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

1969 Mercury Cyclone Fastback on 2040-cars

Year:1969 Mileage:75000 Color: White /
 Red
Location:

Port Huron, Michigan, United States

Port Huron, Michigan, United States
Transmission:Automatic
Body Type:fastback
Engine:302
Vehicle Title:Clear
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
VIN: 9H15F541191 Year: 1969
Interior Color: Red
Make: Mercury
Number of Cylinders: 8
Model: Comet
Trim: Cyclone
Drive Type: rear
Mileage: 75,000
Exterior Color: White
Condition: UsedA vehicle is considered used if it has been registered and issued a title. Used vehicles have had at least one previous owner. The condition of the exterior, interior and engine can vary depending on the vehicle's history. See the seller's listing for full details and description of any imperfections.Seller Notes:"969 Mercury Cyclone fastback. 75,000 miles. F code 302 C4 . Manual brakes manual steering. Has no rust other than surface. Hood has been changed. Wheels are chrome styled steel wheels from a 1969 Mach one with 30,000 miles and are perfect. New tires. Original paint. Originally from Arkansas. Marti report. Color code car. Runs and drive fine. Engine and transmission are original low mileage units from a 1969 Fairlane with less than 20,000 miles on them (original not rebuilt other than new double roller timing set and new oil pump). I do have the original engine but not the transmission. Has all new brakes(hoses shoes hardware and master cylinder), coolant hoses, heater core, redone carburetor, new radiator, alternator.New ignition parts , new water pump, new fuel pump. New exhaust front to rear. A nice original unmolested car. Can be driven anywhere. I have the original mirrors and hubcaps. Car is for sale locally , and listing may end at any time for a pending sale."

1969 Mercury Cyclone fastback. 75,000 miles. F code 302 C4 . Manual brakes manual steering. Has no rust other than surface. Hood has been changed. Wheels are chrome styled steel wheels from a 1969 Mach one with 30,000 miles and are perfect. New tires. Original paint. Originally from Arkansas. Marti report. Color code car. Runs and drives fine. Engine and transmission are original low mileage units from a 1969 Fairlane with less than 20,000 miles on them (original not rebuilt other than new double roller timing set and new oil pump). I do have the original engine but not the transmission. Has all new brakes(hoses shoes hardware wheel cylinders and master cylinder), coolant hoses, heater core, redone carburetor, new radiator, alternator.New ignition parts , new water pump, new fuel pump. New exhaust front to rear. A nice original unmolested survivor car. Can be driven anywhere. I have the original mirrors and hubcaps. Clear title.

Auto Services in Michigan

Winners Auto & Cycle ★★★★★

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Address: 17700 Telegraph Rd, Romulus
Phone: (734) 229-1009

Westborn Auto Service ★★★★★

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Phone: (313) 565-0220

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Phone: (419) 698-1011

Vaneck Auto Body ★★★★★

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Address: 4520 Chicago Dr SW, Grandville
Phone: (616) 532-1626

US Wheel Exchange ★★★★★

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Phone: (248) 373-1300

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Address: 7162 E Apple Ave, Ravenna
Phone: (231) 788-1970

Auto blog

Ford finds flex-fuel engine design plays big role in emissions output

Mon, Jan 6 2014

How bad is ethanol for your engine? There's been a lot of debate on this issue as the US considers upping the biofuel content in the national gasoline supply from 10 percent (E10) to 15 percent (E15). The ethanol industry and some scientists say higher ethanol blends show no "meaningful differences" in new engines while the oil industry says ethanol creates health risks. Researchers working at the Ford Research and Innovation Center decided to take a closer look at how a wide range of gas-ethanol blends - E0, E10, E20, E30, E40, E55 and E80 - affected the emissions coming out of a flex-fuel 2006 Mercury Grand Marquis. To see the full report, printed in the journal Environmental Science & Technology, requires payment, but there is an abstract and Green Car Congress has some more details. The gist is that, "with increasing ethanol content in the fuel, the tailpipe emissions of ethanol, acetaldehyde, formaldehyde, methane, and ammonia increased." At least NOx and NMHC emissions decreased. The researchers say that the effects are due to the fuel and "are expected for all FFVs," but that the way that a manufacturer calibrates the engine will affect NOx, THC, and NMOG emissions. It's this last bit that's important, since the researchers found, "Higher ethanol content in gasoline affects several fundamental fuel properties that can impact emissions. ... These changes can have positive or negative effects that can depend on engine design, hardware, and control strategy. In addition to direct emissions impacts, higher ethanol content fuel can also provide more efficient combustion and overall engine operation under part-load conditions and under knock-limited higher-load conditions." So, as we head towards more ethanol in our fuel supply (maybe), manufacturers are going to need to learn how to burn it most efficiently.

Junkyard Gem: 1972 Mercury Cougar XR-7

Sun, Feb 12 2023

Starting with the 1939 model year and continuing through 2011, the rule in Dearborn was that most Ford models would get a dressed-up sibling wearing Mercury badges (and Canadians even got Mercury F-100s and Econolines). When the Mustang first hit showrooms in 1964, the countdown for a Mercurized version began. That car, the Cougar, debuted as a 1967 model marketed as "the man's car." Today's Junkyard Gem is a much-abused example of the early-1970s Cougar, found in a San Francisco Bay Area car graveyard a while back. Just as the Mustang packed on weight and price as the 1960s became the 1970s, the even more heavily gingerbreaded Cougar did the same. For 1971 through 1973, the Cougar was still based on the Mustang chassis but weighed several hundred additional pounds and was more than seven inches longer. The curb weight for this car was 3,298 pounds, versus 2,941 pounds for the lightest '72 Mustang coupe. Yes, there's a Mustang underneath all that chrome! When the Mustang went to a modified Pinto chassis starting in the 1974 model year, the Cougar moved over to the midsize Torino platform and stayed there until it rejoined the Mustang on the Fox platform for 1980 (though the honor of being the Mustang's near-twin went to the Mercury Capri at that point). For 1989, the Cougar became an MN12 Thunderbird sibling, where it remained through its 30th anniversary … and then the Cougar got the axe. The Cougar story wasn't done at that point, however, because the name got revived in 1999 with a Mondeo-based version that lasted through 2002 and bears the distinction of being one of the few Mercury models with no corresponding Ford-badged counterpart. Along the way, there were Cougar sedans and even station wagons, with the curb weight of the heaviest-ever Cougar bloating to well over two tons (the winner of that honor is the 1977 Cougar Villager wagon, scaling in at an astounding 4,482 pounds). In 1972, though, all new Cougars were coupes or convertibles, and all of them came with factory V8 power. The build tag on this one tells us that it was assembled at the River Rouge compound in Dearborn and sold via the Kansas City sales office. That tells us that someone drove this car to California after buying it in the Midwest; Ford also built 1972 Cougars in San Jose, so California Mercury shoppers would have bought locally-produced ones. It's a top-end XR-7 in Medium Bright Yellow paint, with the interior in Medium Ginger.

Mercury Cougar from Bond film 'On Her Majesty's Secret Service' is up for auction

Fri, Nov 20 2020

To a James Bond fan, this is a very cool and important car. This 1969 Mercury Cougar XR7 up for auction by Bonhams was one of three used during the filming of 1969's "On Her Majesty's Secret Service," the one-and-done film starring George Lazenby that's a dark horse favorite among many Bond fans (this one included, there's a Japanese-market 'OHMSS' poster hanging behind me as I type this). However, this was not James Bond's car in the movie. He drove an Aston Martin DBS, including in the film's pre-titles sequence when he follows Tracy di Vicenzo driving her bright red Cougar. She would go on to rescue him with it in Switzerland (hence the skis), sacrificing its pretty red paint and body work in a demolition derby on ice that they use to shake Blofeld's Benz-driving goons. Later, after getting caught in a blizzard, they seek refuge in a barn -- a pivotal scene in the film and one where this particular Cougar was apparently used.  ON HER MAJESTY’S SECRET SERVICE | Ice Car Race However, even without the Bond connection, this Cougar is a very cool car. It was one of only 127 in 1969 to be fitted with the top-of-the-line 428 CobraJet Ram Air V8 rated at 335 horsepower. Tracy had a serious muscle car. Bonham's doesn't seem to have thought to provide a Marti report, but I'm guessing the build of XR7, convertible and a color combo of matching red exterior and interior wasn't exactly a common one. Well, we know there were at least three. With skis and French number plates, too.  As for the '69 Cougar itself, this was the only year it looked like this: it got a new body for '69 that would last two years, but the horizontal grille slats that extended over the headlight doors (so cool!) didn't carry over to 1970. It looked worse, and it could easily be argued that it was only downhill from here for the Cougar.  The auction is set for December 16 and Bonhams is estimating a sale price of between $130,000 and $200,000. That certainly makes sense given the rarity of a CobraJet Cougar, the film connection and the complete restoration undertaken by the man who found it in a classified ad in the late 1980s. He originally just wanted it for the engine until he discovered the Bond connection. I actually saw this very car at the 50th Anniversary "Bond in Motion" exhibit at the Beaulieu Motor Museum in England back in 2013 (pictured below). There's also a model of the thing sitting next to me.