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

1977 Lincoln Continental Town Car 460v8 Classic Vintage Rust Free Arizona Car on 2040-cars

Year:1977 Mileage:76200
Location:

Avondale, Arizona, United States

Avondale, Arizona, United States
Advertising:

SELLING THIS GREAT RUNNING 460 V8 LINCOLN TOWN CAR VERY WELL KEPT VINTAGE LUXURY SEDAN WITH NEW TIRES AND NEW CARPETING.

ALL ELECTRIC EQUIPMENT RENEWED AND WORKS GOOD. ALL GLASS IS GOOD, INTERIOR SHOWS ONLY SOME FADING ON DRIVER'S SEAT BUT NO CUTS OR TEARS. ONLY NEEDS A NEW A/C COMPRESSOR.(froze) WAS COLD UNTIL A MONTH AGO.

IT IS A GREAT SURVIVOR ARIZONA DESERT CAR NO RUST OR DENTS WITH THE ORIGINAL PAINT STILL VERY SHINY. VINYL TOP IS REASONABLE BUT HAS SOME STAINS AND COULD USE SOME VINYL PAINT RESPRAY. GREAT CAR FOR DAILY DRIVING OR WEEKEND PARADING OR JUST DRIVE TO FLORIDA ANYTIME.

RECENTLY TUNED-UP AND SERVICED AND READY TO DAILY DRIVE ANYWHERE. COMES WITH A CLEAR ARIZONA TITLE. ODOMETER SHOWS 76K. MUST DRIVE TO APPRECIATE THE SMOOTHNESS OF 1970'S LUXURY. STILL DOES 17-18 MPG, GREAT FOR THE SIZE OF CAR AND COMFORT. DRIVES AND SHIFTS GREAT

CALL AND COME SEE IF NEAR PHOENIX OR MAKE ME AN OFFER I CAN'T REFUSE. I GOT TOO MANY BIG CARS SO THIS ONE MUST GO.

602 449 9964 HOME (LEAVE MESSAGE HERE) 623 698 8499 CELL (IF NOT FOUND HOME) PHONE CALLS ONLY. NO TEXT PLEASE UNLESS IS IN MORSE CODE. CALL ANYTIME TILL MIDNIGHT - I SLEEP LATE.

//////////////////      CHECK LARGE PHOTOS BELOW     ////////////////////////////////

<center>
<a

 photo DSC_8350_zpseefb3b5c.jpg  photo DSC_8349_zps3ed509ca.jpg  photo DSC_8347_zpse0c24bed.jpg  photo DSC_8346_zpsde108896.jpg  photo DSC_8345_zps570eb17a.jpg  photo DSC_8344_zpsd89df145.jpg  photo DSC_8343_zps84a3e536.jpg  photo DSC_8357_zpse04c10d3.jpg  photo DSC_8356_zpsd0fa1aeb.jpg  photo DSC_8355_zpsd8084d31.jpg  photo DSC_8354_zps7cff052c.jpg  photo DSC_8353_zps8626c883.jpg  photo DSC_8352_zps3af71d31.jpg  photo DSC_8351_zps9a95413a.jpg  photo DSC_8342_zpsaebc2ac1.jpg  photo DSC_8341_zps33122efd.jpg  photo DSC_8340_zpsa64b64e7.jpg  photo DSC_8337_zps21cd1599.jpg  photo DSC_8331_zps57b3614c.jpg  photo DSC_8330_zps0f836c3c.jpg  photo DSC_8329_zpsd9256db5.jpg  photo DSC_8327_zps12c77d15.jpg

Auto Services in Arizona

Village Automotive INC ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
Address: 13111 West Marana Road, Red-Rock
Phone: (520) 682-3380

Victory Auto Body ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
Address: 2210 S 4th Ave, Tucson
Phone: (520) 791-2925

Thunderbird Automotive Services #2 ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Oil & Lube
Address: 18808 N Reems Rd, Waddell
Phone: (623) 882-8990

Thiem Automotive Specialist ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 401 E Western Ave, Avondale
Phone: (623) 932-4340

Shuman`s Auto Clinic ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Transmission
Address: 235 S Siesta Ln, Guadalupe
Phone: (480) 424-4938

Show Low Ford Inc ★★★★★

New Car Dealers
Address: 1920 E Deuce Of Clubs, Show-Low
Phone: (928) 537-3673

Auto blog

Lincoln Aviator's Air Glide Adaptive Suspension knows when it'll hit potholes

Mon, Jul 22 2019

Lincoln is set to release its all-new three-row 2020 Aviator this summer. It will become the fifth SUV in Lincoln's lineup and the second-most expensive of the bunch, behind its Navigator big brother. One of the vehicle's stand-out features is the available Adaptive Suspension with Road Preview, which adjusts to the road using cameras and sensors. Lincoln detailed the modern tech in a new video seen above.  Selling vehicles in the luxury space requires various impressive characteristics, but above all, the most important might be the ride. Engineers design everything to maintain a comfortable experience, and today, the preparation for rough roads doesn't stop in the development and production facilities. Modern technology allows cars adapt to the surfaces they're driving on rather than applying a one-size-fits-all setup to all roads.  The 2020 Lincoln Aviator will use Air Glide Suspension and Adaptive Suspension with Road Preview in attempts to provide the best ride possible. The Air Glide Suspension uses air springs instead of coil springs, and the air bladders will stiffen or soften based on the road conditions, driving speed, and drive mode.  The Adaptive Suspension uses 12 sensors placed throughout the vehicle to monitor all sorts of vehicle conditions. It collects information on body motion, steering, acceleration, and braking and adjusts accordingly. Lincoln says the system reads the road about 500 times per second and can change settings up to 100 times per second. For example, the Aviator will know when a pothole is incoming and will stiffen the shock absorber to reduce the harshness of the hit. Road Preview, which uses a built-in forward-facing camera near the rearview mirror, helps understand the road up to 50 feet ahead and aids in informing the adaptive suspension of incoming bumps between two to eight inches.  Buyers interested in the Aviator will be able to choose between two powertrains: a twin-turbocharged 3.0-liter V6 or a twin-turbocharged 3.0-liter V6 hybrid. The Standard model starts at $52,840, while the Black Label Grand Touring starts at $89,540. Look for the Aviator to pop up at dealerships soon. 

Autoblog Podcast #327

Tue, 02 Apr 2013

New York Auto Show, Jim Farley interview, 2014 Chevrolet Silverado fuel economy, Ford fuel economy app challenge
Episode #327 of the Autoblog Podcast is here, and this week, Dan Roth, Zach Bowman and Jeff Ross talk about this year's New York Auto Show, Chevrolet's latest assault in the pickup truck fuel economy battle, and Ford's reward for developing a better fuel economy app. Dan also has an interview with Ford's Jim Farley about the future of Lincoln. We wrap with your questions and emails, and for those of you who hung with us live on our UStream channel, thanks for taking the time. Keep reading for our Q&A module for you to scroll through and follow along, too. Thanks for listening!
Autoblog Podcast #327:

2017 Lincoln Continental: Was this mic-drop moment just a big flop?

Thu, Jan 21 2016

The Lincoln Continental may have been our fifth-place pick for Best In Show at this year's Detroit Auto Show, but it's probably the one we argued about the most. In fact, we're still talking about it. And we'll no doubt be discussing it long after we finally get to drive the new sedan later this year. We do this with lots of cars, all the time. The Continental is an especially important, high-profile car right now. It has the task of being a torch-holder for the struggling-to-run Lincoln brand, and that's a tough job these days. But did Lincoln do right by its Continental name? Did its Detroit showcar stop us in our tracks, or were we left feeling cold? In an effort to show you our full discussion, we're trying something different. About a week after the Detroit Auto Show press days concluded, Autoblog's Jonathon Ramsey sent an email around to some editors about the Continental to open a discussion. It got heated, and fast. And while we considered summarizing it, we decided to instead post the whole, largely unedited (adjusted for typos and swear words) chain. From: Jonathon Ramsey To: Autoblog Team Does anyone else think it's a problem that the new Continental looks 85 percent like the MKZ? And another 10 percent of it looks like a Jaguar and a Bentley? Because I think Lincoln screwed the pooch. The German Three plus Porsche can make cars that look alike – they've earned the right, even if I'd rather they didn't. The MKZ looks like a car for regional sales reps. Lincoln broke the glass in case of emergency, grabbed the Continental name, then put it on a car that looks a lot like that sales-rep car, but one for regional VPs. Do we really think this can work? Because I don't. From: Steven Ewing To: Autoblog Team Personally, I'm pretty disappointed in the final execution of Continental. I'm glad Lincoln isn't obsessed with chasing the Germans, but at this point, it's not even chasing Cadillac. I think that introducing the new front end and TTV6 engine on the MKZ before the Continental was a huge mistake. And while I have high hopes for the Conti from a comfort/driving standpoint, my gut instinct is that it's going to be more "better than the MKS" than "best American luxury sedan." Introducing the new front end and TTV6 engine on the MKZ before the Continental was a huge mistake.