Lincoln Continental Mark VII - Trim Levels

Trim Levels

There were 4 trim levels to start with: Base, Gianni Versace Designer, Bill Blass Designer, and LSC. The Versace had unique stitched seats, the Bill Blass had pillow top seats with the initials "BB" etched in the backrest. By 1988, only the Bill Blass and LSC remained.

The LSC was a performance oriented model, designed to compete against European luxury coupes like the BMW 630/635CSi and the Mercedes-Benz 500/560SEC. It had a stiffer suspension, dual exhaust, sport leather seats, a higher output engine (until 1988 when all came with the 225 hp (168 kW) 302 from the Mustang GT) and sport styled 15-inch (380 mm) rims. Base Mark VIIs and the designer series had wire rims and even an optional geometric rim. In 1988, 16 in (406 mm) turbine rims appeared on the LSC. For 1990, 16 inch rims based on the BBS RA Series appeared on the LSC. In 1991, the wheels became standard on both the Bill Blass and the LSC as the LSC suspension was standardized across the board. The LSC also had analog gauges (1986 onward) with a speedometer, tachometer, fuel level gauge, coolant temperature gauge, and separate trip and regular odometers. The Bill Blass model continued with digital instruments - just a speedometer, fuel level gauge, and trip odometer. All Mark VIIs featured a power deck-lid release (through an interior mounted button) and electric pull-down, in which the trunk lid was partially lowered by hand, and then automatically pulled down about an inch by a motor mounted inside the trunk latch. Also standard on all Mark VIIs was an automatic dimming high-beam module. This worked via a sensor located adjacent to the rear-view mirror, and sensitivity could be adjusted by a dial located on the dashboard. Of notable mention is the Mark VII GTC, a Lincoln-Mercury dealer-sold car built by Cars & Concepts with monorchromatic paint, a body kit, and available performance upgrades. A select few were sent to Jack Roush Performance for suspension enhancements and optional 5.8L and T5 manual transmission conversions. There was also a 'Comtech' Mark VII, with a CRT touch screen, which did exist in at least one vehicle, it was on loan to Bob Bondurant while he had his driving school at Sears Point Raceway. Ford Motor Company allowed him to have a fleet of new vehicles every year, and one of Bob's choices was the Comtech Mark VII. Larry Albedi Motors (Lincoln-Mercury) in Vallejo, California serviced the vehicle a couple of times before it was returned to Ford at the end of the year. The Comtech parts that were unique to that Mark VII were also listed in the Lincoln Mercury parts catalog, but when the Merkur arrived the Comtech pages were removed and the Merkur pages replaced them. The Comtech model being a prototype, they saw no reason to keep it in the parts catalog.

In 1990, the LSC Special Edition was added to the lineup, as Ford prepared to segue to the Mark VIII. Since that car was still a few years away, and the VII was quickly becoming one of the more dated production cars on the road, a serious interior redesign took place that year, along with the introduction of the driver airbag. Other new features included a radically different dashboard and middle stack, a more sophisticated optional autodimming interior rearview mirror, the 120 mph speedometer on the LSC/LSC SE, and a more sophisticated oil monitoring system. However, the "antenna" switch disappeared on the '91-'92 models. The seats had equally been "downgraded" and while remaining unmistakably luxurious lost one of the bolsters and, perhaps more regrettably, the tall headrest (only found on the '84-'89 models). In spite of these minor deficiencies, the 1990-92 Mark VIIs are generally very coveted cars among collectors, boasting a unique exterior and interior. The '91-'92 Bill Blass and LSC/LSC SE are essentially the same car, as both use the stiffer LSC air springs. This makes the '90 Bill Blass a unique Mark VII - while retaining the distinctively ultra-soft Bill Blass ride from the 80s production run, the car features a 90s interior. It is thus, in a way, the last "true" Bill Blass Mark VII, and the collectors frequently will joke that the '91-'92 Blass is an LSC with a digital dash. To be sure, the '91-'92 Bill Blass still retains the unique to that edition exterior and interior. In the meantime, the LSC SE was offered in three colors (red, black, grey) and was entirely devoid of chrome save for the grille; instead, all exterior trim was blacked out, rendering the SE different from both the base LSC and the Bill Blass edition. The taillight trim was unique to the SE and reflected the exterior paint color (red or black), the same applied to the lower body trim. The 1992 models quietly introduced, as often is the case with the final production year, a few other unique features, including the extremely rare green exterior color option and the non-perforated leather steering wheel (these have generally survived better than the perforated ones over the decades).

Lincoln Mark VII trims timeline
Trim 1980s 1990s
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Base
Versace
Bill Blass
LSC
LSC SE

Read more about this topic:  Lincoln Continental Mark VII

Famous quotes containing the words trim and/or levels:

    When we think of him, he is without a hat, standing in the wind and weather. He was impatient of topcoats and hats, preferring to be exposed, and he was young enough and tough enough to enjoy the cold and the wind of those times.... It can be said of him, as of few men in a like position, that he did not fear the weather, and did not trim his sails, but instead challenged the wind itself, to improve its direction and to cause it to blow more softly and more kindly over the world and its people.
    —E.B. (Elwyn Brooks)

    The only inequalities that matter begin in the mind. It is not income levels but differences in mental equipment that keep people apart, breed feelings of inferiority.
    Jacquetta Hawkes (b. 1910)