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

2014 Toyota 4runner Sr5 Premium on 2040-cars

US $38,455.00
Year:2014 Mileage:0 Color: Magnetic Gray Metallic /
 Black
Location:

248 Auto Plaza Dr, Beckley, West Virginia, United States

248 Auto Plaza Dr, Beckley, West Virginia, United States
Advertising:
Fuel Type:Gasoline
Engine:4.0L V6 24V MPFI DOHC
Transmission:5-Speed Automatic
Condition: New
VIN (Vehicle Identification Number): JTEBU5JR8E5183905
Stock Num: 12652
Make: Toyota
Model: 4Runner SR5 Premium
Year: 2014
Exterior Color: Magnetic Gray Metallic
Interior Color: Black
Options:
  • 1st and 2nd row curtain head airbags
  • 4-wheel ABS Brakes
  • ABS and Driveline Traction Control
  • Audio controls on steering wheel
  • Auxilliary transmission cooler
  • Bluetooth wireless phone connectivity
  • Braking Assist
  • Bucket front seats
  • Cargo area light
  • Center Console: Full with cove
  • Clock: In-dash
  • Coil front spring
  • Coil rear spring
  • Cruise control
  • Cruise controls on steering wheel
  • Daytime running lights
  • Digital Audio Input
  • Double wishbone front suspension
  • Driver and passenger knee airbags
  • Driver Seat Head Restraint Whiplash Protection
  • Dual illuminated vanity mirrors
  • Entune
  • External temperature display
  • Fold forward seatback rear seats
  • Front and rear suspension stabilizer bars
  • Front fog/driving lights
  • Front Independent Suspension
  • Front reading lights
  • Front Ventilated disc brakes
  • Fuel Capacity: 23.0 gal.
  • Fuel Consumption: City: 17 mpg
  • Fuel Consumption: Highway: 21 mpg
  • Fuel Type: Regular unleaded
  • Head Restraint Whiplash Protection with Passenger Seat
  • Heated driver mirror
  • Heated passenger mirror
  • Heated windshield washer jets
  • In-Dash single CD player
  • Independent front suspension classification
  • Instrumentation: Low fuel level
  • Interior air filtration
  • Manufacturer's 0-60mph acceleration time (seconds): 7.3 s
  • MP3 player
  • Multi-link rear suspension
  • Passenger Airbag
  • Power remote driver mirror adjustment
  • Power remote passenger mirror adjustment
  • Power windows
  • Privacy glass: Deep
  • Rear seats center armrest
  • Rear spoiler: Lip
  • Rear Stabilizer Bar: Regular
  • Regular front stabilizer bar
  • Remote activated exterior entry lights
  • Remote power door locks
  • Remote window operation
  • Rigid axle rear suspension
  • Side airbag
  • Spare Tire Mount Location: Underbody w/crankdown
  • Speed-proportional power steering
  • Split rear bench
  • Stability control
  • Tachometer
  • Tilt and telescopic steering wheel
  • Tire Pressure Monitoring System
  • Trailer hitch
  • Trip computer
  • Variable intermittent front wipers
  • Vehicle Emissions: LEV II
  • Video Monitor Location: Front
  • Wiper park
Drive Type: 4WD
Number of Doors: 4 Doors

SAVE AT THE PUMP!!! 21 MPG Hwy.. Hey!! Look right here! 4 Wheel Drive, never get stuck again... Just Arrived!! Special Financing Available: APR AS LOW AS 0%!!! Are you looking for a outstanding value in a vehicle? Well, with this versatile 4Runner, you are going to get it!! It has nice optional equipment like: Rigid Running Boards, All Weather Floor Mats & Cargo Tray, Cargo Cross Bars...

Auto Services in West Virginia

Todd Auto Body Inc ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Dent Removal, Towing
Address: 13899 Molly Pitcher Hwy, Falling-Waters
Phone: (717) 977-5154

Ramey 9999 Or Less ★★★★★

New Car Dealers
Address: RR 460, Kegley
Phone: (304) 425-9999

Pro Tech Autocare ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 13952 Webster Rd, Calvin
Phone: (304) 742-5005

ohio motor group ★★★★★

Used Car Dealers, Financing Services, Warranty Contracts
Address: 56341 national rd, Glen-Dale
Phone: (740) 633-0039

Mercury Endurance Cycles ★★★★★

New Car Dealers
Address: 222 E Oak Ridge Dr, Falling-Waters
Phone: (240) 347-4959

Far From Factory ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
Address: 2686 US Rt. 60, Ona
Phone: (304) 360-2140

Auto blog

What would you drive in 1985?

Wed, May 6 2020

Bereft of live baseball games to watch, I've turned to the good ship YouTube to watch classic games. While watching the 1985 American League Championship Series last night, several of the broadcast's commercials made its way into the original VHS recording, including those for cars. "Only 8.8% financing on a 1985 Ford Tempo!" What a deal! That got me thinking: what would I drive in 1985?  It sure wouldn't be a Tempo. Or an IROC-Z, for that matter, despite what my Photoshopped 1980s self would indicate in the picture above. I posed this question to my fellow Autobloggists. Only one could actually drive back then, I was only 2 and a few editors weren't even close to being born. Here are our choices, which were simply made with the edict of "Come on, man, be realistic."  West Coast Editor James Riswick: OK, I started this, I'll go first. I like coupes today, so I'm pretty sure I'd drive one back then. I definitely don't see myself driving some badge-engineered GM thing from 1985, and although a Honda Prelude has a certain appeal, I must admit that something European would likely be in order. A BMW maybe? No, I'm too much a contrarian for that. The answer is therefore a 1985 Saab 900 Turbo 3-Door, which is not only a coupe but a hatchback, too. If I could scrounge up enough Reagan-era bucks for the ultra-cool SPG model, that would be rad. The 900 Turbo pictured, which was for auction on Bring a Trailer a few years ago, came with plum-colored Bokhara Red, and you're damn sure I would've had me one of those. Nevermind 1985, I'd probably drive this thing today.   Associate Editor Byron Hurd: I'm going to go with the 1985.5 Ford Mustang SVO, AKA the turbocharged Fox Body that everybody remembers but nobody drives. The mid-year update to the SVO bumped the power up from 175 ponies (yeah, yeah) to 205, making it almost as powerful (on paper, anyway) as the V8-powered GT models offered in the same time frame. I chose this particular car because it's a bit of a time capsule and, simultaneously, a reminder that all things are cyclical. Here we are, 35 years later, and 2.3-liter turbocharged Mustangs are a thing again. Who would have guessed?

Everybody's doing flying cars, so why aren't we soaring over traffic already?

Mon, Oct 1 2018

"Where's my flying car?" has been the meme for impending technology that never materializes since before there were memes. And the trough of disillusionment for vehicles that can take to sky continues to nosedive, despite a nonstop fascination with flying cars and a recent rash of announcements about the technology, particularly from traditional automakers. Earlier this month, Toyota applied for an eye-popping patent for a flying car that has wheels with spring-loaded pop-out helicopter rotors. The patent filing says the wheels/rotors would be electrically powered, while in on-land mode the vehicle would have differential steering like tracked vehicles such as tanks and bulldozers. At an airshow in July, Aston Martin unveiled its Volante Vision Concept, an autonomous hybrid-electric vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) vehicle it developed with Rolls-Royce. Aston says the Volante can fly at top speeds of around 200 mph and bills it as a luxury car for the skies. Audi used the Geneva Motor Show in March to unveil a flying car concept called the Pop.Up Next it developed with Airbus and Italdesign. If the Pop.Up Next, an electric and autonomous quadcopter/city car combo, gets stuck in traffic, an app can be used to summon an Airbus-developed drone to pick up the passenger compartment pod, leaving the chassis behind. Audi said that the Pop.Up Next is a "flexible on-demand concept that could open up mobility in the third dimension to people in cities." But Audi also acknowledged that at this point it has no plans to develop it. The cash-stoked, skies-the-limit Silicon Valley tech crowd is also bullish on flying cars. The startup Kitty Hawk that's backed by Google co-founder Larry Page announced in June that it's taking pre-orders for its single-seat electric Flyer that's powered by 10 propellers and is capable of vertical takeoffs and landings. The current version can only fly up to 20 mph and 10 feet in the air and has a flight time of just 12 to 20 minutes on a full charge. The Flyer is considered a recreational vehicle, so doesn't require a pilot's license. Uber says it plans to launch its more ambitious Elevate program and UberAIR service in 2023. "Uber customers will be able to push a button and get a flight on-demand with uberAIR in Dallas, Los Angeles and a third international market," Uber Elevate promises on its website.

Toyota wants you to meet an 'obsessed' hydrogen fuel cell engineer

Thu, May 8 2014

Like a television-broadcasting company covering the Olympics, Toyota is looking to market its future in hydrogen fuel-cell vehicle production by taking the personal approach. In this case, the Japanese automaker is telling the backstory of Jackie Birdsall, an engineer at Toyota Technical Center who Toyota says is "obsessed" with fuel-cell technology. A Sacramento native, Birdsall is responsible for testing fuel-cell vehicles and making sure hydrogen stations fill the tanks of the cars in a "reasonable" timeframe. Long a gearhead, she attended Flint, MI's Kettering University (formerly General Motors Institute) and, among other places, worked for the California Fuel Cell Partnership before joining Toyota in 2012. Her first car was an '87 Camry. That's one personal side of Toyota's hydrogen push, and shows another way Toyota is introducing the world to this new powertrain (see also: winter performance). The nitty-gritty is made up of things like working with FirstElement Fuel Inc. on a hydrogen-refueling network in California. As for its fuel-cell sedan, which was displayed in FCV prototype form at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January and is due next year, Toyota said it expects the car to have a full-tank range of about 300 miles and a five-minute refueling time. That's if Ms. Birdsall has anything to say about it. Check out Toyota's press release about Birdsall below. Talkin' 'Bout a Revolution A healthy obsession leads Jackie Birdsall and TTC to the forefront of history The word she keeps using is "obsessed." Jackie Birdsall became "obsessed" with cars when she was a teenager. That made her "obsessed" with the history of auto icons like Henry Ford and Lee Iacocca. In 2003, she did an internship with Daimler-Chrysler, leading to an "obsession" with hydrogen fuel cell technology. And now, as an engineer at Toyota Technical Center, Birdsall is "obsessed" with bringing fuel cell technology to the masses. But perhaps you need to be obsessed when you're trying to change the world. After all, revolutions don't blossom from complacency. Leading an alternative fuel revolution is just what Birdsall and her partners on the Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle team are doing. Collectively, they're finding tangible ways to reduce fossil fuels in the automobile world and figuring out how hydrogen fuel cells can be useful and affordable. In 2015, that obsession will bear fruit when Toyota's FCV hits the markets in California, Japan and Europe.