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

2012 Toyota Corolla S - Manual on 2040-cars

US $16,500.00
Year:2012 Mileage:19785
Location:

Warwick, Rhode Island, United States

Warwick, Rhode Island, United States
Advertising:

 This is a 2012 Toyota Corolla S purchased at the end of August in 2012, still under factory warranty, and under the free maintenance service from the dealer. Above what is standard in the S package the car has the sliding/tilting glass sunroof, TRD front strut bar, touchscreen DVD/Navigation system, backup camera. There is 19,785 mi. which was put on in a year ( I commuted from Warwick to Portsmouth RI and back each day) all highway miles. The car is in great shape, looks new, just waxed. The pictures did come out grainy, I will be retaking pictures next weekend when we have sunlight again.

Paul (401) 217-9741

Auto Services in Rhode Island

Tommy`s ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 90 Allendale Ave, North-Scituate
Phone: (401) 231-9202

Richmond Motor Sales & Rental ★★★★★

New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 700 N Main St, Greenville
Phone: (401) 369-7779

Pare Service Center Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 2 Andrews Ave, N-Kingstown
Phone: (401) 821-9733

McLaughlin Automotive Stores ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Body Parts
Address: 350 Plainfield St, Woonsocket
Phone: (401) 943-5000

Glen Hills Service Center ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 244 W Natick Rd, Coventry
Phone: (401) 736-0999

Darlington Auto Body ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Used Car Dealers
Address: 156 Benefit St, Rumford
Phone: (401) 723-2280

Auto blog

Toyota Hilux gets heart transplant from Lexus IS F

Thu, Sep 10 2015

The Toyota Hilux might not be sold in the US, but Toyota's venerable pickup has an international reputation of being able to go anywhere and do just about anything. The trucks aren't really known for their speed, though, at least until Toyota South Africa Motorsport's new, one-off project. This bruiser ditches the usual diesel engine and replaces it with an unrestricted 5.0-liter V8 from a Lexus IS F making 449 horsepower. Of course, it takes more than power to handle the rigors of high speed off-roading. The motorsport team also adds bigger, competition-spec brakes, fully adjustable dampers, new springs, and retuned gearing to make the truck look practically ready for the Dakar Rally. The gearbox is really the only part that carries over. The V8 gives the special Hilux quite a mean growl, too. With the new Tacoma just launching in the US, maybe the engineers at TRD need to apply this same concept over here for its own Lexus-engined, one-off pickup.

Green self-driving cars take center stage in Tokyo

Sat, Oct 31 2015

Visions of cars that drive themselves without emitting a bit of pollution while entertaining passengers with online movies and social media are what's taking center stage at the Tokyo Motor Show. Japan, home to the world's top-selling automaker, has a younger generation disinterested in owning or driving cars. The show is about wooing them back. It's also about pushing an ambitious government-backed plan that paints Japan as a leader in automated driving technology. Reporters got a preview look at the exhibition Wednesday, ahead of its opening to the public Oct. 30. Nissan Motor Co. showed a concept vehicle loaded with laser scanners, a 360 degree camera setup, a radar and computer chips so the car can "think" to deliver autonomous driving. The Japanese automaker called it IDS, which stands for "intelligent driving system." Nissan, based in Yokohama, Japan, said it will offer some autonomous driving features by the end of next year in Japan. By 2018, it said vehicles with the technology will be able to conduct lane changes on highways. By 2020, such vehicles will be able to make their way through intersections on regular urban roads. Nissan officials said they were working hard to make the car smart enough to recognize the difference between a red traffic light and a tail light, learn how to turn on intersections where white lane indicators might be missing and anticipate from body language when a pedestrian might cross a street. Nissan's IDS vehicle is also electric, with a new battery that's more powerful than the one currently in the automaker's Leaf electric vehicle. Although production and sales plans were still undecided, it can travel a longer distance on a single charge and recharge more quickly. A major challenge for cars that drive themselves is winning social acceptance. They would have to share the roads with normal cars with drivers as well as with pedestrians, animals and unexpected objects. That's why some automakers at the show are packing the technology into what looks more like a golf cart or scooter than a car, such as Honda Motor Co.'s cubicle-like Wander Stand and Wander Walker scooter. Instead of trying to venture on freeways and other public roads, these are designed for controlled environments, restricted to shuttling people to pre-determined destinations. At a special section of the show, visitors can try out some of the so-called "smart mobility" devices such as Honda's seat on a single-wheel as well as small electric vehicles.

How to fix a $4,000 hybrid battery problem with vinegar and baking soda

Wed, Feb 18 2015

This is one of those 'Don't try this at home if you don't know what you're doing' DIY tales. Two weeks after imgur user "scoodidabop" bought a used Toyota Camry Hybrid with no warranty, he got the Christmas Tree dash display with warnings like "Check VSC System," "Check Hybrid System," and the Check Engine light. After some Internet sleuthing he figured it could be a faulty brake actuator, assuming the hybrid system warning was a false alarm. But it wasn't the actuator, it was the battery, a Toyota dealer telling him that his battery had "gone bad," and he'd need $4,457 to replace it. Then he had a brainstorm: it could be one of the cells that's gone bad, not the whole battery. Scoodidabop has some experience as an electrician, so he figured he could test it and replace any bad cells for about $45 apiece. He removed the battery unit from the trunk and over the course of two hours tested all 68 cells four times. He found nothing wrong. So he devised another type of test and checked every cell again. He couldn't find a problem with any of them. Turns out the problem wasn't in the cells, but with the dirty and corroded copper connectors at the ends of the high-voltage cables. He pulled the 34 connectors and their steel nuts, soaked them in vinegar, gave them a light steel wool scrub, soaked them in baking soda and water to counteract the vinegar, applied an anticorrosive and reinstalled them. That took an hour. When he replaced the battery, the warning lights had all gone out and the battery worked perfectly. Skill level: experience. Cost: less than $10. Perhaps it's time for hybrids to be able to test their own cells individually. Dealers, too.