Check your local tire outlets for best pricing in your area. Maybe one or more will have a 'buy three tires get one free' sale going on. Those are fairly common in springtime. Be sure and check the sidewall of your existing tires for the size. There are two sizes used on Solara (you didn't say which you have in your question) and the price difference could be substantial. A caution. Tires, like brakes, aren't really something you want to cheap out on. They're the only thing you have going between you and the road so you depend on them for good traction (accelerating, turning and braking) plus water shedding in the rain or even if you only hit a puddle. They have to put up with potholes and bumps and be reasonably quiet. Cheap tires will probably give up some of those things...maybe even all of them.
what is the drive cycle of Toyota solara 2002
The 2001 Solara is fuel injected. There is no carburetor. Cheers
No, it does not.
engine compartment.
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One year and possibly some color options. The first year for the Generation II Solara (different body style) was 2004. Cheers
bridgestone tires
Both the 2.2 liter 4 cylinder and the 3.0 liter V6 engines used in a 2001 Toyota Solara have a timing BELT
When I had this problem with my 1999 Toyota Solara, the issue ended up being a faulty oil pressure sender unit. The 2001 Toyota Camry uses the same engine (and very likely the same sending unit) as the 1999 Toyota Solara.
I dont think that a 2001 Solara has a carburetor. They stopped using them years ago - your car should have a fuel-injection unit.
According to the Gates website : The 2001 Toyota Solara 2.2 liter 4 cylinder : Has a timing BELT, it is NOT an interference engine , change the belt at 90,000 miles
Sorry, there isn't a cabin filter on the Gen I Solara. The filter came with the Gen II (2004) and later models. Cheers