Lincoln Town Car 2003 Cartier Ultra Low Miles (373xx) on 2040-cars
Aurora, Colorado, United States
If interested or have any questions, you can contact me at 303-887-7606 text or call. Up for sale is a
grandparents car, Lincoln Town Car Cartier 2003 with 37372 miles
(roughly 3000 miles a year). I do drive it occasionally to keep the
battery good and the seals lubricated so miles will go up slightly by
maybe 10 miles a week. Car is in excellent condition, tires are good,
inside looks great. Comes with 6 disk changer, parking sensors, heated
seats etc, all the standard stuff for the then top of the line Lincoln town car. Clean carfax, never wrecked. Dealer serviced with occasional
grease monkey oil change.Please note that I will not ship the car, local pickup only. If you are flying in, I can pick you up at the Denver International Airport.
|
Lincoln Town Car for Sale
- 2005 lincoln stretch limousine
- 2004 lincoln 120" stretch limo black(US $14,500.00)
- Lincoln stretch 6pax limo(US $12,500.00)
- Lifetime florida moonroof survivor 1976 lincoln town coupe - 51k orig mi
- 1998 lincoln town car(US $3,000.00)
- 2000 lincoln town car signature leather canvas roof 32k texas direct auto(US $9,480.00)
Auto Services in Colorado
Wagner Garage ★★★★★
Trudesign Wheel ★★★★★
Toy Car Care ★★★★★
Strictly Automotive Inc ★★★★★
Star Tech Mercedes ★★★★★
South Platte Auto Center ★★★★★
Auto blog
Lincoln MKC Concept shows real promise [w/video]
Sun, 13 Jan 2013Ford's efforts to resuscitate its moribund Lincoln luxury brand began in earnest with the introduction of its 2014 MKZ sedan, a model many labeled as the marque's make-or-break offering. Of course, one model does not a comeback make, and with the MKZ just now starting to trickle into dealers, it will be some time before America's jury of consumers comes in with their judgment. More to the point, it's likely to take better than a decade's worth of products and sustained marketing effort to even begin to figure out whether Lincoln has a shot at redemption or if it will die of Mercury poisoning. After all, rival General Motors has been pouring resources into Cadillac since the late '90s, and if the sales charts are any guidance, it's still probably too early to declare its rebirth a success.
Certainly, a brand with Ford's resources, free of distractions (read: the now-defunct Premier Auto Group and various other side projects) should be able to successfully market a single luxury brand, particularly one with such a rich - if distant - history. Especially now with the Blue Oval enjoying more consumer goodwill than at any time in recent history. So let's all give Alan Mulally and friends a little room to work, eh?
We can start by focusing on the compact crossover seen before you, the Lincoln MKC Concept. Riding atop the same global C-platform that underpins the Ford C-Max, Escape and Focus, the MKC showcar here presages a production small CUV that will stick its distinctive nose into one of the auto industry's fastest-growing segments.
Lincoln needs a farewell address, not a new marketing plan
Tue, 09 Apr 2013
The trouble with Ford's Lincoln brand is that no one cares about it any more.
Not long after I heard that Mark LaNeve, chief operating officer of Ford agency Team Detroit, was moving to take over direct operations of the New York ad agency Hudson Rouge for Lincoln, I heard that JCPenney CEO Ron Johnson was ousted. The two events are connected.
2015 Lincoln MKC
Mon, 09 Jun 2014Back in 2012, Lincoln claimed its comeback bid was finally underway with the new-for-2013 MKZ. But don't you believe them - the renaissance won't actually begin in earnest until the shapely compact crossover seen here reaches showrooms in big numbers. That's because while the four-door MKZ was indeed a proper step toward rebirth, the 2015 MKC is the first wholly conceived vehicle under Lincoln as a standalone brand, a move first announced back in 2012.
That's an important distinction, because Lincoln's newfound emancipation from Ford's design and development processes has given the struggling marque both the corporate wherewithal and the will to develop a more fully formed product. The four-wheeled result seen here is a surprisingly cohesive luxury CUV, one with significantly more aesthetic and dynamic separation from its Ford Escape sibling than the MKZ and its Fusion counterpart. Said another way, after flogging Lincoln's latest for hundreds of miles over canyon roads outside of Santa Barbara, we've come to understand that this is far from a re-grilled Dearborn special with luxury tinsel - it's a bona fide standalone product that readily displays the sort of clear differentiation seen in platform cousins like the Audi Q5 and the Volkswagen Tiguan. It's the real deal.