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The third-generation Grand Marquis retained the same powertrain as the 1995–1997 Grand Marquis, with a 4.6 L Modular V8 and a four-speed 4R70W automatic transmission. In a minor revision, several under-hood components were relocated, with the power steering reservoir attached to the engine and the coolant overflow reservoir relocated onto the ...
Marquis: 1967 1986 4 Entry-level full-size luxury car Montego: 1968 2007 3 Intermediate (1968–1976), full-size (2004–2007) Capri: 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 ...
For 1981, the engine line underwent a revision, with a 4.2 L V8 becoming the standard engine on the base-trim Marquis outside of California; [32] the now-optional 5.0 L V8 was offered on Brougham-trim Marquis and Grand Marquis four-door sedans. [33] For 1982, the 5.8 L V8 was dropped from the US-market Marquis, with sales continuing in Canada.
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 ...
The Ford Panther platform was an automobile platform that was used by Ford Motor Company from the 1979 to 2012 model years. Following the downsizing of the General Motors B-bodies and C-bodies by two years, the Panther platform marked the end of production of full-sized American sedans.
Ford Panther platform Cars: Ford Crown Victoria, Mercury Grand Marquis, Mercury Marauder and Lincoln Town Car; 2004. 4R75E used in: 5.4 L 3 Valve V8 F-150; 4R70E used in: 4.6 L V8 F-150(except F-150 Heritage) 4R75W used in: Mercury Marauder; Ford Police Interceptor; Ford Mustang (GT and Mach 1) 5.4 L 2 Valve V8 Trucks Ford E-Series Van, and ...
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 ...
This is a list of vehicles that have been considered to be the result of badge engineering (), cloning, platform sharing, joint ventures between different car manufacturing companies, captive imports, or simply the practice of selling the same or similar cars in different markets (or even side-by-side in the same market) under different marques or model nameplates.