1966 Lincoln Continental

4dr Convertible

8-cyl. 462cid/340hp 4bbl

#1 Concours condition#1 Concours
#2 Excellent condition#2 Excellent
#3 Good condition#3 Good

$58,700*

equal0%
#4 Fair condition#4 Fair
Value GraphOct 2024
1961-1969 Lincoln Continental stats
Number produced **
** Number produced is specific to this year and configuration.
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Model overview

Model description

The 1961 Lincoln Continental was based on a stretched version of a proposed 1961 Thunderbird two-door hardtop that had been rejected as too classy and not sporty enough for the typical Thunderbird buyer. The 1958 recession and Edsel debacle, meanwhile, had injured the Ford Motor Company overall. But while the four-seat Thunderbird was a relatively huge success, the Lincoln division was in danger of being culled. Designers and engineers worked hard at making a new, distinctive and profitable Lincoln. They succeeded admirably with the 1961-69 Continental.

Lincoln decided to build the cars as four-doors, but a convertible was desired and there was the continuing mandate to share major underbody designs with the Thunderbird. Since the convertible did not have a solid enough center pillar on which to support a door hinge, and in an effort to limit the size of the 1961 cars, rear-hinged or "suicide" rear doors were selected. The length of the wheelbase was a relatively short 123 inches until the car was stretched to 126 inches from 1964 through 1969. A two-door hardtop joined the lineup for 1966.

These cars may have been physically shorter than the prior-generation, but they were almost equally heavy. Convertible versions weighed 300 pounds more than hardtops, due to the need to brace the unit body. Engines were characteristically massive, starting out with 430 cubic inches and 320 hp in 1961, with a bore and stroke increase to 462 cubic inches and a power increase to 340 hp in 1966. The 1969 car is a “hybrid” that utilized the all-new 460 cubic inch, 365 hp Lincoln V-8 in the carry-over unit body. All such cars are considered collectible. Earlier four-door hardtops are more affordable than convertibles. No mention of these cars is complete without the sad remembrance that it was a stretched version of this car that carried President Kennedy on the day of his assassination in 1963. That very car resides at the Henry Ford Museum to this day.

Equipment

Additional Info
Vehicle Length: 220.9 in
Wheelbase - Inches: 126 in
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