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

on 2040-cars

C $20,400.00
Year:1996 Mileage:104000
Location:

BC, Canada

BC, Canada

For sale is my 1996 Toyota Supra Twin Turbo 6-speed
- Factory RZ car with 2JZ-GTE 6-speed
- Only 104,000 KMs
- Factory JDM kit w/ MVP front lip
- Full-adjustable HKS coilover suspension
- 18" VOLK SF-Challenge rims
- SARD exhaust
- SARD gauges (boost, oil pressure, temp)
- HKS cold-air intake
- HKS turbo-timer
- Greddy shift knob

This is a series 2 built in late 1996, which only ran production for 1 year with the standard 2JZ-GTE 6-speed setup before changing to VVTi. This is the most rare and sought-after Supra you can get.

Very good example of a clean Supra. It's mostly stock with general upgrades, and excellent condition inside and out. All service is up to date, recent oil change and spark plugs done. Drives very smooth and pulls strong.

Asking $20,400. May consider reasonable offers to an enthusiastic buyer looking for a TT 6-speed. Only serious buyers contact and I will get back to you as soon as I can. NO TRADES, need to sell.

This car is located in the Vancouver, BC region. Pickup available, or can arrange transport at buyers expense.

Will only sell to Canadian buyers.
Note: 17 0's were input to bypass ebay error, car has the original 12 digit VIN.

Auto blog

Toyota to buck engine downsizing trend, may go larger and turbo-free

Mon, 14 Oct 2013

Turbocharging isn't really Toyota's specialty, and the Japanese automaker isn't being shy about acknowledging it. Koei Saga, a senior managing officer in charge of drivetrain research and development, says that eschewing turbos and increasing displacement of engines using the Atkinson cycle can produce better power gains without sacrificing fuel economy, Automotive News reports.
Toyota is investing heavily in larger-displacement Atkinson-cycle engines in addition to turbocharged engines, but Saga doesn't think the automaker will use turbocharging across many product lines. He apparently remains unconvinced that the technology "makes the world better."
In Toyota's eyes then, Atkinson cycle engines do make the world better, and here's how. Their pistons complete four processes - intake, compression, power and exhaust - in one revolution of the crankshaft, and the power stroke is longer than the compression stroke. Traditional Otto cycle engines require two crankshaft revolutions to accomplish those same four operations and have equal-length compression and power strokes. Atkinson cycle engines are more efficient, but less power dense, though increasing displacement can offset that shortfall.

Toyota to shock with Supra concept for Detroit Auto Show?

Fri, 06 Dec 2013

We've written about approximately 187,000 rumors about a return of the Toyota Supra to the land of living cars. There are a couple of good reasons for this: first, Toyota won't stop dropping hints about a new halo sports car. Late this summer, Toyota sales guru Kazuo Ohara called a Supra successor "one of the options we have" - a comment followed by a hint that there would be "better news" on the subject in the future.
The second reason for all the Toyota tales is, of course, that we all have missed the Supra since its departure from the US market in 1998. So, when a member of the Autoblog team is party to a nudge-and-wink-filled conversation about a new Supra concept headed to January's Detroit Auto Show, we tend to listen up.
A 400+ horsepower hybrid sports car would match up pretty well with the upcoming NSX.

Toyota sells six of 10 of hybrids in California

Wed, 31 Jul 2013

In an apparent shot back at Ford's increasing market share of electrified vehicles and claim that it accepts more Prius trade-ins for its own hybrids than any other car, Toyota has flexed a muscle and played the numbers game to put the Blue Oval in its place.
Leaning on its hybrid market dominance in California, the Japanese automaker stated that six out of 10 hybrids sold in the Golden State are Toyota models. And it keeps coming: Year-to-date through May 2013, Toyota sold five times more hybrids than Ford. One of every two hybrids in California is a Prius model. In addition, Toyota notes that it has sold 1.5 million Prius vehicles in the US, 90-percent of which are still on the road today.
Want more? We'll let Bill Fay, Toyota's group vice president and general manager of sales lay the smack down: