Scion Frs on 2040-cars
Phoenix, Arizona, United States
Selling my much loved Scion FRS. Car is in great condition. Owned by me only. Regularly attended car meets as I was a fanatic about the FRS from day one. Its been a great car and has never let me down. Have over 7k invested. I will be losing money but priced it to be fair with market and both parties.Here are the details2013 Scion FR-S Asphalt
6 Speed Manual
20,000 miles
Toyota 100K Warranty w/zero deductible
OEM Audio Reference Series stereo, amp, sub upgrade. The most OEM Toyota authorized system
Flex Fuel kit and tune by ECUtek, ECUtek Cable, ECUTek Dongle, No Cut ECU Adapter ,has been Dyno Tuned.
Sparco Arsetto 18X8 Wheels
BFG SportComp
H&R Wheel Spacers with H@R extended Lugs
Airaid Intake
Magnaflow custom catback exhaust with DC black tips welded
Magnaflow glasspack on the midpipe to remove any rasp J2 engineering front pipe.
Morimoto HID reteofit with black out chrome headlights
Red out spyder/sonar taillights
V3 Triton DRL switchbacks
FineVu CR500 HD Dashcam
Kartboy short shifter with whiteline positive shift bushing
Smoked side markers
Tien sport lowering springs 1.5 inch
Perrin lightweight pulley
GoPro Hero 3 Black with LCD backpack, skeleton case and a ton of accessoriesIt currently has vinyl decals for OEM audio since it was used as their demo car recently but they can easily be removed.
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Scion FR-S for Sale
- 13 silver automatic miles:7k rwd 2.0l 4-cylinder coupe one owner
- 2013 scion fr-s base coupe 2-door 2.0l(US $22,850.00)
- 2013 scion fr-s silver base coupe 2-door 2.0l automatic(US $21,918.00)
- 2013 scion fr-s base coupe 2-door 2.0l(US $22,999.00)
- Manual coupe 2.0l cd locking/limited slip differential rear wheel drive a/c abs
- 2013 scion fr-s coupe 6-speed bespoke audio spoiler 5k texas direct auto(US $23,980.00)
Auto Services in Arizona
Twentyfifth Street Automotive ★★★★★
Tru-Tek ★★★★★
Thomas Bishop Automotive ★★★★★
Sonny`s Upholstery ★★★★★
Samson Body Shop Service Center Auto Glass Towing and RV Service ★★★★★
Ramirez Wheel Fashion ★★★★★
Auto blog
Incrementally better than ever | 2017 Toyota 86 First Drive
Tue, Oct 4 2016We'd love to tell you that the incremental upgrades bestowed upon Toyota's rear-wheel-drive coupe as it made its transition from Scion FR-S to Toyota 86 have transformed it into a perfect sportscar. If only a few more horsepower, shorter rear-end gearing, and tiny aero updates were enough to quell all the complaints that enthusiasts have leveled at the machine since the platform first hit the road in 2012, this review would have been so much more satisfying to write. Sadly, that's not the case. Don't get us wrong. The 86 is still extremely fun to toss around a twisty road. The chassis is impressively balanced, the steering is direct, and the shifter is sweet. Sorry to impart upon you this well-worn trope, but the old adage that it's more fun to drive a slow car fast than it is to drive a fast car slow is, in this case, completely accurate. The 2017 Toyota 86 is nothing if not entertaining. But it's not completely new. It hasn't been transformed. It is, in the end, the same as it ever was. It will take about three minutes of your time to watch the videos below, in which we cover pretty much everything that's new for the 2017 Toyota 86. Toyota 86s equipped with manual transmissions get a five-pony boost to 205 horsepower and 156 pound-feet of torque. Automatic models soldier forth with a carryover 2.0-liter four-cylinder that puts out 200 hp and 151 lb-ft. Apparently, more than half of Scion FR-S buyers chose the automatic. That's unfortunate, as it drains a good deal of the fun out of the 86 experience. Choose the manual and you'll be rewarded with an easy clutch and a rewarding short-throw shifter. And, as we said, five more ponies, courtesy of intake and exhaust tweaks and the polishing of some internal engine components. The only upside to the automatic is improved fuel economy of 24 miles per gallon in the city and 32 on the highway. Manual 86s are EPA-rated at 21/28. Along with the small bump in power, the 2017 86 gets a 4.3:1 rear-end gear ratio in lieu of the old 4.1:1 unit. That ought to translate into a small improvement in acceleration that really only matters on paper. In the real world, on actual roads, the difference is negligible. To eke the most out of the 86, you have to constantly work the shifter and keep the engine north of 5,000 rpm. It's still not particularly quick, but it's definitely fun. There's plenty of noise inside the 86, from the wind, the road, and the engine.
Toyota GT86 convertible could debut in March
Tue, 27 Nov 2012The dates are lining up, now we wait to see how the badges align. Just before the Toyota GT 86/Scion FR-S/Subaru BRZ line-up was introduced at the Tokyo Motor Show last year, there was a report that Subaru was considering a convertible while Toyota wouldn't even comment on it. That got swapped around when earlier this year the chief engineer on Toyota's side said a convertible was coming, and then a Scion FR-S droptop was confirmed for early 2014.
Autocar now reports that the Toyota GT 86 convertible will make its first appearance at the 2013 Geneva Motor Show in March. In a car whose specs like weight, packaging, horsepower and center of gravity were all tightly controlled to get the most from the least, the changes necessitated by chopping the roof could make this a very different car. It's said to employ a fabric roof to keep a "small" weight gain check, and the suspension will be softened to work more harmoniously with the decreased body stiffness. And somewhere in all that the back seat and trunk space will need to take a hit.
In other news, Autocar says the hi-po GT 86 with some kind of capacitor system instead of batteries is being worked on for 2015.
Scion reveals iM concept ahead of LA debut
Wed, 12 Nov 2014After dropping a teaser image on us a few weeks ago, Scion has revealed in full the new iM Concept it's bringing to the Los Angeles Auto Show next week. As expected, the concept is clearly a rebadged version of the Euro-market Toyota Auris, only with some "European Racing Circuit Styling" upgrades to make it look more aggressive.
Along with the Scion logos, the five-door hatch is treated to a deeper air dam flanked by angular vents with stacked fog lamps, beefed-up wheel arches linked by widened side sills and filled with 19-inch, anthracite-finish alloys on low-profile rubber. Vented brake discs and four-piston calipers join an adjustable suspension as show-worthy equipment upgrades.
The sporty treatment continues around back with a similarly aggressive rear bumper and roof spoiler. Even the wing mirrors are replaced with narrower units. Little wonder it's all done up in a shade Scion calls "incrediblue" that looks rather similar to what sister-brand Lexus would put on one of its F-branded performance models - or for that matter what corporate ally Subaru would put on an STI hot hatches like the WRX.