1968 Lincoln Continental Suicide Doors Original Restored With Rebuilt Motor on 2040-cars
Saint Joseph, Missouri, United States
1968 Lincoln Continental with factory suicide doors - If you're looking at this car then you aleady know how rare they are becoming to find in good shape. This was fully restored just a couple years ago. It was done professionally and looks beautiful. The interior is all original besides the addition of a cd player. The interior is in amazing shape for how old it is. The seats are in great shape. The door panels are in great shape. The headliner has 3 small blemishes in it that aren't noticeable unless youre searching for them. Power Windows all work great. The chrome trim everywhere looks great. The AC blows cold. Everything works! The lights work. The blinkers work. The speedometer is the coolest speedometer you will ever see. The motor was completely overhauled 2 years ago as well and it shows in the pictures. The engine has all kinds of power that you would expect from a freshly rebuilt 460 big block. And this thing runs smooooooth! It floats down the highway like you wouldn't believe. You just have to drive it to understand. The paint is very glossy and was done very very nice. You can use this car as a mirror. You can see in the pictures that this paint and body is slick! Please call me at 816-244-5650 if you have any questions. I am located in st. joseph MO 64503. I will aid in delivery and might even drive it to you if you're willing to pay travel expenses. This is your chance to get your hands on a very rare car. I am selling this so I can remodel my home. I hate to see it go. There are only a few blemishes on this car to make it not perfect. There are a few paint chips in the front area and there is a tiny rock chip in the windshield as well. The underneath of the rear bumper has some rust but its not visible unless you get down on the ground to see it. Other than those few things, this car is cherry. |
Lincoln Continental for Sale
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Lincoln recycling tree fibers into new MKX armrest
Thu, Feb 27 2014Want to hug a tree, or at least a really small part of one. Then set your arm down on one of those armrests in the 2014 Lincoln MKX crossover. The US automaker is working with Weyerhaeuser and Johnson Controls on a tree-based, cellulose-reinforced polypropylene material used in the component that connects the armrest to the floor console, Wards Auto says. With properties similar to plastic, the tree-based material replaces fiberglass and is about six percent lighter. No big deal for now, but if the material starts getting used for things like battery trays and interior storage covers, that loss in weight may eventually start adding up enough to boost fuel economy a bit, providing a green double bonus. Lincoln parent Ford, which isn't saying how much more (or less?) it costs to use the new material, established its Biomaterials and Plastics Research team in 2001. In 2007, the company began using soy-based foam in car seats used for models such as the Lincoln Navigator and Ford Mustang and has since broadened biomaterials use to components like floormats and cupholder inserts. Ford also used recycled plastic bottles from the 2012 North America International Auto Show for seats in the Focus Electric.
2018 Lincoln Navigator First Drive | From black sheep to flagship
Mon, Oct 30 2017This is Lincoln's flagship. It's the most luxurious, comfortable and expensive vehicle the brand sells. It's quite obviously the biggest and heck, like every Lincoln flagship of yesteryear, it even features body-on-frame construction. Crucially, though, this all-new 2018 Lincoln Navigator is also very good. It's distinctive, capable, and competent in ways that will stand up well in the upper echelon of the SUV hierarchy. And we'll get this out of the way now: it's far superior to its primary competitor, the Cadillac Escalade. And yet, the Navigator's flagship status is a comeback story. It wasn't too long ago that it was a black sheep confined to the distant back row of Lincoln family promotional photos along with the Town Car and a fichus added for decoration. It was never given one of the new-fangled MK names, and its V8-powered, truck-based status made it a thirsty dinosaur at a time of rising gas prices and an increasing number of crossovers. Livery services bought them in black-painted droves, but it was otherwise forgotten even as a substantive refresh for 2015 arguably made it a better, more practical bet than its Caddy nemesis. Like its predecessor, and indeed every Navigator since the second generation dawned for 2007, the third-generation 2018 model features an independent rear suspension rather than the live axle in GM's SUVs. First and foremost, this reaps benefits for those sitting in the third row. Full-sized adults enjoy an abundance of room back there on par (or perhaps even better) than a minivan. There's a USB port on each side, the seatbacks power recline and its three seat belts allow for an eight-passenger max. There's even enough room behind the raised third-row for creatively stacked suitcases. Compare this to a regular-wheelbase Escalade with its third row stuck to the sky-high floor; its occupants' knees jammed against the second row and/or stuck into their own chins. It's a wasteland back there, but to be fair, not much worse than an Infiniti QX80 or Lexus LX 570. Yes, the extended-wheelbase Escalade ESV helps, but there's still less space than the standard Navigator. In fact, the Navigator L model offers the exact same third-row – only the cargo area behind it expands. That rear suspension also pays dividends in the ride and handling department.
Ford Q3 pretax profits drop to $1.18B
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There were problems of one kind or another in practically every region. North America experienced higher warranty costs than expected, partially due to recalls. The sales volume for the quarter was 665,000 units, versus 725,000 in Q3 2013, and pre-tax results amounted to $1.41 billion versus $2.296 billion last year.
South America and Europe both posted worse pre-tax results than last year. On the bright side, European volume was up slightly to 321,000 vehicles, from 303,000 in Q3 2013. The Middle East and Africa also lost $15 million, but that was an improvement compared to the $25 million loss previously experienced in this region.