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A unique coupe utility variant of the Mercury was produced in Australia from 1946 to 1948. [8] Marketed as the Mercury Club Coupe Utility, [9] it was built on a 118-inch wheelbase and had a carrying capacity rated at 10–12 cwt. [8] The 1946 version was coded as the Model S9A and the 1947 and 1948 variants as the Model 6M. [8]
Lincoln Continental (1946-1948) Mercury Eight (1946-1948) Nash 600 (1946–1949) Nash Ambassador (1946–1948) Oldsmobile 98 (1946-1947) Oldsmobile Series 60 (1946-1948)
1949 Mercury M series 1966 Mercury M-100. From 1948 to 1968, the Mercury M-series followed the development of its Ford F-series counterparts, differing largely in exterior trim. For 1961 to 1966, Mercury trucks had a gear/lightning bolt symbol on their horn button and no other interior Mercury nameplates.
This is a list of both production and concept vehicles of the former Mercury division of Ford Motor Company of the United States and Canada. Production models
The Mercury 114 was introduced in 1946 [50] to give Mercury-Lincoln dealers a lower-priced car to sell. [49] The 114 was essentially a Ford with a Mercury-style grille, taillights and trim. [ 49 ] Its name was a reference to its 114-inch Ford wheelbase with the larger Mercury models sold in Canada as the Mercury 118 due to its longer wheelbase.
Mercury Monarch was an automobile marque produced by Ford Canada from 1946 through 1957 and from 1959 to 1961. The Monarch was marketed as its own brand of car rather than as a Ford, with its own model names which included Richelieu, Lucerne and Sceptre.
The 1949 Town & Country 2-door convertible, which carried over with so very few improvements over the previous model year (1948), [5] was in its last model year of production, which was the only Chrysler Town & Country offering during the 1949 model year after a four-model-year production run (since the 1946 model year), during the next model ...
The Mercury Custom is an automobile which was produced by Mercury for the 1952 through 1956 model years. [ 2 ] [ 1 ] The Custom was introduced as the base model series in the 1952 Mercury range, replacing the original Mercury Eight that introduced the all-new Mercury marque. [ 2 ]