2008 Toyota Matrix Xr Wagon 4-door 1.8l on 2040-cars
Livonia, Michigan, United States
2008 Toyota Matrix XR. 76,326 miles. Black with black cloth seats. Purchased used from a dealership at about 12,000 miles. Well maintained, regularly serviced at a Toyota dealership, oil changed every 5,000 miles, etc.
Automatic transmission. Power windows and locks. Anti lock brakes. Cruise control. Air conditioning. Sunroof tilt and slide. Radio and CD player. Set up for SIRIUS radio (but not active). Newer battery and tires. Paint in great condition. Drives great and reliable. Clean inside and out. Upholstery and carpets in great condition, no tears. Everything works. From a non -smoking household. NOTES: 1. Driver’s side windshield has small crack from a stone that hit it as I was driving on the freeway about 2 years ago. The crack measures about 1/2 inch and hasn’t grown since it happened. The crack does not affect visibility at all. See photo. 2. Driver’s side front bumper has a tear. I purchased the car this way at 12,000 miles and it has not changed since then. See photo. I have described this to the best of my ability. Please contact me with any questions. On Feb-07-14 at 13:28:18 PST, seller added the following information: Correction: SIRIUS radio will be active until August 1, 2014. On Feb-08-14 at 04:15:27 PST, seller added the following information: LOCATED IN LIVONIA, MICHIGAN, A SUBURB OF DETROIT. |
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California readies big 'red carpet' for hydrogen cars, H2 stations
Mon, Aug 4 2014The Golden State is sinking some serious green into its hydrogen-refueling infrastructure. But California says it's rolling out the red carpet for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. Maybe we'll get our colors straight eventually. With a goal to have 1.5 million zero-emissions vehicles on California roads by 2025, the California Air Resources Board is outlining plans to sink $50 million into opening 28 publicly accessible hydrogen refueling stations by the end of 2015 and more than 50 ready for business by 2017. Today, California is home to all but one of the country's 11 public hydrogen stations (the other is in South Carolina). The most recent addition was at Cal State Los Angeles in May for the university's Hydrogen Research and Fueling Facility. Most of the first expansion of 28 stations will be represented by a partnership Toyota and FirstElement Fuel Inc. announced this spring. FirstElement is headed by ex-General Motors and Hyundai executive Joel Ewanick. The collaboration will help build out 19 hydrogen refueling stations, which are said to be located so that anyone in the state can reach them with their H2 car. HyGen Industries, Linde and the Institute of Gas Technology are among the other entities breaking out refueling stations. Check out CARB's press release below. California agencies roll out red carpet for hydrogen electric vehicles State partnerships accelerate the transition to zero-emission vehicles SACRAMENTO - California state agencies are collaborating on a range of initiatives to support the goal of 1.5 million zero-emission vehicles on the road by 2025. Last week, the California Energy Commission carried out one of these initiatives, voting to use nearly $50 million to put in place 28 new, public hydrogen refueling stations and one mobile refueler by the end of 2015. The move was one of several actions designed to help achieve a key goal of the state's zero-emission vehicle (ZEV) plan: to accelerate construction of hydrogen refueling infrastructure across the state. "California is rolling out the red carpet for Californians who choose these ultra-clean hydrogen powered electric cars and for the companies that make them," said Air Resources Board Chairman Mary D. Nichols.
Toyota Camry re-earns CR 'Recommended' rating following crash tests
Thu, 19 Dec 2013All is right again in the Toyota kingdom. The Japanese manufacturer's bread-and-butter sedan, the Camry, has been put back on Consumer Reports' "Recommended" vehicle list, following improved performance in the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety's crash testing.
You'll recall that the 2012 and 2013 Camry were infamously booted from the list due to "Poor" ratings in IIHS' notoriously tough small-overlap crash testing. Toyota vowed - just last week actually - to fix the ratings. As the Toyota brand's head, Bill Fay, said last week, "It's still a five-star car. It still does very well in all the IIHS tests. It did not in [the small overlap frontal crash test], and we're busy making the necessary adjustments so that we can address that."
Now, though, those redesigned cars have been tested, earning an "Acceptable" rating in the overlap testing. According to Consumer Reports, Camrys built from November 2013 on feature new internal structures that improve the car's crash test scores enough to make it a "Recommended" buy. IIHS has also elevated the car back to a position in its Top Safety Pick category, although it falls short of the new gold standard, the Top Safety Pick + rating.
Automakers not currently promoting EVs are probably doomed
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