notable ones are the new trapezoidal grille and a power roller shutter that covers the pick-up’s bed
the Isuzu D-Max and Mitsubishi Triton were updated in 2019, while Malaysia’s pick-up king, the Toyota
It’s the American brand’s latest update on the rival of the all-conquering Toyota Hilux.Speaking
Roof which is the one you see on the blue Triton, while another is the GT Pickup which extends to the bed
guessing that the “fusion” is longer than the standard Exora thanks to the added truck bed
Pictures from autonetmagz (sourced from Car Spotting TH) show the adorable Honda e spotted on a truck bed
the Myvi is a converted campervan when she parks the car and set things up.Other than a queen-size bed
Where the Toyota Corolla Altis and Honda Civic used to rule the roost, now they battle for scraps left
These embellishments give the Navara a more action-packed look than the Ford Ranger Wildtrak or the Toyota
the 3rd-row passengers an airy impression inside.The Haoyue aims squarely against the likes of the Toyota
There are already after-market Lexus ‘spindle grille’ conversions for various Toyota models
.If it looks funny to you, don’t be surprised, as it appears that Geely has tacked on a truck bed
camping companion and this is further enhanced with a simple safari rack and a canvas canopy covering the bed
Hence the term “body-on-frame”.From the Ford F-150 to the Toyota Hilux and the Mercedes-Benz
hugeCapping off the looks are stripes along the top and sides of the car, with wings extending from the bed
Launched in 2008, the Mitsubishi Triton is the closest rival to the Toyota Hilux in terms of price.
Each new car will be delivered on a single flat-bed truck and covered in canvas to ensure factory-fresh
This is the new 2020 Toyota Hilux Rogue modified - the top-dog in the newly-facelifted Toyota Hilux range
Think of it as a powerboot for a pick-up truck - instead of having to physically lift your trucks bed
2014 Perodua Alza Advance 1.5
157,270 km
10.5 years
Johor Bharu
2016 Perodua Alza Advance 1.5
101,004 km
7.5 years
Petaling Jaya
@daniheath4 Yes indeed Dani! Happy days are here again 🤗 Had an uneventful trip home. No issues getting in and out our minivan (Toyota Sienna). Both Ed & I had a great time last night. Been 12 weeks since we were in the same bed.🥂 Was greeted w/ a bouquet of balloons & flowers.#HomeAtLast https://t.co/7N14OLzwsm
Special Camping Rental : Toyota Sienna Van with Sleeper Bed (Hilo) $60 - https://t.co/6cWvFlUAPN https://t.co/JqPXrBF4eR
Congratulations to Inez & David, the owner's of Squirrel's Nest Bed and Breakfast, who purchased the 2017 Toyota Sienna! Sold by Blake. https://t.co/jtrH9Uicvy
I present the Toyota Sienna RV edition. 3 seats. 1 bed. 0 hotel costs. http://t.co/lORY7Zh4xZ
#bed Can I move a queen bed in or on top of a Toyota Sienna?
Big question tomorrow: can you fit a queen size bed in a Toyota Sienna? The moving has begun!
I have a 2003 Toyota Sienna. The rear-most seats are both stuck. They are properly affixed to the vehicle bed, but I am now unable ...
It is with a heavy heart that I announce the passing of my 2005 Toyota Sienna LE. She has officially shat the bed and is being put out to pasture over-morrow. In lieu of flowers, I ask that all followers leave an F in the chat.
a Toyota Sienna bucket seat does not a comfy bed make.
So idk if my searching skills aren't good enough but for the life of me I can't find a definitive answer as to whether or not I'll be able to fit my queen size bed into my parents' Toyota Sienna. Guess I'll just have to see what happens when I try to move ot tomorrow.
From ,Which Minivans have Stow-and-Go Seating?,: Here is a quick breakdown of which of the minivans we selected offer stow-and-go seating: Kia Sedona – Not available Toyota Sienna – Split-n-stow feature, third-row Honda Odyssey – Not available Mercedes Bendz Metris – Not available Chrysler Voyager – Available for 2020 LXi trim model Chrysler Pacifica – Standard feature, third-row Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid – Not available Ford Transit Connect SWB/LWB – Not available Dodge Caravan – Standard feature, third-row Stow and Go seating means that the seats in the vehicle fold dlwn into the floor of the vehicle.
I only have 496,000 miles on my ’89 Silverado diesel, so I’m not certain. One Chevy Silverado owner has two, one with over one million miles, the other only has about 500,000 miles on it. I had my auto trans rebuilt at 400,000 miles, as it was leaking a little fluid. Other than that mine still has no rust, engine still starts and runs fine. Best part it gets 20 mpg in town, and 25 highway. Cab for five MEN, and 8′ bed to haul material and tools. Only cost $14,000 new. Can’t buy this configuration today. It’s more the maintenance and how it’s driven I think. Those that buy a vehicle, then only put three items into it, “The key, Gas, and their A$$” are always having problems. “IF IT Ain’t Broke, Don’t Fix IT”, just doesn’t work, except for the car salesman.
Well I'm poor and only have one friend and my family, soo, can I have the ten million pretty please? Granted I have many acquaintances and folk I am friendly with, but Just my friend from middle school truly considered friend. And family. They can't be friends cause like my 4 year old said to me at bed time, I yuv you always mommy, but I get so mad sometimes I forget that. But right now, I know I yuvs you. Hard to argue that is basically how family life is. We aren't always best friends because we live together, but we are always family. And friends are like good food, quality over quantity for me, thank you muchly. So back to my ten million. Sounds good. Moderately bigger house, college savings for the kids, debt free. Maybe buy the hubs a four door Toyota truck he's always drooling on. I like my toyota sienna so ill keep the Golden Girl. All medical bills paid off. A few goats, yep sounds good.
Minivans are actually extremely versatile vehicles. We bought a new Toyota Sienna minivan in 2013 even though our kids were grown and gone. Although Minivans are not considered “cool” at all, and will always be associated with the “Soccer - Mom” title, if you can look beyond that, they are actually darned good vehicles for a number of reasons including: It’s Much easier to get in and out of the middle and rear seats than most SuV’s. There is more interior room than just about any SUV. You can easily put the back seats down and slide the middle seats up and you’ve essentially got a pickup bed - you can carry a full size bicycle without taking the wheels off, lots of lumber, etc. Gas mileage is pretty darned good. When you need to carry up to seven people, you can, and it’s nice not to have to take two cars to a restaurant or wherever you want to go. Okay - truth be told, despite all of the above, I’d rather have a mid size SUV, but this is my wife’s car, and she really loves her minivan.
I asked myself this question. I looked at new Odysseys and Siennas. Then came the sticker shock as they can get pretty expensive. So I gave in and purchased a 2001 Honda Odyssey with 161K on it a couple of years ago. When we closed on our house in Georgia, we needed something to drive back to Texas to pick up some of our crap that we had left at my sister’s house. We owned a sedan at the time. This wasn’t going to work for us. There was quite a bit of stuff to bring back, plus, there was 4 of us going. My first thought was to rent a van or truck or whatever. So I called Enterprise. It was going to cost like over $800. I said no way. Plan B. So then I thought of buying a cash car. A cheap truck or something to haul all of our stuff in and that would comfortably fit 2 adults and 2 kids. Trucks are expensive. And my budget was under $4K. I searched Craigslist and all I could find was a bunch of crap for trucks at that price point. Plan C? Now, I’m like, “how ’bout a van?”. I felt this would give me more room and added flexibility versus a crossover. I looked at older Toyota Siennas and Honda Odysseys. I see there’s plenty out there in my budget. I do my research on these 2 cars. I notice that the older Odysseys are notorious for transmission problems. I find a 2001 Honda Odyssey on Craigslist listed for $3,000. It has 161K on it. In the description, the owner says the transmission has been replaced at 150K. This caught my attention. I call the guy. My wife and I drive over to see it. The owner pulls out a collection of service records, and I mean a collection. Tranny replaced. Timing belt replacement documentation. All the oil change service records. This guy had everything. We drive it and it checks out. I ended up buying it from him for $2,500. I paid $217 in taxes at the DMV. My thought process was that we’ll just drive it to Texas and back and then I’ll flip it and hope to get my money back. After all, the rental would have been over $800, right? We go to Texas. I had to put 2 new front tires on it for $250. We pick up our crap and drive back. It ran strong the entire way. Fast forward 2 years later to today and we still have the thing. It now has 190K on it. Why’d I decide to keep it? Well, I wanted a newer truck. Not to pull things but just for the Home Depot trips and stuff. Again, trucks are expensive. Trucks are only cool until the first car payment. The back seat of the Honda folds all the way flat into the car. The 2 middle captains chairs can be taken out completely. With this format, it’s as if I have a 8-foot truck bed in the back. This is very practical for me and the family as we have hauled plenty of things on multiple occasions. We’ve gotten our money’s worth out of it and then some. So there you have it. I may sell it just before 200K. I bet I can sell it for $3,000 and get my money back on it. Not a bad “investment”, huh?
I asked myself this question. Then I gave in and purchased a 2001 Honda Odyssey with 161K on it a couple of years ago. When we closed on our house in Georgia, we needed something to drive back to Texas to pick up some of our crap that we had left at my sister’s house. We owned a sedan at the time. This wasn’t going to work for us. There was quite a bit of stuff to bring back, plus, there was 4 of us going. My first thought was to rent a van or truck or whatever. So I called Enterprise. It was going to cost like over $800. I said no way. Plan B. So then I thought of buying a cash car. A cheap truck or something to haul all of our stuff in and that would comfortably fit 2 adults and 2 kids. Trucks are expensive. And my budget was under $4K. I searched Craigslist and all I could find was a bunch of crap for trucks at that price point. Plan C? Now, I’m like, “how ’bout a van?”. I felt this would give me more room and added flexibility versus a crossover. I looked at older Toyota Siennas and Honda Odysseys. I see there’s plenty out there in my budget. I do my research on these 2 cars. I notice that the older Odysseys are notorious for transmission problems. I find a 2001 Honda Odyssey on Craigslist listed for $3,000. It has 161K on it. In the description, the owner says the transmission has been replaced at 150K. This caught my attention. I call the guy. My wife and I drive over to see it. The owner pulls out a collection of service records, and I mean a collection. Tranny replaced. Timing belt replacement documentation. All the oil change service records. This guy had everything. We drive it and it checks out. I ended up buying it from him for $2,500. I paid $217 in taxes at the DMV. My thought process was that we’ll just drive it to Texas and back and then I’ll flip it and hope to get my money back. After all, the rental would have been over $800, right? We go to Texas. I had to put 2 new front tires on it for $250. We pick up our crap and drive back. It ran strong the entire way. Fast forward 2 years later to today and we still have the thing. It now has 190K on it. Why’d I decide to keep it? Well, I wanted a newer truck. Not to pull things but just for the Home Depot trips and stuff. Again, trucks are expensive. Trucks are only cool until the first car payment. The back seat of the Honda folds all the way flat into the car. The 2 middle captains chairs can be taken out completely. With this format, it’s as if I have a 8-foot truck bed in the back. This is very practical for me and the family as we have hauled plenty of things on multiple occasions. We’ve gotten our money’s worth out of it and then some. So there you have it. I may sell it just before 200K. I bet I can sell it for $3,000 and get my money back on it. Not a bad “investment”, huh?
(This is not me in the picture. I got the picture from the internet. I have no idea who the guy in the picture is, but he has the same kind of van as me, and he’s doing something I’ve done with mine.) A Toyota Sienna has enough room in the back for a full-sized air mattress, if you take out the middle row of seats and collapse the back row. Both of those things are very easy to do. This comes in handy on long road trips, if you don’t want to spend money on a hotel room just to sleep for a few hours. My family uses this sometimes when we go to drive-in movies in the summer. We open the back hatch, take out or collapse the necessary seats, fill up an inflatable bed, and the kids watch the movie from there. The adults sit just outside, next to the back bumper. It’s a lot of fun. I can do the same thing with the seats to fit standard-sized plywood or drywall in my van. I’ve used that feature a lot.
This is the reason I always buy a vehicle I can sleep in. In 1980 I bought a Toyota pickup truck with a cover on the bed and sleep in the bed until 2000. I bought a Sienna Van and outfitted it to sleep in it. When I moved to France, I gave the Sienna to my niece. In France I bought a VW camping van. In France there is a limit on the number of hours a truck driver can drive. So I pull up next to the trucks at the rest areas for trucks (truck stop) and crawl in the back for either a nap or the night. Good night!
Depends. Work, pleasure, or family? For work, it'd be a Mercedes Sprinter. High Roof, preferably 4x4. Best fuel economy of any commercial vehicle, lots of luxuries you wouldn't find in other vans, 6′ of headroom in the back and full-height cargo doors, up to 16′ of cargo length (double a long-bed truck) and easy engine access (an issue with many vans). Can be configured with up to 3 seats up front, or 2–4 seat benches in the back, so you can take as many people, cargo, etc as you want. Pleasure, either a Jeep Wrangler 2 Door, or a 20+ year old RWD sports/muscle car tuned for drifting (300zx, Supra, Corvette, Mustang, etc). Either would be manual. I'd spend much of the $50,000 in upgrades for either, whether it's an engine swap, suspension, tires, differential, or for the Jeep, offroad bumpers and related upgrades. Jeep Wranglers look cool, are convertible, and have an endless catalog of modifications. And there's no better way to use a powerful car than driving sideways. Family, either a passenger model Sprinter, short wheel base, with mods for travel comfort (leather seats, entertainment, possibly a collapsible bed), or a Toyota Sienna. Something luxurious, spacious, yet fuel efficient and practical. Sliding doors are a big plus with kids (no door dinging every car beside you).
I currently drive a 1995 Toyota Previa minivan, which I bought new in 1995, and it’s AWD. I can sleep in it comfortably and have done numerous road trips of 1 - 2 months to Squamish, Canada, all over Colorado, climbing in Utah (Moab, St. George, Maple Canyon), and California. However - they don’t make them any more. MIne is getting older, and having mechanical problems. I’d love to replace it with a new Previa. The Toyota Sienna is also an AWD minivan, but it’s not as tall, so there’s less headroom when camping. Cooking in the back of my minivan (the bed platform folds up and down). Previa “kitchen” . Bed’s made when it folds down. The van, at Squamish.
No, Toyota Sienna isn't available in Steering Adjustment Electric.
No, Toyota Sienna doesn't have Parking Camera.
No, Toyota Sienna doesn't have Steering Adjustment Electric.