«   CarDomain Blog Home   »

June 10, 2009

CarDomain Obscure Muscle Car Parking Lot: the Lincoln Mark VII LSC

By Jim Brennan

UDMan

Welcome to the CarDomain Obscure Muscle Car Parking Lot, a regular feature which aims to expand the notion of what a muscle car is, and to have some civilized discussion while doing so. After years of square-lined formality, Lincoln’s premium coupe took a dramatic new direction with the 1984 Mark VII. Though it shared a platform with the bustleback Continental, this swoopy semi-fastback was derived from the new-for-’83 Ford Thunderbird/Mercury Cougar. The result was smooth, distinctive, and more visually aerodynamic than any previous Mark. It also marked the return of the fabled “Hot Rod Lincoln” in the form of the LSC. Can this be classified as a muscle car? Reintroducing the Lincoln Mark VII LSC.

Continue reading after the jump!

The Mark VII held a lengthy standard equipment list, including an onboard trip computer / message center and digital instruments. Mark VII’s also came with full air suspension at all four wheels. It was the first American vehicle with electronic 4-channel anti-lock brakes (6 months before the Corvette). Mark VII also had the distinction of being the first American vehicle with composite headlights. A humped trunklid, modest taillamps in the rear fender trailing edges, and a toned-down Mark grille were stylistic links with the past, but the car was clearly aimed at a very different clientele: younger, affluent buyers who’d been defecting to high-dollar, high-status imports, a group Lincoln had never courted before. It was also a bold challenge to Cadillac’s Eldorado, which was still relatively overblown.

The Mark VII was an instant critical success, especially the performance-oriented LSC (Luxury Sport Coupe) — the fabled “Hot Rod Lincoln” come to life. Enthusiast magazines even thought it a credible rival to the vaunted BMW 6-Series and Mercedes-Benz SEC. No wonder. Where the base and Designer models had a soft ride and traditional appointments, the LSC boasted a firmer suspension with fat performance tires on handsome cast-aluminum wheels, plus multiadjustable sport bucket seats and Lincoln’s best cloth or leather upholstery. For 1985 it adopted the Mustang GT’s high-output V-8 with 165 bhp (versus 140 for other models). The ’86 got an even hotter port-injected engine with 200 bhp (versus 150 bhp on other Marks), plus standard ABS four-wheel disc brakes and a nice set of analog gauges (replacing the digital/graphic electronic display retained for its linemates). Engine refinements extracted another 25 bhp for 1988-90.

With all this, the LSC was the most overtly sporting Lincoln since the very first Continental and the most roadable Lincoln since the “Mexican Road Race” days. It was also one terrific buy at initial prices of $23,700 — about half the cost of erstwhile German competitors. Lincoln-Mercury planners thought lesser VIIs would outsell it, but buyers confounded them by ordering more LSCs — enough that by 1988, the original four models had been cut to just LSC and the Bill Blass Designer Edition. Overall Mark VII sales were good: 30,000-plus in the first season 15,000-38,000 thereafter. Prices inevitably escalated, reaching the $27,000 level by decade’s end, but standard equipment also kept growing even as trim variations thinned. The 1990s boasted an important new safety feature in a standard driver-side airbag, which also brought a reworked, slightly more ergonomic dash.

Performance for the LSC was pretty good for the 80′s. The 1988 version recorded a 0-60 time of just under 8.0 seconds, with a quarter mile elapsed time of 16.10 Seconds, and a little over 101 mph. Top speed for this Luxury Hot Rod? Electronically limited to 120 MPH. Remember, this was with the 225 HP 5.0L V-8 that was used in the Mustang, and the LSC weighed close to 3,800 Lbs.

CarDomain Members Rides

There are over 350 Lincoln Mark VII Models within the CarDomain Community, many of them are the LSC Version, and they can all be looked at here. However, I will try and post a couple of the outstanding ones here.

Here’s Chucks beautiful White 1990 LSC from somewhere in Michigan. The 5 Spoke rims are tasteful enough, and not over the top, and the color shows off the lines of this ride beautifully. Take a look, and leave a comment.

Here’s Matt’s beautiful Silver Mark VII from Buffalo, NY. It sports what is an easy swap; Stock Mustang Rims, and they look really good. Check out his ride.

Here’s a rare one, a MK VII Turbo Diesel. It belongs to John Dancy from Primo, PA. Looks like he has a selection of other Marks as well, but this one sports A BMW Turbo Diesel Six, and that makes it a rare machine (published reports state less than 500!). Take a look at his other cars while you take a look at this rare Mark!

So there you have it, a Lincoln from the 80′s, with performance intentions, cool looking, Rear Wheel Drive, and a very lively V-8 up front. Is this enough to be called a Muscle Car, and is it Obscure Enough to be parked on the lot, or is it just another 80′s curiosity that should be forgotten. Let me know, as I look forward to each and every comment.

Comments

yarday
May 29, 2010 at 4:56 am

the last lincoln on page is my 1987 lincon mark VII named nikita

makemula
Mar 31, 2010 at 3:42 pm

i got mine 3weeks ago….paid nothing 4 it. mark 7 1989 bill blass…i will be back 2 show it off trust.

MY92M7LC
Aug 3, 2009 at 8:34 pm

to all fellow Lincoln mark vii enthusiast and owners sit back and take a long look at your mark and know that this is the definition of muscle,sleek yet stout strong yet graceful the mark vii is in my opinion one the sexiest cars in its class in its era,so to not consider these as a muscle car,would be a damn shame to American muscle and another thing with the right vision and know how they can be quite astonishing!!! scrap the throw aways of today which are built as commodities to be used and thrown out like trash because not worth the money to fix and go out and save a classic from the crushing and scrap yards save something worth saving so save a classic and ride a part of history!!!!! stop in and see what i mean

7killacap9
Jun 30, 2009 at 8:32 am

who owns that last lincoln. that is one clean looking one. also I had a friend with a black lsc lincoln. that car was mean I have always wanted one. I still do and hope to find one soon. those cars are something else. its a beauty till this day

wsbob
Jun 16, 2009 at 11:36 am

An American made rear wheel drive V8 powered 2 door car that made over 200 horsepower in the 80′s? A muscle car

oldscoob
Jun 10, 2009 at 9:14 pm

Shhh. I secretly had a crush on this car when I was a kid. the commercials were really on tv as they were knew, talking of how the car dropped at speed,150s mph, and that shape…it is so common sense and looking good…as lincoln luxury to boot. Stick this up the crazy ford thunderbirds/cougars tailpipe. A relative had a v6 thunderbird (similar appearance) it was an omen in comparison.

88eurotrash
Jun 10, 2009 at 9:11 pm

Yes reserve this one a place on the lot. I remember as a kid I had a Revell 1/24 scale pro street mark VII anyone else remember that Model, I think it was even “sponsered” by HOT ROD magazine.

http://cgi.ebay.com/Revell-Lincoln-LSC-Pro-Street-Hot-Rod_W0QQitemZ130312019877QQcmdZViewItemQQptZLH_DefaultDomain_0?hash=item1e57339fa5&_trksid=p3286.c0.m14&_trkparms=65%3A1|66%3A2|39%3A1|240%3A1318|301%3A1|293%3A1|294%3A50

anything that Hot Rod puts there name on has got qualify

wsbob
Jun 10, 2009 at 8:18 pm

This car definitely deserves a place in the lot. This article has me reconsidering this car as a whole. I liked the style, but now its a not so bad performance model for its time, with some still nice features

Alex Vickers
Jun 10, 2009 at 8:18 am

I’d raher have the Mark VIII LSC, those things put out almost 300 HP. Those themselves would have been a better pick in my opinion. Or what about the Lincoln LS V8?

palefacetsw
Jun 10, 2009 at 6:33 am

Those things are zippy, as well as squirrely in the back on packed ice and snow….my old boss in Cheyenne, WY had one…I got to drive it all the time…it was fun to drift….lol

Post a comment

Please login to CarDomain to post a comment.