Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

1998 Lincoln Mark Viii Intech V8 Low Miles Garage Kept Florida Well Maintained on 2040-cars

US $4,800.00
Year:1998 Mileage:88258
Location:

United States

United States
Advertising:

 Absolutely STUNNING 1998 Lincoln Mark VIII for sale. Last year of the body style with all the updates. White with black and gray interior. Extremely low original miles. Garage kept since new. Fully loaded with Sony CD, traction control, keyless entry, 32-valve Intech V8 engine, HID lights, Homelink, leather interior, dual power seats with memory and more. The interior is very clean and was never smoked in. The paint and body are near flawless as you can see in the pictures. The best part of the car is the way it drives. Everything works including cold ac. The engine and transmission are in excellent condition and it was serviced regularly. Comes with all books and records. The air suspension does not leak and the rear window rubber is not wavy like most of them. This is one of the best cars Lincoln ever made and the engine is particularly strong and will last another 15 years easily if taken care of. Must see to appreciate. I posted over 80 pictures, please click "view all" to see more. Will help with shipping. Open to reasonable offers.
 Please call 813-502-1947 or email with any questions.


amazingchanceflorida's 1998 Lincoln Mark VIII album on Photobucket

Auto blog

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Lincoln Continental brings back suicide doors with Coach Door Edition

Mon, Dec 17 2018

Remember that teaser image from last week indicating the Lincoln Continental would get suicide doors? Well, it's happening, and we got to check out a prototype late last week. As you can see from the photos, the vehicle is essentially a stretched Continental with rear doors that latch forward. Lincoln doesn't call it the suicide door edition, of course. No, the proper name is 80th Anniversary Coach Door Edition. Semantics aside, the car is here to pay homage to the suicide doors of the 1960s Continental and celebrate 80 years since the original Continental was introduced. That's the why; now here is the how. To build this special edition, a Continental begins life as a normal Black Label model, and leaves the factory with normal doors intact. From there, Lincoln ships the car to Cabot Coach Builders in Massachusetts for the stretch and other modifications we'll get into later. Before you start cursing Lincoln for not really screwing together a suicide door Continental, know this: Lincoln engineered all the components, metalwork and everything else that goes with the build. It then gives the car and components to Cabot for the fabrication work. So yes, somebody else is doing the conversion, but you're still getting a Lincoln-engineered vehicle. Make of that what you will. Cabot has done work for Ford before with the MKT and Transit Van, but Lincoln says it's much more involved in this build than it ever was before. To begin, the Continental gets a six-inch stretch. It was a relatively long car before, but boy does this thing look like it's lounging now. That's exactly what you'll be doing once inside those suicide doors. Lincoln claims best-in-class legroom, and yes, to our eye that is surely accurate. Someone well over 6 feet tall could easily stretch all the way out and still have room to spare back there. The only problem we noticed? Headroom. A sloping roofline combined with seats that are well pushed back doesn't leave a whole lot of space up there. It looks like Lincoln noticed this and carved out little spaces in the headliner, but it might not be enough for those who are closer to the sky than most. A flow-through center console occupies space where the middle seat would typically be. This has all sorts of controls for things like audio and climate control. Lincoln said the one we sat in wasn't entirely finished with all the features and electronics that will be included.