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The Mercury Grand Marquis is an automobile that was produced by Mercury from the 1975 until 2011 model years. Introduced as the flagship sub-model of the Mercury Marquis in 1975, the Grand Marquis became a stand-alone model line in 1983, serving as the largest Mercury sedan.
For the 1998 model year, the Ford Motor Company restyled the Crown Victoria, eliminating the "aero" look that the first-generation Crown Victoria had from 1992 to 1997, adopting the more conservative styling of the Mercury Grand Marquis. Both cars included restyled front and rear end components.
Initially called Sport Appearance Package, it was introduced in 2001 as a counterpart to the Mercury Grand Marquis LSE. According to Ford, the trim package was aimed at buyers who sought style and improved features. The LX Sport featured all mechanical upgrades found on the Handling and Performance Package.
For 1975, the full-size Mercury range was reduced solely to the Marquis (including the Brougham and Grand Marquis trims). The wheelbase was longer on the two-door and four-door sedan than the Mercury Colony Park station wagon, the Lincoln Continental Mark III and the Lincoln Continental Mark IV while sharing the chassis with the 1970 Lincoln ...
Grand Marquis: 1975 2011 3 Top-tier full-size car Monarch: 1975 1980 1 ... Mercury LeGrand Marquis (1968) Mercury LN7 PPG (1981) Mercury Marauder Convertible (2002)
Mercury Grand Marquis; Lincoln Town Car; Ford Mustang (GT and Mach 1) Mercury Marauder; Ford Police Interceptor; AXOD family—Van Dyke Transmission 1986–1991 AXOD—4-speed transaxle Ford Taurus, Lincoln Continental, Mercury Sable; 1991–1993 AXOD-E—4-speed electronic transaxle Ford Taurus, Lincoln Continental, Mercury Sable
4.7L Jeep Grand Cherokee; 4.7L Dodge Dakota; 3.3L Dodge Caravan, Grand Caravan and Caravan Cargo; 2.7L Chrysler Sebring Sedan; 2006. 3.0L Ford Taurus sedan and wagon (2-valve)* 4.6L Ford Crown Victoria (2-valve, excluding taxi and police units) 5.4L Ford F-150 (3-valve. Available in December 2005) 4.6L Lincoln Town Car (2-valve) 4.6L Mercury ...
For 1939, the Mercury was launched at a starting price of US$916 ($20,064 in 2023 dollars [10]); over 65,800 vehicles were sold in the inaugural model year. [11] In response to the popularity of the model line, Ford revised its branding structure after 1940; De Luxe Ford was discontinued as a sub-marque (returning to its previous use as a Ford trim line), and all Lincolns became derived from ...