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Lincoln Continental sedan.

Ford will launch their all-new low-cost “skunkworks” EV platform next week. And they are already increasing the staff as well as opening a new campus in Long Beach that will include a new design department. (The facility had already been used by Ford many years ago to build the Model A). That means we will see many new models based on the new platform. And maybe, just maybe, a new large Lincoln sedan could be part of the plan…

Many employees at the new building have previously worked for Tesla, Apple, Lucid, or Rivian. Which is exactly what Ford needs right now. A lower cost platform also means a new model doesn’t have to sell in huge numbers to be profitable. New FLP batteries built in Michigan will also help reduce cost.

“American Luxury” has gone from large luxury sedans to huge trucks. These large American sedans from Lincoln, Cadillac, and Chrysler are all gone. However, the luxury sedan itself is not. With BMW, Mercedes, Lexus, Audi, Tesla, Lucid, and even Genesis all still offering larger luxurious sedans.

Maybe it’s time for Lincoln to rethink their idea of luxury.

The most famous classic generations of Continentals were from the 1960s and even the 1970s. These super-large sedans basically became the Lincoln Town Car decades later.

While the Continental morphed into a smaller model, effectively replacing the Versailles as a Cadillac Seville competitor. The 8th generation actually grew in size and adopted a more stately and upscale design. At least it looked like a large American luxury car. However, it was now based on an FWD platform shared with the Ford Taurus. That generation was quite popular, with sales doubling from the previous “Seville wannabe” model.

The next generation came out in 1995 and tried hard to look like a sedan version of the Lincoln Mark VIII coupe. It also gained its V8 back. This didn’t really help since the 8th generation was never as popular as the previous one, and production stopped in 2002.

There was a revival in 2017. Which was pretty much a disaster. All throughout its history, the most popular Continentals were the ones that had that classic American luxury car look. It seems design experiments turned Lincoln buyers off, at least as far as the sedans are concerned. The 2027 model was basically a new generation Lincoln MKS called Continental (Probably a last-minute name change).

Lincoln never sold more than 12,000 of them in one year, and the whole thing was pretty much a failure.

While we will indeed see new sedans from Cadillac, based on the Ultium EV platform, it seems there isn’t much planned for Lincoln. Except for more SUVs.

The illustration above shows what a more classic new Lincoln Continental sedan based on that new “lower cost” platform could look like.

Conversation 11 comments

  1. Was this written by a child who was recently hit in the head? Do you not proofread and edit anything?

  2. Take some risk guys! The pendulum probably ready to swing back Caddy and Lincolns way on big luxury cars. And nostalgic advertising the way Chevy does with its trucks, the way I’ve recently seen foreign makes try doing. Show us those big beautiful land yachts going all way back to the 1930s.

  3. Great ,I have the Lincoln Avatar 2020 and I fully enjoy it 👍🏿 😀 😉 😊

  4. I would LOVE to have a Lincoln sedan floating around the country. This rendering is a lovely and would make a great option for the American highway!

  5. Still driving my Lincoln town car designer model.looks like new.have it detailed cleaned every year.for long trips you need a larger heavy car for comfort.
    Hope Lincoln will bring back a simler.model.

  6. Nobody was buying Sedans in large volume. That is why the went out of production. The competition sell world wide and GM has a market in China. Cadillac Escalade sells in volume worldwide. I don’t think that Cadillac or Lincoln will sell in large volumes like they did back in the day. As Sedans got smaller and smaller sales continued to decline. Passenger space and cargo space that they had back in the 70’s and 80’s has so decline in Sedans people jumped on the SUV bandwagon. Space in today’s Sedans dwarf in comparison. Then there is quality issues with the big three. Then there is cost. In 1979 I bought a new Sedan DeVille out the door it cost me $14,000. Today go price these cars they would go between $120k-$340k. Those prices narrow you down to about 1% of the buyers.

  7. I really wanted to buy a large Lincoln non plug in Hybrid, but slim pickings there – I bought a 2025 Lincoln Nautilus Hybrid and would love my next car to be a Full sized Lincoln Hybrid.

  8. Lincoln had the perfect platform for the new Town Car, The Lincoln Navigator had the boy the light it just had NO trunk, so I liked it so much I bought 4 Lincoln Navigators different colors, there is a company in California that Professionally does the body work,there is a picture of a Burgundy colored Lincoln Town Car, I think the (box) look just made it one of the best I have 3 – Lincoln Town Car in different years and colors, I think the Navigator Not the new ones the 2022s is the body style that is a PERFECT PLATFORM for the Lincoln Town Car, it’s my money and my new Town Cars, yes 2 will have the truck Hump.

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