
Of course, one of the more popular reasons being bandied about includes the $40 million Texas was set to give the company for the move, as well as the state's generous tax rates. According to Lentz, though, the reason Toyota chose Plano over a group of finalists made up of Atlanta, Charlotte and Denver, was far simpler than that - it was about consolidating its marketing, sales, engineering and production teams in a region that's closer to the company's seat of manufacturing in the south.
"It doesn't make sense to have oversight of manufacturing 2,000 miles away from where the cars were made," Lentz told The Times. "Geography is the reason not to have our headquarters in California."
Toyota nears $40B cash reserve as calls grow for new investment, payouts
Wed, 05 Feb 2014With the April 15 tax deadline just a few months away, our US readers will be faced with a decision should they get a refund: save or spend? It seems this issue is one many of us face whenever there's a windfall, trying to decide whether we should set the money aside in an account of some sort or use it as a down payment on a new car or a trip to the Apple store. Unsurprisingly, major corporations face a similar, albeit more complex, issue.
Take Toyota, for example. With President Akio Toyoda at the helm, the Japanese manufacturer has gracefully weathered recalls and natural disasters, all while turning beaucoup profits. Last quarter, profits quintupled to 434.4-billion yen ($4.3-billion USD), according to Bloomberg. Toyota also upped its forecast for the end of fiscal year 2013 (which ends on March 31 for Japan), to a record 1.9-trillion yen (about $18.8 billion). Now, the Japanese brand is reportedly sitting on a cash pile of nearly $40 billion, leaving Toyoda-san in an envious predicament - what should the company do with all that money?
Some think Toyota should be doing something, anything with that big stack of cash.
Lexus eschews production in China over quality concerns
Sat, 03 May 2014One of the more popular trends in the auto industry is setting up production operations in China. Mainstream manufacturers like Ford, General Motors and Volkswagen have done it, and even luxury marques like Audi, BMW and Mercedes-Benz have or will soon have manufacturing ops in the People's Republic.
One company that isn't building cars in China, though, is Lexus. The Toyota-owned luxury brand still manufactures all of its vehicles in Japan (aside from a few RXs, which are built at a Toyota factory in Canada). According to Tokuo Fukuichi, Lexus just isn't ready to build cars there yet.
"The German Three have a brand image that they have cultivated over the past century in their long history, but Lexus is not in people's minds like that yet," Fukuichi-san told Reuters UK.