Oscar Wilde once said that “With age comes wisdom, but sometimes age comes alone.” With my 40th birthday barreling toward me like a speeding garbage truck, I think about this statement often. My brain is a malfunctioning kaleidoscope of car-related detritus, especially when I’m getting ready to purchase a new one. Many of my cars were purchased impulsively, or with “car guy math” rationalizations as sound as 20 year old BMW timing chain guides.
I don’t think wisdom comes with age, as we are constantly bombarded with contrary examples. Maybe wisdom comes with experience? I’ve had a lot of experience with many different cars. Did this wisdom help me in my recent daily driver purchase? Will this new car help me as I drive over the proverbial “hill”? Let’s find out.
[Ed Note: It’s been a while, so it’s worth welcoming back Steve Balistreri, our resident NVH engineer-contributor! -DT].
I’ve followed some guiding rules when selecting my cars. The first is to always drive something interesting. I may have bent that rule slightly at times. Is a Chevy Volt interesting, or was it just cheap and reliable at a time when I needed both? I think there is an argument to be made that it is interesting, but certainly not to everyone.
The second rule is to always have at least one reliable car. This has led to some interesting vehicle combinations. Pairing my MkV GTI with a 69 MG Midget makes sense. When I had a non-running 1957 Lincoln Premiere I needed a 2014 Mustang GT to get around. When my E39 528it wagon kept breaking down I convinced myself a $25k high mileage NSX would be reliable because hey, its a Honda, and I was mostly right [Ed Note: Wait, you had an NSX?! -DT]. I had a 300k mile, $500 E30 who’s rear footwells would become ice rinks in the winter, paired with a 200k mile E28 M5 back when you could buy those for around $10k and both of those cars were surprisingly reliable. This rule is why my 2001 Audi S8 got paired with a 94 Pontiac Bonneville SSEI with the venerable 3800 V6, which has been a peach to own. The Audi not so much.
Time For a New Car
This S8 was doing old German car things so I started my car hunt last fall. I replaced the accessory belt and some idler pulleys that started screaming with old age. A plastic fitting on the coolant overflow line broke, necessitating a parking lot bodge job fix until a new piece arrived. The heated seats didn’t work from the previous owner’s incomplete interior swap. The car started running out of gas at half a tank due to some decaying component in the Rube Goldberg contraption of tubes and siphons in the gas tank.
I started the dreaded timing belt/water pump service because it was overdue, which requires surgically removing the face of the car. My kit came with a wrong idler pulley, causing a several-week delay. Then it started snowing and life happened as it usually does. The car is still sitting faceless in my garage like some Teutonic corpse. The front bumper lies in my driveway, a shelter to decaying fall leaves and a shameful monument to my ADHD-addled brain’s inability to get things done.
So I needed a new ride, fast. The Bonneville was working fine, except for the radio, which just played static. It’s also a rare, rust free example with just over 80k miles, so it would’ve been a sin against the car gods to expose its tender underbelly to the salty ravages of a Michigan winter. My bagged C10 is more of a summer cruiser as well. I wrote an article explaining my requirements, and polled the brilliant Autopian commentariat on what my next daily driver should be. There were a lot of great suggestions. Here’s a quick list of the cars I test drove, and my impressions.
Steveo’s Carro Comparo
Mazda 6: It’s really like a Miata sedan in the way it handles. Seats were surprisingly comfortable with a nice interior. My sunny impression changed when I got on the highway and the car’s suspension acted like a record player needle transmitting every nook and crevice in the road to my right foot and butt. If I lived somewhere with smooth, curvy roads this would be a clear winner. But here in Detroit the constant battering would drive me crazy. Sadly had to pass.
Cadillac CTS V-Sport: This is a true sports car, which is reflected in all the accolades it got in the automotive press. The one I drove had like 5 different materials on the dash which somehow all worked together harmoniously. I test drove the Cadillac at a dealer by my office, partially for the convenience, and partially to try it on a terrible section of road nearby. Overloaded semi-trucks sunk divots into the asphalt, and a railroad crossing is so broken up everyone slows to a crawl and swerves off the main driving lane to dodge the craters. Needless to say, the Cadillac V rode quite rough around the area roads. This car would be a blast, but its a little too hardcore for a daily, and my insurance company thought so, too.
Cadillac CT6: Nice car with a chassis that strikes a perfect balance between competent handling and a comfortable ride. The interior on this black on black example felt nice but was dark and somewhat anonymous. I got insurance quotes on selling most of my cars and adding one of these candidates. The Cadillacs were the only cars where my insurance would actually increase. With the CT6 it was over $100 a month extra. This and the fact that there weren’t a ton of examples in my ~$20k price range made me pass.
Buick Regal TourX: This was up high on my list and suggested by many of you. Unfortunately ones in my price range were tough to find. Whenever one popped up on Marketplace it would be quickly sold, so no luck getting to drive one of these.
Chrysler 300: I always liked this car. I got to drive a 300 SRT on Michigan International Raceway for the SRT experience many years ago and came away impressed. With my budget I’d be stuck with a V6 model, which I tested. It was a nice cruiser, but it had several negatives. The seats were surprisingly hard, a lot of functions such as heated seats require several taps on the touch screen, which is a big minus. Interior materials weren’t the best which I’m usually not too picky about. Its not a bad car, but for the same price, the car I chose did everything significantly better.
So What Did I Buy?
This beautiful 2017 Lincoln Continental Reserve! Its got an aluminum 3.0L twin turbo V6 with 400 horsepower, 400 ft-lbs of torque, torque vectoring AWD, tons of room, a huge trunk, a premium stereo, a stylish interior. Whats not to like? Well, a couple things that we will get to in a minute.
First let’s go through the basics. This is a large four door sedan with ample leg room and a commodious trunk. I feel the four door sedan is the pinnacle everyday driver for those who don’t need to off road. You get the handling benefits of a car over an SUV, yet there is still plenty of room for people and cargo.
We recently drove my family and my mother-in-law to an Indian wedding in Dayton, Ohio. If you’ve been to one of these weddings you know there are multiple events and a different outfit is needed for each one. The car swallowed two extra large suitcases, several smaller ones, as well as miscellaneous bags of snacks and other stuff that you need when traveling with a toddler. My MIL in the backseat had more legroom than she could ever use and the car cruised in quiet comfort getting 29 MPGs on the freeway.
400 Horseys
Let talk about the powerplant. The 3.0L V6 has two turbos bolted to the sides making a more than respectable 400 horsepower. When you get on it the all wheel drive system digs in and propels you forward in a wave of torque. The Continental came with a naturally aspirated 3.7L V6, a 2.7L twin turbo six, and the big 3.0L TT. This engine is also found in the Lincoln Mk1, Aviator, and the F0rd Explorer ST. There are mods available to gain even more power but I think the car has plenty under the hood at the moment.
The engine even sounds decent, with an enhancement system filling in some of the gaps when you get on it. Some take offense to this type of thing but I don’t mind it. It sounds better when its on than off.
The only drawback is that the transmission is a six speed auto. Compared to many of my previous cars, six is a lot. However it is down a few gears compared to the competition, and it’s probably leaving a few MPGs on the table.
Does It Handle Like A Boat?
I’ve owned many “great handling” cars — the NSX, Fiesta ST, VW GTI, various BMWs. For most people, great handling is something that is accurate and engaging when the road gets twisty. But what happens when your roads have no twists? What do you do when your road surface resembles the moon more than Laguna Seca? You spend a lot of time and energy scanning the street in front of you for holes and frost heaves, feeling every sickening thud as your tire slams into a broken piece of pavement. Your back and your soul are as bruised as your wheels, bushings, and suspension arms.
While I lost some street cred buying a car that would be out of place on a track day, I’ve gained peace of mind and a lot less guilt. The Continental’s ride is quite good, comfort mode makes a decent attempt at replicating the Lincolns of yore. While it might not filter out all the smaller imperfections its body on frame ancestors would’ve glided over, larger undulations come with a single slow, satisfying bounce that would be familiar to anyone who inherited their grandpas car.
Detroit is basically a large grid. The only curves are on ramps and the occasional roundabout. Instead of piloting a stiff car where 1% of my commute is thrilling and the other 99% is tiring, pretty much my whole drive is great. There is also sport mode. I tried it out on some twisty Ohio back roads. While it didn’t turn the Continental into a BMW M car, it removed the Lincoln bounce, and firmed up the pedal, steering, and suspension. It’s not a sports car but it was competent, even enjoyable. Maybe we should redefine “great handling” to mean that the car matches its environment and intended purpose.
Speaking of modes, there is Normal, Sport, and Comfort. You choose sport from a button on the dash. There is a submenu in the instrument cluster for picking the handling and performance in Drive and Sport. In the past I thought the dizzying array of customization options in some cars was a little silly, but it would be nice to fine tune things a little more. Suspension, steering, and pedal calibrations are all lumped into “handling”, while the engine and transmission are under “performance.” I would like to keep the performance steering and pedal feel with he softer suspension.
The AWD system does things. It’s there, you can watch it do its work on one of the configurable speedometer screens. All I know is that in the snow it drove very predictably, not getting stuck or sliding around. The Audi S8 seemed unstoppable in the snow and ice, and I haven’t put the Lincoln through similar torture tests, but it would probably do well enough as long as I don’t do anything dumb.
Rich Corinthian Leather
Speaking of speedometers, we have to mention the interior. Before the Continental came out, Lincoln knew it had to do more than slapping fake wood grain and nicer leather in a Ford interior and call it a day. While competitors went a more anonymous, tech-luxury route, Lincoln looked to their art-deco heyday. The result is an interior that looks special. Matte, open pore fake wood is outlined by thin chrome trim. Silver speaker grills with tiny holes drilled in a swirly pattern successfully ape Mercedes of 10 years ago. It is a nice place to be.
There is a screen obviously with CarPlay and all the modern conveniences of 2017, but a big selling point is you don’t have to blindly peck away at the touchscreen if you don’t want to. All the buttons you’d ever want to press for the radio and climate control are attractively laid out in a four by six rectangle, heated and cooled seats included. The buttons and dials feel nice and have distinctive sizes and textures. You can do pretty much anything without having to take your eyes off the road and tap through menus with zero tactile feedback. It’s a joy to operate compared to most of the new cars I’ve driven lately.
Also aping older Mercedes is the seat controls on the doors. This is necessary as the Continental has the magical 27 way perfect position seats. They heat and cool your bottom, and massage it if you so desire. There are multiple air bladders that expand and contract, each leg has its own extendable platform. Since I’m getting to the age where my back always hurts I leave the seat heaters on pretty much all the time. The massage functions would be nice if they worked, but more on that later.
The Exterior
Continuing with the aesthetics lets move to the exterior, which combines angles which are bold and handsome with others that are somewhat underwhelming. Some of this is the stretched Ford CD4 front wheel drive platform it is based on. If it had the long hood, RWD proportions of the Cadillacs it would be a better looking car. But it has broad shoulders over the rear tires, a handsome upright grille with unique headlights. The door handles are integrated into a sturdy chrome bar that runs underneath the windows. The rear lighting treatment is a continuous light bar that looks distinctive. Overall, I think it looks quite nice even if its slightly anonymous. It fits in with the Continentals history of large, four door sleds.
Not wanting to be mistaken for a cab, I searched for a Continental with an actual color and found one in this deep metallic red. It’s humorously called Burgundy Velvet. Maybe Lincoln is pulling a Dodge and mining through its 70’s brochures for its color names. If you ignore the swirl marks and small bits of bubbling paint that I’ll discuss in a second its a beautiful color.
Do I Still Gotta Wrench on it?
Reliability is a criteria I gave a lot more thought to than in the past. I’ve owned a lot of German cars — VWs, BMWs of all stripes, the Audi S8, a very green 1976 Mercedes. In my younger days I thought nothing of laying on a cold garage floor, hammering away at a pickle fork to refresh bushings large BMWs are so fond of eating, or rebuilding Vanos units in the driveway. I thought of it as a way to learn about and get closer to my car, while pumping up my wrenching bona-fides. Now it feels like annoying bullshit I don’t have the time or money to spend on. I still enjoy wrenching in theory, but I really don’t have time right now. This is why I excluded any of the normal German marques in my search.
Continentals are getting into the high 200k, low 300k mile range in the Facebook groups. I have some maintenance to catch up on now that I hit 90k miles. Transmission fluid is said to be “lifetime” although most people recommend replacing it around 80k miles, along with the PTU and Axle fluid. I have spark plugs and a fuel filter in a box in the trunk that will be installed at some point. The brakes will probably have to be refreshed soon as well.
Beyond that normal maintenance are a couple small issues I have to deal with. There is a TSB for the perfect position seats across all Ford products. The wiring harnesses weren’t long enough which can cause them to malfunction. My front passenger seat doesn’t adjust at all because of this. Most of the adjustments work on the drivers seat except the massage function sadly. You can buy harness extensions from the dealer that come with the connector to give it the strain relief it needs. This is on my long to-do list.
After filling the car with gas it would idle weirdly for a few minutes which required replacing some evap valve, a five minute procedure that I also had to do on my Fiesta ST. On 2017 model years, the electronic door popper buttons would occasionally crap out. I can tell by the unpainted plastic on my rear passenger handle that this was fixed at least once in the car’s past. Knock on wood, I haven’t had any issues.
Some of the exterior cameras get cloudy which is also a known issue. Even though the cameras were replaced at least twice according to the Car Fax, certain angles in the top down view of the car are still cloudy looking. Thankfully I have friends who work for the camera supplier who said they could solder in some better cameras, a benefit of working in the industry.
The paint is also bubbling in some spots — odd because they are aluminum panels. Apparently this is a problem at several automakers. If the car were still under warranty the dealer would repaint it but unfortunately I just have to live with it.
Besides that the car has started up and run fine, every time I’ve turned the key. That’s something you really appreciate after being in the wrenching trenches for so long.
Conveniences I’ve Been Missing
Other things I appreciate; remote start is a godsend. When you’re trying to wrangle a toddler and drive him to day care in the early morning, the last thing you need is to have to chip the car out of an ice cocoon so you can open the doors. Heated steering wheel; also amazing. I forgot how often I had to press my frozen hands against the vents, waiting for the air to warm up and get some feeling in my fingers. Soft close doors are kind of nice too, especially when dealing with a sleeping kid.
It has CarPlay and an awesome Revel sound system with 19 speakers which is great for long drives. I don’t miss having to deal with an FM transmitter to listen to music. Also helpful for long drives is the radar cruise control. It has cross-traffic alert when you are reversing which is super handy in low visibility situations. Front collision alert can be a little sensitive but it doesn’t go off enough to be an annoyance.
After driving so many 15-20 year old cars I feel like I’m caught up to the modern age.
The Continental Isn’t Just For Old Folks
I’ve been joking about being old, even though I don’t feel old. My automotive tastes have sort of been stuck in the past. When I was a kid I’d pour through every car magazine and memorize their stats. These days there aren’t a ton of new cars I get excited about these days, at least ones I can afford.
Maybe this is why the Continental appeals to me. They had to keep it somewhat old school for the geriatric traditional Continental buyer. It’s not beeping at you all the time, you don’t have to use the touchscreen if you don’t want to, two golf bags and jumbo box of Depends fit in the trunk, the boat can float like a cloud.
But its also got 400 hp, a twin turbo V6, and torque vectoring AWD. The floaty suspension can reel itself in when needed and this Lincoln can be a fun partner on a back road when asked to. It has a significantly higher power to weight ratio than the S4’s and Skylines I lusted after as a kid. All in a comfortable, classy interior that can blast my tunes through a killer stereo system. The Continental can do it all. Maybe I have gotten wiser with age.
These are very underappreciated cars. My wife has a 2013 MKZ and it’s been a awesome car. So many luxury features for a very affordable price.
My mom even has a 2020 MKZ with the 3.0TT and my god that thing is fast.
Wow these are a great deal! Found a low mileage (28k) 2018 near me for under 25k.
Probably would last longer than a 2024 BMW
Ok, the Continental is neat and everything, but you can’t just casually mention a NSX and leave it at that. I want to hear about the NSX. I need to hear about the NSX.
Sounds good! I’ll write something up!
I picked up a 2017 Lincoln MKX a couple years ago. After getting used to the nice comfortable ride, I would never go back to something “sporty.” I can also see why old folks love them and would definitely buy another Lincoln
> Maybe we should redefine “great handling” to mean that the car matches its environment and intended purpose.
Amen to that. By that standard, the “best handling” daily driver I’ve ever had, behind my current 2012 Infiniti G37X, would probably have to be my 1982 300D. No, you aren’t going to set any record lap times in the thing or anything, but if a semi blows a tire 1/8 of a mile ahead of you on the highway at 75 mph with little time to react, you can swerve around the debris and return to a straight path without breaking speed, and the car won’t be half as nervous about it as you are.
Whether crosswinds, wakes from large trucks, or split-second accident avoidance, it felt like absolutely nothing would move the car off the path you intended for it to take. The car responded very quickly and very well to input from that giant steering wheel, but still had a firmer yet somehow more comfortable ride quality than the Large Cars Of Beauty And Grace of my childhood (shoutout to one of my favorite Torch features on the old German lighting site). For lack of a better description, a Benz W123 is still one of the most “solidly planted”-feeling cars I’ve ever driven.
Steve, I am genuinely jealous.
I’ve no idea what your car cost, and haven’t googled any of those in my area (SoCal) but I am *absolutely* OK with admitting that I’m old enough to prefer comfort (and safety, and convenience) over absolute acceleration, razor-sharp handling, etc… for my daily driver.
I like your car, I like the color, and I’d be OK with the caveats (though the complexity of those almost Cronenbergesque seats scare me a bit) and I like that fake matte wood and metal faux-Burmester speaker grills on the doors too.
Use and enjoy it in good health and appropriate happiness. 🙂
Thank you! I got it for about $22k. You can find lower optioned ones with higher mileage in the mid teens. The black label top of the line ones are still a little pricey but they have the cool interior colors and crazy plush backseat.
Definitely enjoying the car and hope to keep it for a while
Sedans are OK, wagons are far better.
All the utility of an SUV with proper ride and handling. I’m with you on the cush though – I had to really search for a “Luxury Line” version of my S212 MB E350 wagon, as most of them are the “Sport Line” with lower/harder suspension and rubber-band tires. Mine is delightful on real world roads, and it’s just not the sort of car one hustles through the twisties, even though it is perfectly happy to do that too. The Mercedes station wagon, the most competent car in the world on paved roads.
I also have an e91 BMW wagon, which is rather more fun with it’s RWD and 6spd stick, but it’s not as comfortable as Der PanzerWagen. Different horses for different courses.
I feel that you have a pretty off the radar, great every day car. Sedans are still great even though most people feel they aren’t.
My thought on how to own cars is to have all based covered. My wife’s car is a CX50 that we just upgraded so that’s the mom mobile. I have a Mazda3 turbo that’s my work car as well as fun vehicle. I have a Tacoma too that also serves work duty when the 3 is just too small and I need more around the house work done.
Before I had the 3, I had a Miata. But then the kid came along and it was time to get into something we could all go along in or at least have something a little more sensible.
3 cars in my 2 driver family has always been the standard, with the Tacoma being the constant. Don’t drive it as much as I used to but she always starts up and gets the job done. For the way prices are now on used ones, I probably will just keep throwing maintenance at it and keep it until it truly dies. Which being a Toyota and only at 187k, hopefully (knocks on all the wood in my vicinity) should be a while
Congratulations! Great choice. I want a 79 Lincoln Mark V
Always thought those were handsome cars, especially the door handle integration into the window trim. Nice color choice too!
I think late teen’s cars are a good buy these days – they’ve got the electronics mostly reliable, powertrains are simply upgraded versions they’ve already made hundred of thousands of, and they get great fuel mileage. I have two Audi A4 Allroads – a 2017 and a 2018. So far both have been terrific, and I’ve had each of them on long road trips already.
I can’t wait for these to be 20 years old and pick up one for dirt cheap.
Good job on getting a well-optioned Continental! Probably 50% or more are livery trim it seems, and those don’t even have ventilated front seats! You got a good one-the fancy LED headlights, amazing upgraded seats, and adaptive cruise control (why that wasn’t standard on these is beyond me, but it’s actually a rare feature).
I recently test drive a Continental with a friend who was car shopping. It was pretty awesome. She ended up with an MKC, and I did a bunch of work to it. As someone who also has a German car background, I find Fords pretty annoying to work on. I’m overhauling an LCI E90 atm and definitely find it more fun to work on than the MKC.
Forgot to mention definitely want to get ForScan and one of the recommended OBDII dongles. With the desktop version and preferably a hard wired connector you have 99+% of the OE scan tool functionality including being able to adjust so many of the factory settings.
On my year MKZ for some inexplicable reason the temp of the heated steering wheel is set from the factory at 68 degrees. Meanwhile later years, all Fusions and Mondeos got higher temps. Only took a few minutes to adjust it to 85 degrees. The other things I changed were the off time on the power port and changing the lane change number of flashes from 3 to 4. I haven’t been brave enough to activate the stop and go function on the adaptive cruise.
On my F-250 I used when I put larger tires on to correct the speedo.
Can confirm. When I added a subwoofer to my F150, I bought a factory plug and wired it to the harness for the factory sub behind the C-pillar. 5 minutes with ForScan and it was active and happily sending bass with 0 extra wires ran, everything came from that plug and powered my Kicker hideaway sub.
Yup forgot to mention that it is also useful for adding or turning on factory options that weren’t present on a particular vehicle.
The lane change flash – what group of numbnuts decided 3 was the best number for damn near every vehicle in production, and that the owner shouldn’t be allowed to change that number on their own?
If you want more blinks, just hold the damn lever down!
With ForScan you can turn it off completely or change it to anything between 1 and 10 if I remember right.
As I mentioned if they offered a Hybrid version I would most likely be driving one. In my 50’s I found myself spending 3 hrs per day commuting a large portion of the year I decided comfort and MPG were the most important considerations when I decided to spend some real money on a car for myself. I picked up a 2015 MKZ hybrid with the earlier version of the massaging seats and my wife and I love that feature. However I do prefer a larger car being a serial Panther owner, so the Conti definitely interested me when it came out. However I just can’t give up 40+ MPG. Now if the RWD based model would have made it to market that certainly would have been in the running particularly if they offered the Explorer’s Hybrid system.
That would’ve been a great combination
On 87 octane, it gets 360 HP. You need 93 to get the big 4-hundo.
THE HORROR
My butt dyno is not that finely calibrated.
I am pretty sure this article was written specifically for me. My 1998 Conti is getting a little long in the tooth, and I have been looking for a replacement for a few years, cross shopping all the cars you mentioned. I’ve always liked the looks of these Continentals, and this article may have made up my mind!
I drove my FIL’s Conti of that generation a few years back, right before he sold it…what a surprisingly nice car. The gauge cluster’s fucking amazing!
Of course the real secret to making a Lincoln sound even more up-market is to pronounce the second “L”…
Nice looking seats. I wouldn’t let JD Vance near them!
I definitely agree with the idea of pairing a reliable car and a project/classic/hot rod, but I don’t think that a 1969 MG Midget is really reliable enough to offset owning a Mk V Golf.
Maybe if he completely redid the electrical system already? =P
I didn’t even wait until I was 40 to decide I was done with punishing, “sporty” (read: harsh) ride quality and went with comfort. Once I passed 40 my body appreciated that comfort even more.
Comfort + 400 hp/AWD? What is not to like? Yeah it won’t take turns with a Ferrari, but most people are perfectly happy getting their kicks from stomping it at a stoplight or on a highway onramp. This should do that just fine.
I was born that way…cheap, reliable, and comfortable above all else. At least my Mazda3 handles well, but damn is our Outback a fantastic highway cruiser. We couldn’t get out of the CX5 we test drove after it fast enough.
I really like the way these cars look and while I am still some years away from 40 (I’m 32) I would love to know how reliable these cars in the long run. Does anyone know how these do say when they start getting into higher miles. For comparison, my daily is a 2017 Camry with almost 200k miles. I know this car won’t be at that level but it’s a modern car so should not be too bad right?
Lincoln had a livery package for taxi companies and they put a lot of miles on them. There’s one guy on the FB groups that just passed 300k but a bunch of stuff failed at once so I think he threw in the towel.
The livery package had the 3.0TT?
That’s good to know that they can make it all the way to 300K!
or just aim for the Lexus ES(h)? Those 4 cylinder Toyota last a long time with regular maintenance.. The lincoln is a transverse v6 engine, a bit harder to work on.
By the time you are looking for a replacement.. the hybrid cars should be plentiful.
I actually really like the latest ES350 and 300h refresh. They also recently dropped that goofy mouse pad interface. I’ll probably be looking for a new car in couple of years and the ES is for sure at the top of my list. I’ve also considered the last gen Avalons and maybe even sticking with a 2017 Camry but going with the XSE this time since I have the SE.
I really like this car, but I always felt something was lacking. “Presence” maybe, compared to the old school idea of what a Continental was? But hey, who cares, you got yourself a great ride and I wish you many years of good service.
This is why to my dying breath, I’ll continue to decry the failure of vision at Ford for not putting the 2002 Lincoln Continental concept into production.
I definitely think it’s because they used the fusion platform and you can only do so much with FWD proportions. If they could’ve gotten it closer to the concept it’d be a looker for sure.
Probably a safe bet. The Ford guys knew that the writing was on the wall for sedans, so they pulled and stretched the CD4 on a budget. Still that interior looks great, a nice place to soak up the miles.
At least it’s a good looking car. I love the detailing on it and they still catch my eye.
I usually do at least one decent length driving trip a year and a few shorter weekend ones. I would adore this for that purpose. But I cannot accommodate another car both space wise and insurance cost wise.
Congrats! These are genuinely so nice, you barely notice it’s FWD-based. And I’m STILL mad that Lincoln didn’t incorporate that door handle design and application to all their models. It’s SO GOOD!