Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

Toyota Tundra Base Double Cab Pickup 4-door on 2040-cars

US $8,000.00
Year:2011 Mileage:47200 Color: Gray
Location:

Kent, Connecticut, United States

Kent, Connecticut, United States
Toyota Tundra Base Double Cab Pickup 4-Door, US $8,000.00, image 1

Toyota Tundra 2011 Double Cab with new ( one season)Fisher MM2 SD 7 ½' Snowplow Package. 47,075 miles. magnetic gray metallic, towing package, full size spare, 18" steel wheels, interior graphite, 4.6L DOHC 32 valve i - Force V8, 2,000 miles on new tires Goodyear Wrangler AT/S 275/65R19C, new battery last fall, Extang Trifecta Tri-Fold bed cover, Westin step bars, Toyota bed liner. Plow has a replaceable polymer cutting edge, also have a steel cutting edge, plow was used only on my drive in 2015, have removable set of halogen reverse lights that fit into rear stake pockets on bed rails - easy on/off with with flat connectors, wired with lighted switch on dash, manually operated, 21" removable 3 piece wooden sides for bed Runs great, interior excellent condition, couple dents see picsI am second owner. Purchased from a dealer $25,800, Brand New Plow $4,900, brand new tires $1,300, I have driven it less then 3,000 miles since purchasing it.

Auto Services in Connecticut

Woodbridge Auto Body Shop Incorporated ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Dent Removal
Address: 36 Lucy St, Derby
Phone: (203) 397-2909

Valenti Autocenter ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 319 Middlesex Tpke, Old-Saybrook
Phone: (203) 481-8299

Talcott Transmissions ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Transmission
Address: 101 Talcott Rd, West-Hartford
Phone: (860) 233-8259

Sunshine Car Repair ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Automobile Inspection Stations & Services
Address: 247 West St, Litchfield
Phone: (860) 567-9490

Shoreline Collision & Rstrtn ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
Address: 18 Garnet Park Rd, Madison
Phone: (203) 245-9922

Sciaudone`s Garage ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Brake Repair, Automobile Inspection Stations & Services
Address: 28 Leonard St, Norwalk
Phone: (203) 853-0595

Auto blog

Toyota develops new pre-collision system with steering assist

Sun, 13 Oct 2013

A number of automakers are working on developing fully autonomous cars, but it looks like the groundwork for such technologies will likely show up first as semi-autonomous systems for both safety and convenience. Following recent announcements from Nissan and Ford in this area, Toyota has now released information for some of its advanced semi-autonomous technologies that could be offered in production cars over the next few years.
On the safety front, Toyota's new pre-collision system with pedestrian-avoidance steering assist is aimed at protecting the folks who aren't in the car. This system combines visual and audible alerts with automatic brake assist and automatic steering. If warnings don't get the driver to slow down, the brake assist kicks in if a collision is very likely, but if that is still not able to avoid the impending collision (and if there is enough room to do so), the car can automatically steer itself around the pedestrian. This sounds most beneficial for last-second dangers such as a person accidently stepping out into the road in front of a car. Toyota hopes to have this technology available to customers by 2015.
The Japanese automaker is also testing a suite of technologies called Automated Highway Driving Assist (AHDA). The key part of this is a new adaptive cruise control system that uses vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communications rather than a radar-based system. This cooperative-adaptive cruise control allows vehicles to communicate their acceleration and deceleration data with other cars, which Toyota says this helps to improve fuel efficiency and traffic flow. Also a part of AHDA is the Lane Trace Control feature, which sounds like a next-gen lane keep assist. This system uses cameras, radar and a computer to keep the vehicle in a "smooth driving line" by being able to change steering angle, engine torque and braking force. Toyota says this technology could be in place by the "mid-2010s."

Toyota GT86 convertible could debut in March

Tue, 27 Nov 2012

The 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.

Expedition drives from Russia to Canada over North Pole...

Tue, 21 May 2013

No, a Ford Expedition did not drive from Russia to Canada via the North Pole, but that's exactly what a team of intrepid explorers accomplished recently. Using specially-modified buses with massive tires, the group slowly drove 2,485 miles in 70 days over drifting ice, occasionally using a pickaxe to clear a path and staying on guard for chasms that could open up and plunge the team into the frigid arctic waters. Average speeds were about 6 mph, "at the speed of a (farm) tractor." While the big tires technically allowed the buses to float if the need arose, the team preferred to stay out of the water to keep the suspension from getting coated in thick, hard ice. Falling in on foot would mean almost certain death.
According to Phys.org, the buses were powered by Toyota diesel engines, but were built with prototype parts from a previous driving expedition to the North Pole. Right now, the machines are parked in a garage in Canada's Resolute Bay while the the team rests up with family back home. They plan to continue their trek to back across the Bering Straight to Russia. If successful, the team may eventually offer a version of their buses for commercial sale.