.

Mercury Monarch: Difference between revisions

Wikicars, a place to share your automotive knowledge
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
Line 77: Line 77:
<gallery>
<gallery>
Image:Grand Monarch.jpg|1975 Mercury Grand Monarch Ghia
Image:Grand Monarch.jpg|1975 Mercury Grand Monarch Ghia
Image:1977 Mercury Monarch.jpg|1977 Mercury Monarch
<gallery></gallery>
<gallery></gallery>


[[Image:Grand Monarch.jpg]]
[[Image:1977 Mercury Monarch.jpg]]





Revision as of 17:04, 30 May 2007

1977Mercury Monarch.jpg
Mercury Monarch
Mercury
Production 1975-1980
Class Intermediate
Body Style 2-Door Coupe
4-Door Sedan
Length 200.9"
Width 74.5"
Height 54.1"
Wheelbase 109.9"
Weight 3000-3400 lbs
Transmission 3-Speed Manual, RWD
4-Speed Manual, RWD
3-Speed Automatic, RWD
Engine 3.3L (200 cid) I6 (1975-1977)
4.1L (250 cid) I6 (1975-1980)
5.0L (302 cid) V8 (1975-1980)
5.8L (351 cid) V8 (1975-1977)
Power 85-144 hp
Similar Ford Granada

Mercury introduced the Monarch as an upscale twin to the Ford Granada in 1975, differing mainly in grilles, taillights and having slightly fancier trim. It was offered as a 2-door coupe or a 4-door sedan - no wagon bodystyle was offered. Drivetrain choices were also the same as the Granada. There were base, Ghia and Grand Monarch Ghia models - the latter model was dropped in 1977 to make way for the new Lincoln Versailles, which was introduced as Ford's answer to the Cadillac Seville. Monarchs got a small facelift in 1978 that included rectangular headlights but were otherwise largely unchanged. The Monarch was sold through the 1980 model year when it was replaced by an all-new Fox-body Cougar in 1981.


The Mercury Grand Monarch Ghia was a luxury automobile built only in 1975 and 1976. Based on the successful Ford Granada and Mercury Monarch platform, the Mercury Grand Monarch Ghia had four-wheel, disc brakes with a sophisticated central hydraulic power system as standard equipment.

Other standard luxury features include:

  • Genuine leather seating surfaces
  • Thickly padded handcrafted vinyl roof
  • Quartz crystal digital timepiece
  • Leather-wrapped luxury steering wheel
  • Power steering
  • Dual beam map-reading lamp
  • Illuminated visor vanity mirror (passenger side)
  • 14 inch, cast-alluminum spoke wheels
  • Solid-state ignition
  • White sidewall steel-belted radial tires
  • Fully reclining bucket seats with matching map pockets
  • Deep carpeted interior and luggage compartment
  • Deluxe sound and ride package
  • Wide color-keyed bodyside molding.

According to the May 1976 edition of Car and Driver, Henry Ford II and three out of five of Ford’s top executives used the Mercury Grand Monarch Ghia as their personal car.

Grand Monarch Migrated to Lincoln Versailles

In the spring of 1977, Lincoln introduced a new model the Versailles, based on the Monarch platform. The Versailles had many of the same luxury features as the Mercury Grand Monarch Ghia -- four-wheel, power disc brakes, fully-padded vinyl roof, Normande rear window, and lighted visor vanity mirror.


See separate Ford Granada entry for more information about the Mercury Monarch.

Photos

Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination


Mercury Grillefff.jpg
MERCURY

Ford Motor Company


Ford | Mercury | Lincoln | Mazda | Edsel | Continental | Merkur


Historic: Grand Marquis · Milan · Mariner · Mariner Hybrid · Mountaineer · Montego · Monterey · Capri · Colony Park · Comet · Commuter · Custom · Cougar · Cyclone · Eight · Bobcat · LN7 · Lynx · M-Series · Marauder · Marquis · Medalist · Meteor · Monarch · Montclair · Mystique · Park Lane · S-55 · Sable · Topaz · Tracer · Turnpike Cruiser · Villager · Voyager · Zephyr · 114

Concept: MC2 · Messenger · Meta One · My · XM 800 Concept · L'Tude Concept

One-Off: Bob Hope Special ·


Lincoln-Mercury · SYNC · Elena Ford


Ford Corporate website A brand of the Ford PAG