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

2007 Toyota Highlander 2wd Sport on 2040-cars

US $9,400.00
Year:2007 Mileage:89000
Location:

Wailuku, Hawaii, United States

Wailuku, Hawaii, United States
Advertising:


A/C ice cold, All scheduled maintenance, All records, Always garaged, Custom wheels, Excellent condition, Fully loaded with all the goodies, Looks & drives great, Mostly highway miles, Must see, New Bridgestone tires, No accidents, Perfect first car, Seats like new, Title in hand, Upgraded sound system, Very clean interior, Well maintained, Roof rack, Towing pkg, Running board, Rock deflector, Wet okole seat covers (front and back), Carfax available. Will negotiate.

Toyota Highlander for Sale

Auto Services in Hawaii

Cutter Fiat Hawaii ★★★★

New Car Dealers
Address: 914 Ala Moana Blvd, Ewa-Beach
Phone: (808) 564-9950

United Auto Body Repair Inc ★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Truck Body Repair & Painting
Address: 1164 Kona St, Kapolei
Phone: (866) 595-6470

Puhi Industrial Parts-Bearings ★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Battery Storage, Hardware Stores
Address: 1579 Haleukana St # B, Kaumakani
Phone: (866) 595-6470

Kona Hyundai ★★★★

New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers
Address: 75 5793 Kuakini Hwy, Kailua-Kona
Phone: (866) 595-6470

Affordable Auto Body Repairs ★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
Address: 2232 Kamehameha Hwy, Waimanalo
Phone: (808) 861-6161

Goodyear Auto Service Center ★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Tire Dealers, Auto Oil & Lube
Address: 4510 Salt Lake Blvd, Hickam-Afb
Phone: (808) 450-3147

Auto blog

Toyota takes self-driving step with patent for eyelid detection device

Mon, Mar 23 2015

With the rise of smartphones and more advanced auto infotainment systems, combatting distracted driving is a growing concern. One day, fully autonomous vehicles could end the problem, but that solution is still at best years away for consumers. Until then, automakers are working to make the tech safer, and one way to do that is monitoring drivers' eyes to make sure they're paying attention. With a recent patent, Toyota thinks it can make the tracking work even better. In Japanese brand's patented solution, a camera constantly monitors the driver's upper and lower eyelids and uses the data to calculate how open the eyes are. The company admits systems like this already exist elsewhere, but they can sometimes return false results by detecting redeye instead of the location of a person's actual eyeball. To fix this, the automaker adds a further step to search for redeye. If it occurs where skin is already assumed to be, then the system can go back to tracking the accurate location of the eye. Toyota doesn't specify how it might use this technology, but more accurate data would always be useful. The company wouldn't be the first automaker to work on implementing eye detection, either. For example, General Motors has a pilot program using it to monitor distraction, and Jaguar Land Rover watches a driver's peepers to create the 3d image for its Virtual Windscreen. Related Video:

Toyota turning landfill gas into hybrid vehicles, indirectly

Fri, Mar 28 2014

Chamillionaire certainly wasn't referring to the Toyota Avalon or Camry when he rapped about "ridin' dirty" but maybe he'll change his tune soon. That's because some of the future energy sources for the Kentucky factory that makes those two models will come from gas created from the breakdown of solid waste. So the power behind some of the production at Toyota's largest North American factory will indeed be funky. Toyota is working with Waste Services of the Bluegrass to build a network of wells at a nearby landfill in order to collect the gases. Construction of the system starts next month and will be finished by early next year. The upshot is that the system will produce one megawatt of electricity per hour, which is the equivalent to the power used by 800 houses. Last spring, Toyota said it would start producing the Lexus ES at the Kentucky plant after getting almost a $150 million offer from the state. That's because that model is expected to add 50,000 vehicles to the existing production numbers at the plant. And those production numbers are already large, as Toyota makes both the standard and hybrid versions of both the Camry and Avalon there. Mind you, Toyota's not the first to go this route for factory-energy production. In 2011, General Motors' Orion Assembly Plant started getting about 40 percent of its energy for production of models such as the Chevy Sonic and Buick Verano from methane captured from a landfill nearby. The General estimated at the time that the process would cut the company's energy costs by about $1.1 million a year. Check out Toyota's press release about the Kentucky plant and its future landfill gas below. Landfill Gas to Build Cars and a Greener Community Partnership between Toyota and local landfill turns garbage into good March 24, 2014 GEORGETOWN, Ky. (MARCH, 24 2014) – Can a car company be a vehicle for change? Toyota thinks so. The Kentucky plant that manufactures some of the greenest cars on the road, including two hybrid models, will soon be powered in part by green electricity. Toyota Motor Manufacturing, Kentucky, Inc. has teamed up with Waste Services of the Bluegrass to generate power from local landfill waste, marking the region's first business to business landfill gas to energy initiative. Toyota estimates the locally-generated landfill gas will supply enough power each year for the production of 10,000 vehicles. How it Works As solid waste naturally breaks down in a landfill, it creates gas.

What's in a trademark? Sometimes, the next iconic car name

Thu, 07 Aug 2014



The United States Patent and Trademark Office is a treasure trove for auto enthusiasts, especially those who double as conspiracy theorists.
Why has Toyota applied to trademark "Supra," the name of one of its legendary sports cars, even though it hasn't sold one in the United States in 16 years? Why would General Motors continue to register "Chevelle" long after one of the most famous American muscle cars hit the end of the road? And what could Chrysler possibly do with the rights to "313," the area code for Detroit?