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1970 1994 3 Sports car (1970–1977), pony car (1979–1986), roadster (1991–1994) Bobcat: 1974 1980 1 Subcompact car, rebadged Ford Pinto. Sold in Canada since 1974, and in the United States since 1975 Grand Marquis: 1975 2011 3 Top-tier full-size car Monarch: 1975 1980 1 Compact near-luxury car Zephyr: 1978 1983 1 Compact car Topaz: 1984 1994 2
English: Front right view of a 1970 Mercury Cougar Hardtop coupé, assembled in Dearborn, MI, and fitted with the standard 250hp 351ci-2V V8 engine with 9.5:1 compression. It is unknown whether this is a Cleveland or a Windsor unit.
English: The dashboard of a 1970 Mercury Cougar Hardtop coupé, assembled in Dearborn, MI, and fitted with the standard 250hp 351ci-2V V8 engine with 9.5:1 compression. It is unknown whether this is a Cleveland or a Windsor unit.
In 1968, Mercury's mid-sized models again received new sheet metal and styling that resembled the full-sized Mercury models and shared their chassis and many parts with Ford's mid-sized Fairlane and Torino models. The mid-sized base model was the Comet (Mercury dropped the 202 suffix) available only as a two-door coupe.
The Mercury Cougar is a series of automobiles that was sold by Mercury from 1967 to 2002. The model line is a diverse series of vehicles; though the Cougar nameplate is most commonly associated with two-door coupes, at various stages in its production, the model also was offered as a convertible and a hatchback.
1970 marked the introduction of the Capri, the first subcompact car sold by the division. In place of marketing a counterpart of the Ford Pinto economy car, Mercury commenced captive imports of European Ford Capri from Cologne, Germany; the model line was among the first compact sports cars sold in the United States. The first Ford Motor ...
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Capri (later Mercury Capri) is a nameplate marketed by the Lincoln-Mercury division of Ford Motor Company over three generations between 1970 and 1994.. From 1970 to 1978, the Capri was a sport compact marketed in North America by the Lincoln-Mercury division without any Ford or Mercury divisional branding; [1] it was a captive import, manufactured by Ford of Europe and sold simply as the Capri.