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

1968 Mercury Cougar Xr7 Restored 5-speed Manual 351w on 2040-cars

Year:1968 Mileage:99999
Location:

Louisburg, Kansas, United States

Louisburg, Kansas, United States
Advertising:

$23,000. Over $50,000 into car. Perfect body (few stone chips since I don't trailer it, see last photo), beautiful paint. 351W, ford racing, trick flow heads, long tube headers with dumps, brand new tires, rims. New T5 5 speed manual transmission (runs 1800 RPM at 70MPH). 3.5 gears, traction bars, lowered a bit for good ride. Brand new rack and pinion steering and springs. Interior very good shape. Clean, zero rust, straight frame.

No oil usage or leaks; transmission perfect. All turn signals, lights, hideaway headlights, heater work. Drives great and is fast. No rust in the usual spots for a cougar; frame off about 6 years ago. Very hard to find in a manual.  Some gauges are original (fuel, Speedo, Tach) while others are newer but close to matching.  Tachometer was disabled because the resistors in it were monkeying with ignition.  It was working prior.

Needs: scratch on window tint; panel light indicating "Brake" stays on (this is different than the emergency brake); disabled the vacuum operated swing away steering column; brake booster front section has a tiny drip; upholstery in back passenger side wrinkled from a friend shoving his big butt into the back seat. No A/C. Just noticed front passenger leading bumper panel (above the bumper) has a scratch and paint is feathering.  I will try to get a photo.

Selling because I have too many toys and just can't drive it enough. Don't spend the money fixing one up; it's much cheaper to buy someone else's and have it already done. Feel free to ask Rick at Hot Rod Express in Blue Springs, MO (they installed the transmission, suspension, etc. and know the undercarriage and how solid the car is). 

Would consider trades worth $10,000 or more towards it just so I could resell those. Or would look at Z06, 2008 and up CTS-V plus cash on my part.

Yes, I would be comfortable with driving any distance.  It doesn't overheat and is completely roadworthy.  That being said, if you are over 40 it'll hurt after a few hours!  Seats are original, no cruise control, and no air conditioning!

I will take more photos or video of what you want, or come take a look.  South of Overland Park, KS (Kansas City).   Please know your bank will NOT loan much on this car, so please don't bid without the funds.

 

Auto Services in Kansas

Warner Automotive ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Tire Dealers
Address: 2485 W Oklahoma Ave, Ulysses
Phone: (620) 356-5599

Walter`s Tire & Service ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Tire Dealers
Address: 5500 King Hill Ave, Elwood
Phone: (816) 238-1005

Sunflower Auto Plaza ★★★★★

New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers
Address: 103 W 4th St, Tonganoxie
Phone: (913) 845-0002

Snyder`s Garage Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 3419 E Harry St, Haysville
Phone: (316) 684-4043

Rob Sight Auto Plz ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers
Address: 13901 Washington St, Stanley
Phone: (913) 826-6492

Norris Collision Center ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Body Parts
Address: 19918 W Kellogg Dr, Goddard
Phone: (316) 794-1161

Auto blog

Petrolicious shows Mercedes 280SL as architecture in motion

Wed, Jun 17 2015

While still an absolute beauty today, the design of the pagoda-roof W113 Mercedes-Benz SL was revolutionary when it debuted. Moving away from the soft curves of the previous SL models, the all-new generation brought an upright, angular shape that was as much architectural as automotive. In the latest video from Petrolicious, owner and architect Daniel Monti expounds on the inspiration that he gets from his 1969 280SL's fantastic styling. The roof is the most famous design feature of this generation of SL. Look at the top from the front or back, and you can see a gentle, downward arc that evokes the look of a pagoda. That one styling element is also a fabulous counterpoint to a vehicle that is largely more angular than curvaceous. Petrolicious wonderfully illustrates how some of the SL's form-follows-function design aesthetic can be found in the architect's work in this video's heaping helping of mid-century modern goodness.

Has the Mercury Marauder gotten better with age?

Fri, Oct 23 2015

In the early 2000s Mercury desperately wanted to develop some edge for its brand – seemingly stuck between a quasi-premium, quasi-performance space in the Ford Universe. The Marauder is perhaps the most famous of the vehicles that resulted from those efforts, and is rapidly approaching Modern Classic status, today. Effectively a murdered out Grand Marquis with some updated trim pieces – what are company parts bins for, if not raiding? – the Marauder looked convincingly like a bad guy car. The 4.6-liter V8 under its hood that had been breathed on by engineers for a little more power, kicking out 302 horsepower and 318 pound-feet of torque from the factory. Not exactly Ferrari-baiting numbers, but it'd give your local cop's car a run for its money. Being a wild child of the last decade, of course our friends at MotorWeek had it on the program. What better way to test your mean-mugging muscle sedan than with John Davis' tanned and steady hands?

Junkyard Gem: 1979 Mercury Marquis 2-Door Sedan

Sun, Jul 25 2021

As the creator of the now-much-overused term "Malaise Era" (which I say started in 1973 and ended in 1983, full stop), I have a certain affection for the big two-door Detroit cars of the late 1970s. When such a car is built on the very first model year of Ford's long-lived Panther platform and I find one in a junkyard, I must document it. The 1979 Mercury Marquis is such a car, and this one was found in a San Francisco Bay Area self-service yard last month. Since Ford built the Grand Marquis all the way through the demise of the Panther platform— and Mercury itself— in 2011, it's easy for us to forget that the model name started out as just the plain old Marquis, back in the 1967 model year, with the Grand appellation used for the car's top trim level. While today's Junkyard Gem has some of the features of the Grand Marquis and Marquis Brougham trim levels for 1979 (notably the padded vinyl landau roof and power windows), it lacks the huge chrome lower-body moldings of those cars. Instead, it's a regular Marquis 2-door sedan with a big load of expensive options. That landau roof has suffered greatly from its decades beneath the vinyl-disintegrating California sun. The Panther platform was a big technological upgrade from the late-1950s-vintage chassis technology of full-sized Fords of the 1960s and 1970s, and it stayed in front-line service in much the same form through 2011. Though its ride and handling were much improved, the 1979 Marquis was quite a bit smaller than its predecessors, and that caused some grumbling among Mercury shoppers. Some ham-handed junkyard shoppers really tore up the interior of this car while extracting a few bits and pieces, but we can still admire the Pine Green pleather of the glorious Twin Comfort Lounge front seats. You had two engine choices when buying a new '79 Marquis: the base 302-cubic-inch (5.0-liter) Windsor V8 making 129 horsepower or the optional 351-cubic-inch (5.8-liter) Windsor V8 rated at 138 horsepower. This one appears to be the 351, the same engine as had been swapped into the pizza-delivery Mercury I drove in the middle 1980s. New cars sold in California around this time had these giant emissions-numbers stickers on the side glass. Later, they went on the underside of the hood.