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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.
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.
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.
Mercury Comet Escapade (1966) Mercury Comet Fastback (1964) Mercury Comet Super Cyclone (1964) Mercury Concept 50 (1988) Mercury Concept One (1989) Mercury Cougar El Gato (1970) Mercury Cougar Eliminator (1999) Mercury Cougar S (1999) Mercury Cyclone (1990) Mercury Cyclone Super Spoiler (1969) Mercury D528 "Beldone" (1955) Mercury Escapade (1965)
Mercury rebranded the Montego as a fourth generation of the Cougar; in addition to the flagship Cougar XR7 personal luxury coupe, the Cougar offered two-door and four-door sedans and a station wagon. Following a substantial exterior revision, the Torino/Gran Torino was rebranded as the Ford LTD II , with the Ford Elite replaced by a downsized ...
Snow falls on the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., Jan. 6, 2025. / Credit: Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images
1967 Mercury Marquis two-door hardtop 1968 Mercury Marquis. For 1967, Mercury introduced two hardtop model lines above the Park Lane to serve as the counterpart of the Ford LTD. The Park Lane Brougham was a four-door, with the Marquis offered solely as a two-door. While all full-size Mercury two-doors were hardtops, the Marquis was fitted with ...
Image credits: Photoglob Zürich "The product name Kodachrome resurfaced in the 1930s with a three-color chromogenic process, a variant that we still use today," Osterman continues.