2007 Toyota Tundra Base Standard Cab Pickup 2-door 4.7l on 2040-cars
Johns Island, South Carolina, United States
This is a one owner truck that has seen mostly highway miles, and is excellent for trailer towing, with a rating of 9600 pounds. It goes up and down mountains with a heavy trailer without even breathing hard. It is set up for trailers with electric brakes, with a dash mounted trailer brake controller for strength and response time of trailer braking, and a 7 pin connector with a Class IV hitch. The truck has literally never had a flaw other than some oxygen sensors needing replacing. The original tires lasted 85,000 miles and the brakes were re-done at 107,000 with still miles of use available. Mileage without a trailer is 20 MPG on the highway. Other than one small bumper scratch, this truck shows like new both inside and out. It has been garaged since new and well serviced all it's life. The carpet bed liner and Leer Hardtop cover had been installed since new, so the bed is pristine. The air conditioning blows very cold and has never needed anything. The AM/FM/CD system sounds fabulous. These trucks routinely hit 200,000 miles, so there are many years left of good quality trailer-pulling or other duties. The paint still shines like new and there are no dents or dings. It is priced below market for a quick sale. Title is clear and there is no lien on it. The carfax is immaculate. |
Toyota Tundra for Sale
Crew max limited 4x4 1-owner sunroof nav rear camera heated seats tow pkg
2008 toyota tundra 5.7 sr5 crew cab pro comp custom lifted truck~low miles~nice!
2007 toyota tundra double cab, awesome truck, 5.7 motor texas edition 20" wheels
2004 toyota doublecab ltd with leather pkg
Truck for sale(US $20,000.00)
2000 toyota tundra sr5 2wd(US $2,500.00)
Auto Services in South Carolina
X-treme Diesel Truck & Trailer Center LLC. ★★★★★
Titan Automotive ★★★★★
Tim`s Auto Service ★★★★★
Spartanburg Chrysler Dodge Jeep Inc ★★★★★
S & W Auto Repair ★★★★★
Rob`s Mobile Mechanic Service ★★★★★
Auto blog
Fuel cells will flop outside Japan, says VW
Fri, 12 Sep 2014
"It may fly within Japan, but not globally," VW's Shoji said.
It's long been battered into our beleaguered auto writer brains that the ultimate future source of motivation for tomorrow's cars and trucks is not gasoline, diesel, electricity, natural gas, propane or solar power - it's the hydrogen fuel cell. It's been the Next Big Thing since the start of Next Big Things.
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Mon, Apr 27 2015Automakers are obviously free to develop whatever next-gen, zero-emissions tech that they want. However, if a company wants to get on the good side of the Chinese government, that strategy better include some plug-in vehicles. The authorities there are lending major support to plug-ins at the moment, and its forcing the auto industry to play along. According to Bloomberg, Toyota, Volkswagen, Hyundai, and BMW are all launching dedicated EV brands with their joint venture partners, and as many as 40 electric models could hit the Chinese market this year alone. However, analysts don't think the vehicles are going to sell well. Instead, the launches are essentially a way for companies to play nice with the government and help get the approval to build factories in the country. Take Toyota as an example. The company is pushing the future of hydrogen hard with promotional films for the Mirai and engineers talking down fast-charging EVs. Still, the Japanese automaker is getting ready to launch two EV brands in China with its joint venture partners, according to Bloomberg. China's push for alternative fuels has been happening for a while, but it really kicked into high gear last year. The government has set a goal to improve fleet-wide economy by 40 percent by the end of the decade in order to spend less importing oil and for the population's health. The plan has shown some success so far with hybrid and EV sales growing early in 2015. Related Video: News Source: BloombergImage Credit: Kin Cheung / AP Photo Government/Legal Green BMW Hyundai Toyota Volkswagen Green Culture Technology Electric tax incentives chinese government