Toyota Cars Info

Your guide to everything Toyota

January 10th, 2010

Toyota Corolla S

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I’ve always been a little biased when it comes to Toyota. My first car was a ’93 Corolla and I have fond memories of that baby. Anyway, check out its 2008 trim levels.

All Corolla S, LE, and CE offer standard and optional exterior and interior features. Mostly their exteriors are sleek and have color-keyed body side moldings. They also have power outside mirrors ad smoked headlamps. The interiors boast amenities such as a 60/40 split fold-down rear seat, silhouette sport speedometer and leather-wrapped steering wheel. Am adjustable tilt steering wheel, CFC-free air conditioning, and a deluxe AM/FM ETR/CD with four or six speakers are also part of the package. The engine is a standard 130-horsepower, 1.8-liter, DOHC, 16-valve, VVT-I, 4-cylinder. For other performance features, check the official Toyota website

October 10th, 2009

The Corolla


Although the Civic remains to be a more popular choice, the Corolla is by no means an automobile meant to be disregarded. Yes the Civic is more contemporary, offers more space and obviously a lot more comfortable not to mention durable but Toyota offers a lot more electronic stability control which is known as the VSC (Vehicle Stability Control) as an alternative on all the Toyota series except the CE version of the Corolla as compared to the exclusive Honda sporty version of the Civic. The electroluminescent gauges is another bonus, the instrument panel is hardly visible but its okay because it get highlighted when you start engine as the same time with the speedometer and tachometer. A good attributed that used to be only evident on luxury cars.

August 11th, 2008

TOYOTA VS. HONDA


Image Source: www.alibaba.com
The 2 most important Japanese car producers today are Toyota and Honda. Both cars are well made and have there own technological enhances. They also show the way the race for the most fuel well-organized cars. If you’re looking for the most fuel efficient car, the Toyota Prius has an edge over the Honda Civic. But if you’re looking for toughness, I would say that Honda cars are more durable. They will give you 5-10 trouble free years provided you obey with the manufacturers scheduled preservation checks. I’m not saying that Toyota cars are not durable, its just that Honda cars are made of sturdier stuff. On the down side, Honda’s design is redundant and parts are expensive. Toyota’s simpler figures make it easier and cheaper to maintain than Honda’s. This allows Toyota cars to be in top shape far longer than their competitors. Verdict: buy a Honda. If it reaches 10 years you actually have to get a new car anyhow.

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