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2018 Toyota Sienna Se Braunability Wheelchair Mobility Van 14k Miles $26000 on 2040-cars

US $26,000.00
Year:2019 Mileage:14000 Color: White
Location:

Brooklyn, New York, United States

Brooklyn, New York, United States
Advertising:

2018 Toyota Sienna SE Braunability Wheelchair Mobility Van 14k Miles $26000
6 way Swivel seat
EZ lock
Hand controls
Navigation
Moonroof

Cell: 917-520-7452
Email: 773cars@gmail.com
www.seewaldcars.com

Toyota Sienna for Sale

Auto Services in New York

Tones Tunes ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Window Tinting, Glass Coating & Tinting
Address: 924 W Jericho Tpke, Greenlawn
Phone: (631) 864-8663

Tmf Transmissions ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Auto Transmission, Auto Transmission Parts
Address: 1805 Tebor Rd, Ontario-Center
Phone: (866) 595-6470

Sun Chevrolet Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers
Address: 104 W Genesee St, Chittenango
Phone: (315) 687-7231

Steinway Auto Repairs Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 2305 Steinway St, New-Hyde-Park
Phone: (718) 545-6129

Southern Tier Auto Recycling ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Radiators Automotive Sales & Service, Automobile Accessories
Address: 1225 Coon Hollow Rd, Big-Flats
Phone: (607) 962-7995

Solano Mobility ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Wheelchair Lifts & Ramps, Wheelchairs
Address: Cold-Spring
Phone: (866) 511-6940

Auto blog

Japan offering $20,000 incentives for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles

Wed, Jul 23 2014

That tailwind Toyota may be feeling in Japan won't be from a stiff breeze off the northern Pacific Ocean. The Japanese automaker is getting ready to start selling its first production hydrogen fuel-cell vehicle in its native country next year. And the government is ponying up real big in incentives, Reuters says. The Japanese government will provide incentives worth about $20,000 per fuel-cell vehicle, Reuters reports, citing Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. That sort of government money will bring Toyota's first hydrogen fuel-cell vehicle to the customer at under $50,000. Just so we're clear, Japan's incentives for battery-electric vehicles top out at about $8,500. That sound you hear is a bunch of Nissan executives tearing their hair out. Last month, Toyota said the price for the fuel-cell sedan would be about $69,000 in Japan, and while the company hasn't priced it for US consumption, the word's out that the car may be in the $50,000 range stateside. The fuel-cell sedan, which has a full-tank range of about 300 miles, goes on sale in Japan next April and will start sales in Europe and the US next summer. Honda is also debuting its first production fuel-cell vehicle next year, so Toyota's got company among automakers who are probably all raising a glass and saying "kampai" to the Japanese government right about now.

Does the Toyota Prius still matter?

Tue, Feb 3 2015

Toyota remains incredibly proud of its green halo car, the Prius. On the company website, it calls the gas-electric car, "The hybrid that started it all." Chances are, if someone tells you to think of a hybrid car today, your first thought is going to be the Prius. Now a cultural icon, the Prius changed a lot of attitudes about what an efficient car is able to achieve. But the car is aging, despite numerous refreshes and model tweaks over the years, and sales dropped 11.5 percent last year. It's taken Toyota 25 years of ups and downs to get the Prius to where it is today, and we started wondering if that's too long for the car to remain viable in an era of 40+ mile-per-gallon non-hybrid cars and a plethora of plug-in competitors for the green car crown (we're not the only ones). Plus, Toyota is rapidly shifting its green focus away from the Prius and towards the hydrogen-powered Mirai fuel cell car. But if you ask Toyota representatives if the Prius is still a vital car in 2015 – and we did – you'll find that there's still a lot of love for the car that went before. For example, Geri Yoza is a Toyota national manager who spent years traveling all across the US teaching people about the Prius. The veteran of countless customer education sessions told AutoblogGreen that it took a long time for the Prius to "cross the technology chasm," and that it wasn't until about a decade after launch that the car became a common sight outside of the initial popularity hotspots. "It takes a while for people to become confident in the technology, to understand that it's been proven," she said. Now that the hybrid is ensconced in the public mind, it's time for the next step. "I think the Prius, the whole idea 'to go before,' was to go before the Mirai." Part of that precursor status is due to the fact that a lot of the Prius' powertrain technology has made the jump to the Mirai. When we asked Bob Carter, Toyota's senior vice president of automotive operations, if the Prius still matters, he had a clear answer: "My goodness, yes." "We've been selling hybrids for 25 years," he said, "but when you go back, we had said that the Prius and hybrid technology were a bridge to the future and we were very clear that it's going to be a very long bridge. Essentially, and I'm not an engineer, the Mirai takes the technology from the Prius and takes the ICE engine out and puts a fuel cell stack in.

Akio Toyoda pledges return to WRC in 2017 with a Yaris

Sat, Jan 31 2015

There have been rumors of Toyota returning to the World Rally Championship since the end of 2013, and a Yaris prepped by Toyota Motorsport in Germany has been caught on The Continent several times last year in testing. Akio Toyoda visited Rally Finland while we were there with Hyundai to watch a race up close, and he said that the passion people still had for Toyota's past exploits encouraged him. He finally answered the question about when they planned to enter the series, announcing in Tokyo that they'd line up for the season in 2017. The Japanese company, a legend in rallying, got into the sport in 1979 and left in 1999 after winning seven titles in ten years through the nineties with Carlos Sainz and Juha Kankkunen. The 2017 return is likely due to the regulation changes that year to allow more power than the roughly 300-horsepower in today's challengers and the switch to a fuel-flow formula to let manufacturers use different kinds of engines. Toyota has been sitting in on the WRC rules meetings, and the final slate of changes will be announced at the end of this year. The Yaris that's been testing is powered by a 1.6-liter, four-cylinder that meets current regulations, but we can expect it to change somewhat before it's race-ready. TMG will test the car for the next two years, then it will go up against fellow manufacturers Volkswagen, Hyundai, and Citroen, as well as Fords run by M-Sport. There's video of the Yaris running solo through the Belgian countryside above, and a gallery of the coming car below.