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Mercury Zephyr

 
Mercury Zephyr

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Mercury Zephyr



 
 
For other Ford related cars called Zephyr, see Ford Zephyr
Ford Zephyr

The Ford Zephyr is a automobile manufactured by the Ford of Britain in the United Kingdom. Between 1950 and 1962, it was sold as a more powerful six cylinder saloon to complement the four cylinder Ford Consul: from 1962 the Zephyr itself was offered in both four and six cylinder versions....
, Lincoln-Zephyr
Lincoln-Zephyr

Lincoln-Zephyr was a brand name for the lower priced line of luxury cars in the Lincoln line. Lincoln-Zephyr and Mercury bridged the wide gap between Ford's DeLuxe line and the exclusive Lincoln K-series cars....
, and Lincoln Zephyr
The Mercury Zephyr was a compact car
Compact car

A compact , small family or c-segment car is a car classification of automobile which are larger than a supermini car and smaller than a large family car....
 sold by the Lincoln-Mercury division of Ford Motor Company
Ford Motor Company

The Ford Motor Company is an United States multinational corporation and the world's List of automobile manufacturers#World Motor Vehicle Production by Manufacturer based on worldwide vehicle sales, following Toyota, General Motors, and Volkswagen Group....
 in the North American market from 1978 to 1983. Along with its corporate cousin the Ford Fairmont
Ford Fairmont

The Ford Fairmont was a North American compact car, produced between 1978 and 1983.The 1978 Ford Fairmont was the first vehicle built on the Ford Fox platform, which would be the basis for a variety of other models, including the 1980 to 1988 Ford Thunderbird, the 1981 to 1982 American Ford Granada, the 1979 to 2004 Ford Mustang, and in 198...
, it was the first use of Ford's long-lived unibody Fox platform
Ford Fox platform

The Ford Fox platform was a rear wheel drive, unibody automobile platform that Ford used for 26 years in the North American market. It was designed to be relatively lightweight and simple, in keeping with the general downsizing of Detroit designs in the late 1970s....
, which did not completely leave production until 2004.

Zephyr, taken from a poetic name for the west wind
West wind

A west wind is a wind that originates in the west and blows east. In Greek mythology, Zephyrus was the personification of west wind and bringer of light spring and early summer breezes; in the Eros and Psyche of Cupid and Psyche, he was the attendant of Cupid, who brought Psyche to his master's palace....
, has a considerable history in the Ford line.






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For other Ford related cars called Zephyr, see Ford Zephyr
Ford Zephyr

The Ford Zephyr is a automobile manufactured by the Ford of Britain in the United Kingdom. Between 1950 and 1962, it was sold as a more powerful six cylinder saloon to complement the four cylinder Ford Consul: from 1962 the Zephyr itself was offered in both four and six cylinder versions....
, Lincoln-Zephyr
Lincoln-Zephyr

Lincoln-Zephyr was a brand name for the lower priced line of luxury cars in the Lincoln line. Lincoln-Zephyr and Mercury bridged the wide gap between Ford's DeLuxe line and the exclusive Lincoln K-series cars....
, and Lincoln Zephyr
The Mercury Zephyr was a compact car
Compact car

A compact , small family or c-segment car is a car classification of automobile which are larger than a supermini car and smaller than a large family car....
 sold by the Lincoln-Mercury division of Ford Motor Company
Ford Motor Company

The Ford Motor Company is an United States multinational corporation and the world's List of automobile manufacturers#World Motor Vehicle Production by Manufacturer based on worldwide vehicle sales, following Toyota, General Motors, and Volkswagen Group....
 in the North American market from 1978 to 1983. Along with its corporate cousin the Ford Fairmont
Ford Fairmont

The Ford Fairmont was a North American compact car, produced between 1978 and 1983.The 1978 Ford Fairmont was the first vehicle built on the Ford Fox platform, which would be the basis for a variety of other models, including the 1980 to 1988 Ford Thunderbird, the 1981 to 1982 American Ford Granada, the 1979 to 2004 Ford Mustang, and in 198...
, it was the first use of Ford's long-lived unibody Fox platform
Ford Fox platform

The Ford Fox platform was a rear wheel drive, unibody automobile platform that Ford used for 26 years in the North American market. It was designed to be relatively lightweight and simple, in keeping with the general downsizing of Detroit designs in the late 1970s....
, which did not completely leave production until 2004.

Zephyr, taken from a poetic name for the west wind
West wind

A west wind is a wind that originates in the west and blows east. In Greek mythology, Zephyrus was the personification of west wind and bringer of light spring and early summer breezes; in the Eros and Psyche of Cupid and Psyche, he was the attendant of Cupid, who brought Psyche to his master's palace....
, has a considerable history in the Ford line. It was used in the late 1930s for a smaller, less expensive Lincoln, which provided the basis for the first Continental
Lincoln Continental

The Lincoln Continental, an automobile produced by the Lincoln division of Ford Motor Company, began for the 1939 model year. Over the next 63 years, despite these cars sharing underpinnings with less-expensive Ford automobiles, Continental was usually a distinctively styled, highly equipped luxury car....
. Later on, it was used on a European Ford model. In 2006, it returned to the Lincoln line once again.

The Mercury Zephyr shared most of the Fairmont's characteristics, being available with four, six, or eight-cylinder engines and appearing in coupe
Coupé

A coup? or coupe is a closed car body style, the precise definition of which varies from manufacturer to manufacturer, and over time. Coup?s are often hardtopped sports cars or sporty variants of sedan body styles, with doors commonly reduced from 4 to 2, and a Close-coupled sedan interior offering either two seats or 2+2 seating ....
, sedan, or station wagon
Station wagon

A station wagon in American English, Australian English, Canadian English and New Zealand English usage and an estate car in British English usage, is a passenger automobile with a car body style similar to a sedan but with the roofline following the full, sometimes extended rear cargo area, i.e. ending with a more vertical door...
 form. At introduction, the Zephyr was most easily told from the Fairmont by its curved grille
Grille

A grille is an opening of several slits side by side in a wall or metal sheet or other barrier, usually to let air or water enter and/or leave but keep larger objects including people and animals in or out....
 and four square headlights, Fairmonts having a flatter front and only two large square lights. Later, though, an adaptation of the Zephyr's four-light front was also used on Fairmonts. The Zephyr was outfitted with Ford's 'Ride Engineered' suspension package.

Along with regular 4- and 2-door sedans (and 4-door wagons) introduced in 1978, Mercury also released a limited production, uniquely styled 2-door version of the Zephyr called the Z-7, similar to the Fairmont Futura coupe (though later, the Fairmont Futura was available as a sedan and wagon, the Z-7 remained a 2-door only its entire span). The Z-7 was a 2-door coupe that featured a unique wrapover roof design, wraparound taillights and was usually equipped with either the I6 or V8 (very few Z-7s had the four-cylinder engine). Many Z-7 models included a two-tone paint job.

By 1982 and 1983, Zephyr options dropped off one by one (for example, no V8 engine was available in 1983) as the Marquis and Topaz were being readied for the market.

The Zephyr was reskinned and later sold as the mid-size version of the Mercury Marquis
Mercury Marquis

The Mercury Marquis was a vehicle produced by the Ford Motor Company under its Mercury brand from 1967 to 1986. It began as a full-size car, but became a mid-size in 1983....
, which had previously been the flagship Mercury. The smaller Fox-based Marquis dropped the Zephyr's long-used 3.3 L I6 for 1984 and replaced it with the larger and more powerful 3.8 L "Essex" V6, but kept the same 2.3 L I4 as standard and the same 5.0 L V8 as an option. The Fox-based Marquis was replaced by the 1986 Mercury Sable.

The larger Panther-platform model was renamed the Grand Marquis
Mercury Grand Marquis

The Mercury Grand Marquis is a full-size rear-wheel drive sedan sold by the Mercury division of the Ford Motor Company. It is essentially Mercury's version of the Ford Crown Victoria with which it shares its Ford Panther platform along with the Lincoln Town Car....
, and continues to use the name to this day.

See also

  • Ford Zephyr
    Ford Zephyr

    The Ford Zephyr is a automobile manufactured by the Ford of Britain in the United Kingdom. Between 1950 and 1962, it was sold as a more powerful six cylinder saloon to complement the four cylinder Ford Consul: from 1962 the Zephyr itself was offered in both four and six cylinder versions....
  • Lincoln-Zephyr
    Lincoln-Zephyr

    Lincoln-Zephyr was a brand name for the lower priced line of luxury cars in the Lincoln line. Lincoln-Zephyr and Mercury bridged the wide gap between Ford's DeLuxe line and the exclusive Lincoln K-series cars....
     (classic version)
  • Lincoln Zephyr (2006 version)


External links

  • - A resource for all early Foxes