2007 Toyota Corolla Ce - 36 Month / 36,000 Mile Warranty Included In Price on 2040-cars
San Diego, California, United States
PRICE REDUCTION - SAVE $1,000 NOW THROUGH SUNDAY! 36,000 MILES / 36 MONTH WARRANTY INCLUDED AT NO EXTRA CHARGE. EASY FINANCING. Call to tell us what you would like your payments to be. WE BRING THE TEST DRIVE TO YOU! Or if it's more convenient, call, text or email to see the car at our location. PRICED BELOW KELLEY BLUE BOOK! Low mileage - just 73,700 original miles, clean inside and out, runs perfect, everything works. Clean title with no accidents. Only two original owners. Never smoked in. Tags good through December. Tires like new. Power everything. Automatic transmission. This is the one you want! CARFAX GUARANTEED CLEAN TITLE with no accidents. GIVING IT AWAY TODAY. Just $8,995 plus tax, smog, document and transfer fees. MyRideMotors Mike at 858-442-5418 phone or text Licensed and Bonded California Auto Dealer #85470 Bond #B30004123 |
Toyota Corolla for Sale
- One owner clean car fax never in accident run&dr great non smokr icy ac clean.
- S 1.8l 5k leather heated seats cd aux input sat radio roof loaded backup cam
- L certified 1.8l cd 4 speakers am/fm radio am/fm/cd player w/mp3/wma capability
- 4dr sdn s manual sedan gasoline 1.8l twin-cam efi 16-valv silverstream opalescen(US $5,909.00)
- Bluetooth 17055 miles toyota certified alloy wheels cd player rear spoiler
- 1974 toyota corolla 1600 deluxe! rare original car! 18k miles. look no reserve!
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Auto blog
Toyota settles for $3M after being found liable in sudden acceleration case
Sat, 26 Oct 2013A jury has decided that faulty software was to blame for a crash involving a 2005 Toyota Camry that killed one woman and injured another. This is the first time Toyota has been found liable by a jury in a lawsuit involving sudden acceleration claims. Toyota has maintained that driver error is the most likely cause for cases of sudden acceleration.
Shortly after the jury in the case, which took place in Oklahoma and centered around a crash that injured 76-year-old Jean Bookout and killed her passenger, Barbara Schwarz, reached a verdict that would see Toyota paying $3 million in compensatory damages, a confidential settlement was reached. The jury, which had found Toyota liable for "reckless disregard" for public safety, had yet to decide what punitive damages Toyota would face.
Toyota said in a statement, "While we strongly disagree with the verdict, we are satisfied that the parties reached a mutually acceptable agreement to settle this case. We will continue to defend our products vigorously at trial in other legal venues."
The pre-race and first in-race report from Le Mans
Sat, 22 Jun 2013The 2013, 90th anniversary edition of the 24 Hours of Le Mans has begun, tragedy marking the opening laps with the death of Allan Simonsen. We're at the track now as a guest of Audi and plan to stay through the evening, and even we haven't been able to find out what caused the accident - the only video is from just after the incident, and beyond the statement from ACO there's been no more news. The Aston Martin in the LM GTE Am class and its all-Danish drivers had taken pole in its class and was one of the favorites to win.
The pre-race report will come first, and even thought we can't spoil the race because we're only five hours into it at the time of writing, we'll put all of the news at the end in case you don't even want the updates.
Or you can go straight to the high-res galleries above.
Toyota asking NHTSA for fuel cell car safety exemption regarding electric shocks
Mon, 30 Jun 2014Toyota is requesting an exemption from federal safety regulations that govern electric cars as it prepares to launch a small-scale hydrogen fuel-cell vehicle fleet.
The Japanese automaker is targeting Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 305, which covers the packaging of high-voltage parts in electric cars. According to Uncle Sam, these systems need to be isolated so that passengers and first responders aren't electrocuted in the event of a crash. That seems pretty smart, but it's become a problem for Toyota's upcoming production fuel cell vehicle, as the mechanism that prevents electric shocks in low-speed crashes will apparently simply keep Toyota's car from even functioning.
Instead of the federally approved system, Bloomberg reports that Toyota plans to insulate the high-voltage wires and cables in the car, along with shielding electrical components like the fuel cells, electric motor and batteries with (presumably non-conductive) metal barriers.