2012 Toyota Sienna Xle on 2040-cars
Chicago, Illinois, United States
PRICE JUST REDUCED. Mileage: 50,800 Body Style: Minivan Exterior Color: Gray Interior Color: Light Gray / Leather VIN: 5tdyk3dc4cs227731 Fuel: Gasoline Engine: 6-cylinder Transmission: Automatic Drivetrain: FWD Doors: 5 A/C: Front A/C: Rear Airbag: Driver Airbag: Passenger Airbag: Side AM/FM Radio Anti-Lock Brakes CD Cruise Control Fog Lights Leather Interior Power Locks Power Seats Power Steering Power Windows Rear Window Defroster Rear Window Wiper Remote Keyless Entry Sunroof/Moonroof Third Row Seats Tinted Glass Sunroof weather is coming (hopefully)! 3 Rows of Seating with REAR A/C & HEAT!!! This XLE was just detailed and looks great. Leather, CD, satellite, back-up camera, power doors (including rear door), power seats, new premium tires last summer, heated seats, sunroof and seats 7. Top-rated minivan. Non smoker, no pets. This is one nice van, I hope you'll come take a look. All scheduled maintenance, always garaged, mostly highway miles, title in hand, very clean interior, well maintained. |
Toyota Sienna for Sale
Le 3.5l cd le extra value package #2 overhead multi-information display(US $15,990.00)
7-pass van v 3.5l 3rd row seat bucket seats cruise control heated front seat(s)
10 toyota sienna xle limited navi gps rear dvd heated seats 1-owner
2006 toyota sienna limited edition mini passenger van 5-door 3.3l
2012 toyota sienna xle leather back up camera power doors like new
Gray toyota, awd, xle ltd, original owner, leather trim, fully loaded, clean(US $10,000.00)
Auto Services in Illinois
X Way Auto Sales ★★★★★
Twins Auto Body Shop ★★★★★
Trevino`s Transmission & Auto ★★★★★
Thompson Auto Supply ★★★★★
Sigler`s Auto Ctr ★★★★★
Schob`s Auto Repair ★★★★★
Auto blog
Ford fights back against patent trolls
Fri, Feb 13 2015Some people are just awful. Some organizations are just as awful. And when those people join those organizations, we get stories like this one, where Ford has spent the past several years combatting so-called patent trolls. According to Automotive News, these malicious organizations have filed over a dozen lawsuits against the company since 2012. They work by purchasing patents, only to later accuse companies of misusing intellectual property, despite the fact that the so-called patent assertion companies never actually, you know, do anything with said intellectual property. AN reports that both Hyundai and Toyota have been victimized by these companies, with the former forced to pay $11.5 million to a company called Clear With Computers. Toyota, meanwhile, settled with Paice LLC, over its hybrid tech. The world's largest automaker agreed to pay $5 million, on top of $98 for every hybrid it sold (if the terms of the deal included each of the roughly 1.5 million hybrids Toyota sold since 2000, the company would have owed $147 million). Including the previous couple of examples, AN reports 107 suits were filed against automakers last year alone. But Ford is taking action to prevent further troubles... kind of. The company has signed on with a firm called RPX, in what sounds strangely like a protection racket. Automakers like Ford pay RPX around $1.5 million each year for access to its catalog of patents, which it spent nearly $1 billion building. "We take the protection and licensing of patented innovations very seriously," Ford told AN via email. "And as many smart businesses are doing, we are taking proactive steps to protect against those seeking patent infringement litigation." What are your thoughts on this? Should this patent business be better managed? Is it reasonable that companies purchase patents only to file suit against the companies that build actual products? Have your say in Comments.
This first-gen Toyota Celica is one mean mother
Tue, 09 Jul 2013Brian Karasawa's gen-one Toyota Celica is, in a word, badass. As a long-standing fan of the marque, the doting owner has tried to both restore and improve his Celica keeping period-correct modifications in mind. The 20R/22R mashup engine is outputting roughly 185 horsepower and graced with a lot of JDM-specific parts and modifications. Clearly, the exhaust has been upgraded from stock, as clips of the orange Toyota in motion are accompanied by one hell of a nice sound.
Tastes clearly vary, and there's not as much love for the first-wave of Japanese metal as there is for similar era American-iron, but we're pleased to see these cars finally getting more time in the spotlight. Scroll down below to see why we're stoked, and consider cruising your local Craigslist for late 1970s and early 1980s Japanese coolness (before we get there first).
Toyota retires robots in favor of humans to improve automaking process
Sat, 12 Apr 2014Mitsuru Kawai is overseeing a return to the old ways at Toyota factories throughout Japan. Having spent 50 years at the Japanese automaker, Kawai remembers when manual skills were prized at the company and "experienced masters used to be called gods, and they could make anything." Company CEO Akio Toyoda personally chose Kawai to develop programs to teach workers metalcraft such as how to forge a crankshaft from scratch, and 100 workstations that formerly housed machines have been set aside for human training.
The idea is that when employees personally understand the fabrication of components, they will understand how to make better machines. Said Kawai, "To be the master of the machine, you have to have the knowledge and the skills to teach the machine." Lessons learned by the newly skilled workers have led to shorter production lines - in one case, 96percent shorter - improved parts production and less scrap.
Taking time to give workers the knowledge to solve problems instead of merely having them "feed parts into a machine and call somebody for help when it breaks down," Kawai's initiative is akin to that of Toyota's Operations Management Consulting Division, where new managers are given a length of time to finish a project but not given any help - they have to learn on their own. It's not a step back from Toyota's quest to build more than ten million cars a year; it's an effort to make sure that this time they don't sacrifice quality while making the effort. Said Kawai, "We need to become more solid and get back to basics."