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

2002 Toyota Tundra Sr5 Standard Cab Pickup 2-door Longbed With Liner & Cap on 2040-cars

US $6,000.00
Year:2002 Mileage:108000
Location:

Belfast, Maine, United States

Belfast, Maine, United States

2002 Toyota Tundra SR5 4WD Long Bed with Bed Liner & Cap.  108,000 miles.  Needs tires otherwise good condition, always been reliable.  Books list @ $8,500 we're selling for $6,000.  

Auto Services in Maine

Tom`s Auto Repair ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 182 Spring St, Ripley
Phone: (207) 924-9990

Maple Road Auto Repair ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Mufflers & Exhaust Systems
Address: 1653 E West Maple Rd, Salem-Twp
Phone: (248) 669-5999

Lewis Auto Sales ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers
Address: 1722 Broadway, Hudson
Phone: (207) 990-2171

Johnson Auto Performance ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 1901 Forest Ave Ste 4, Cumberland-Center
Phone: (207) 878-3060

Joe Troegner`s Auto Svc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers
Address: 671 Elm St, Biddeford
Phone: (207) 282-7600

Bob`s Tire & Auto Service Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Wheels-Aligning & Balancing
Address: 8535 W Grand River Ave, Salem-Twp
Phone: (810) 229-7005

Auto blog

Toyota FCV Concept comes one step closer to reality

Wed, 20 Nov 2013

When Toyota first conceptualized a gasoline-electric hybrid vehicle for mainstream Americans to drive, the initial response was pretty skeptical. Still, through relentless engineering and solid product after solid product, Toyota has built the Prius brand into the dominant force in the hybrid car market.
Something like that plan of attack is what the Japanese company is preparing for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, as well, and that attack is seeing a critical salvo fired today with the debut of this FCV Concept at the Tokyo Motor Show.
Though there's nothing substantive to be said about rumors of a 300-mile range or a sticker price around $50,000, the FCV concept does offer a few technical details. The sharp-beaked concept makes use of two high-pressure hydrogen tanks and boasts a power output density of three kilowatts per liter.

KBB 2013 Brand Image Awards has some obvious and oddball winners

Sat, 30 Mar 2013

The sixth edition of the Kelley Blue Book Brand Image Awards have crowned a wide range of winners - in a couple of cases the recipient of the laurels might say more about KBB users than they do about the actual winner. Compiled from the responses of more than 12,000 shoppers on KBB.com over the past year, there are 13 categories broken into non-luxury, luxury and truck segments "representing the combined wisdom of the American car-buying public."
The award categories have been revamped this year, with some dropping off, some new ones appearing and at least one other given a new term. What isn't surprising is that Honda won Most Trusted Brand for the second year running, Best Value Brand for the third year in a row and took Best Overall Brand, which wasn't on last year's list of awards.
On our own shores, in the non-luxury categories Chrysler got Most Refined Brand and Buick took Best Value Luxury Brand. Neither one of those marques won anything in last year's Brand Image Awards, while Cadillac, which won Best Interior Design Brand and Best Comfort Brand last year - those awards disappeared this year - went home without a single accolade.

Toyota's Psy-style Waku-Doki ad inherits Japan's bizarre ad crown

Tue, 29 Jul 2014

A new Japanese Toyota ad featuring crisply suited businessmen driving into the jungle only to segue into a Psy-style music-video dance-off with a gorilla and natives is the latest car commercial to go viral. Jungle Wakudoki is the newest installment in a grand tradition of bizarre ads from the island nation that are by turns hilarious, head-scratching and occasionally even frightening.
Let's face it: My people are weird.
I'm half-Japanese and take suitable pride in my Asian roots, but even I can't figure out what's been slipped into the water coolers of the country's ad agencies much of the time - or the nation at large, for that matter. From Japan's ubiquitous obsession with all things adorable (kawaii) to its offbeat sense of humor and its bizarrely perverse and violent tentacle porn, it's clear there's a lot going on in the culture, and only some of it bubbles up to the surface in its marketing efforts. Much of the strangest and most amazing ads are for non-transportation products (e.g. laundry soap, snacks, energy drinks), but the automotive space has its fair share. This latest Toyota ad had me trawling YouTube for a common theme, trying to make sense of why these spots are the way they are. Scroll down to watch the Toyota ad in question as well as a bunch of other examples of Japan's most bizarre car-related ads and see if you can't find the thread that runs between them. Is it just that something's being lost in translation? Have your say in Comments.