1998 Lincoln Mark Viii Lsc Sedan 2-door 4.6l, Cobra V8, Cold Air, Beautiful Car on 2040-cars
Slidell, Louisiana, United States
Vehicle Title:Clear
Transmission:Automatic
Body Type:Sedan
Fuel Type:GAS
For Sale By:Dealer
Mileage: 129,999
Make: Lincoln
Sub Model: lsc
Model: Mark VIII
Exterior Color: cream pearl
Trim: LSC Sedan 2-Door
Interior Color: off white
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Drive Type: RWD
Number of Cylinders: 8
Options: Sunroof, Leather Seats, CD Player
Power Options: Air Conditioning, Cruise Control, Power Locks, Power Windows, Power Seats
Disability Equipped: No
This car is fast, comfortable, and beautiful. It is in great shape inside and out. Color is cream pearl. It is the LSC model. The air is ice cold, all power options, chrome wheels, and has a sunroof. The only negative to this car is that the traction control has a malfunction that makes it engage when it doesn't have to and limits your performance. My mechanic and I have not been able to figure out the problem. If you turn the traction control off, everything works just fine.
Lincoln Mark Series for Sale
- 1970 lincoln mark iii base 7.5l
- 1977 lincoln mark v base coupe 2-door 7.5l
- 1975 lincoln mark iv coupe 7.5l v8 classic american project / daily driver teal(US $2,500.00)
- 1992 lincoln mark vii lsc sedan 2-door 5.0l only 80k miles! special edition!!
- 1969 lincoln mark iii 3 460 maroon 103,000mi running driving inspected tagged(US $4,444.44)
- 1975 lincoln mark iv(US $18,500.00)
Auto Services in Louisiana
The Tint Shop ★★★★★
Service Plus Auto Glass ★★★★★
Premier Towing & Automotive ★★★★★
Orr Nissan ★★★★★
Northside Towing ★★★★★
Morris Tire Service, Inc. ★★★★★
Auto blog
Ford Q3 pretax profits drop to $1.18B
Fri, 24 Oct 2014Following positive third quarter financial results recently from General Motors, rival Ford took a tumble in Q3. The automaker posted pre-tax profits of $1.18 billion, compared to about $2.59 billion in Q3 2013, a drop of around 54 percent. Net income also suffered with $835 million made in the quarter, versus $1.272 billion last year, a decline of about 34 percent. The Blue Oval blamed the gloomy figures on three reasons in its release: "lower volume, higher warranty costs and adverse balance sheet exchange effects."
There were problems of one kind or another in practically every region. North America experienced higher warranty costs than expected, partially due to recalls. The sales volume for the quarter was 665,000 units, versus 725,000 in Q3 2013, and pre-tax results amounted to $1.41 billion versus $2.296 billion last year.
South America and Europe both posted worse pre-tax results than last year. On the bright side, European volume was up slightly to 321,000 vehicles, from 303,000 in Q3 2013. The Middle East and Africa also lost $15 million, but that was an improvement compared to the $25 million loss previously experienced in this region.
2015 Lincoln Navigator puts on a brave face, offers EcoBoost V6 only
Thu, 23 Jan 2014
Lincoln has finally given its SUV a facelift after seven long years.
Seven years is a long time. For the auto industry, though, seven years is an absolute eternity. Most vehicles receive clean-sheet redesigns within the span of seven years, usually getting a facelift of some sort after year three or four. Not Lincoln.
Lincoln's second, more traditional, Super Bowl commercial
Sat, 02 Feb 2013For its second Super Bowl commercial, Lincoln Motor Company has stepped away from the Max Ernst-ian surrealism of the "Steer the Script" spot. No Germans, no turtles, no aliens nor alpacas this time, just a 30-second run through the ways in which Lincoln sees the 2013 MKZ as a rebirth of the brand and everything a luxury consumer would want.
The kind of traditional spot that could run any time of year, the only question we had after watching it was: "Wait - was that... Abraham Lincoln?" Along with the press release from Lincoln, you can view the spot below.
If you want a deeper look and criticism into Lincoln's "Steer The Script," ad, have a read of AOL Autos' column: Lincoln's Super Bowl Ad is a Flop, written by Pete Bigelow.