2011 Toyota Tundra Sr5 Extended Crew Cab Pickup 4-door 5.7l on 2040-cars
Harvest, Alabama, United States
2011 Toyota Tundra SR5 Extended Crew Cab Pickup 4-Door 5.7L Tundra CrewMax 2WD in Excellent Condition. Equipped with SR5, TRD Off-Road Pkg, V8 5.7Liter Force Engine, Power sliding rear window, spray in bed liner, Power everything, Back up Camera, Running Boards, and much more. Exterior finished in Pyrite Mica with very Clean Beige Interior. All scheduled maintenance, Tires in great condition. Always garaged, Runs & drives perfectly, Mostly highway miles, Never seen snow, Non-smoker, No accidents, Clean Title in hand. This Truck has been very Well maintained. |
Toyota Tundra for Sale
- 4x4 4wd big 'ol backseat
- 12 tundra crew max 4x4 sr5 camburg suspension white king coil over shocks
- 2005 toyota tundra base standard cab pickup 2-door 4.0l(US $7,400.00)
- 2009 toyota tundra sr5 crewmax side steps bedliner 69k texas direct auto(US $22,980.00)
- 2008 toyota tundra limited extended crew cab pickup 4-door
- Tundra crewmax trd off road 4x4 custom new lift wheels tires navigation auto tow
Auto Services in Alabama
Used Tire World ★★★★★
Transmission Magician ★★★★★
Topline Tires ★★★★★
Templar`s Automotive ★★★★★
Spectrum Automotive & Tire Solutions ★★★★★
selective automotive Tint & paint protection ★★★★★
Auto blog
New drifting world record set in Toyota GT86
Wed, 30 Jul 2014We have entered a drifting arms race. Last year, BMW smashed the Guinness World Record for the longest drift by hanging the tail out for 51.3 miles around a wet skid pad in an M5 at the BMW Performance Driving School in South Carolina. That beat the previous milestone of nearly seven miles. Now, Bimmer's record is up in smoke as well and is in the possession of a Toyota.
German driver Harald Müller pummeled the old record to drift for 89.55 miles around a 0.15-mile (235.5-meter) course in Samsun, Turkey, in a Toyota GT86 (or Scion FR-S as it's known in the US). According to the Guinness World Records website, it took him 612 laps and 2 hours, 25 minutes and 18 seconds to manage the achievement. Sit back to watch a few minutes of the German's two and a half hours behind the wheel with the tail out.
Subaru to stop building Camry for Toyota in the US
Fri, 09 May 2014It was back in 2007 that Subaru of Indiana Automotive, under contract from Subaru minority shareholder Toyota, built the first Toyota Camry at its plant in Lafayette, Indiana. Rumblings of the end of that contract work have been around for a while, as Subaru talked of expanding capacity to build more units and add a line for the Impreza, and Toyota talked of moving Camry production to its Georgetown, KY plant. The news was official internally last November when SIA Executive Vice President Tom Easterday told the Louisville Courier-Journal that Camry production would end. Now, Automotive News reports that both automakers have admitted publicly that the end will come in 2016.
SIA currently has a 170,000-unit capacity devoted to the home-brand Legacy and Outback models, while a $400-million expansion increases that to 300,000 units to prepare the facility for Impreza production in two years. Freeing up the 100,000 units of production devoted to the Camry means a 400,000-unit capability, which is far more than Subaru needs at the moment, but the Toyota exit will allow it to expand any way it sees fit. Subaru has said it will absorb the workers on the Camry line and no jobs will be lost, the mayor of Lafayette saying the development could change the timetable for the expansion.
Toyota working on cars that hover above the roadway
Wed, 11 Jun 2014Toyota is one of the largest automakers in the world, but it's not content simply building and selling conventional cars - it's been at the forefront of numerous advancements in ground transportation. It is widely credited with advancing the cause of hybrid propulsion, and alongside Audi and Google, is among the first automakers seriously testing self-driving cars. We could go on, but the news here is that Toyota is reportedly developing vehicles that hover above the road surface instead of rolling along it.
The news comes from Hiroyoshi Yoshiki, one of Toyota's tech gurus, who revealed at Bloomberg's Next Big Thing summer in San Francisco that the company is working on hovering cars - ones that travel just above the road surface, but don't actually fly in three-dimension space.
According to The Verge, a spin-off of our own sister-site Engadget, Yoshiki refused to elaborate on what the project entails and how far along it is. He was speaking along acting NHTSA chief David Friedman, who lauded such advancements as a "great taste of innovations to come," but stressed the significance of more concrete improvements to conventional automobiles - like inter-car communications to keep vehicles from colliding on the highway - as more relevant to today's industry.