Mercury Zephyr

      Mercury Zephyr
      Mercury Zephyr front.jpg
      Manufacturer Lincoln-Mercury (Ford)
      Production 1978–1983
      Assembly St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada
      Kansas City, Missouri
      Mahwah, New Jersey
      Hapeville, Georgia
      Predecessor Mercury Comet
      Successor Mercury Topaz
      Class Compact
      Body style 2-door sedan
      2-door coupe
      4-door sedan
      5-door station wagon
      Layout FR layout
      Platform Ford Fox platform
      Engine 140 cubic inches (2.3 L) OHC I4
      200 cubic inches (3.3 L) Thriftmaster Six I6
      255 cubic inches (4.18 L) Windsor V8
      302 cubic inches (4.95 L) Windsor V8
      Transmission 4-speed manual
      3-speed C3 automatic
      3-speed C4 automatic
      3-speed C5 automatic
      Curb weight 2,747–2,959 pounds (1,246–1,342 kg)[1][2]
      Related Ford Fairmont
      Ford Durango
      For other Ford-related cars called Zephyr, see Ford Zephyr, Lincoln-Zephyr, and Lincoln Zephyr

      The Mercury Zephyr was a compact car sold by the Lincoln-Mercury division of Ford Motor Company for the North American market. Introduced as a replacement for the Mercury Comet, it was produced from 1978 to 1983. Along with its corporate cousin, the Ford Fairmont, it was the first use in the Mercury division of the long-lived unibody Fox platform, which did not completely leave production until 2004.

      Zephyr, taken from a poetic name for the west wind, has a considerable history in the Ford line. It was first used in the late 1930s for a smaller, less expensive Lincoln, which provided the basis for the first Continental. From 1950 to 1972, it was used on a European Ford model. In 2006, it returned to the Lincoln line once again.

      Design

      The Mercury Zephyr shared most of its characteristics with the Ford Fairmont; both were available with four, six, or eight-cylinder engines and appeared in coupe, sedan, or station wagon forms. At introduction, the Zephyr was most easily distinguished from its Ford counterpart by its curved grille and four square headlights. The Fairmont was styled with a flatter grille and two headlights. In 1981, 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.

      By 1982 and 1983, Zephyr options dropped off one by one as the Marquis and Topaz were being readied for the market. In 1983, both of the V8 engine options were discontinued. These cars became popular to drag race because they are relatively aerodynamic, lightweight, and have a large engine compartment which easily accommodates the Big Block 460 Ford engine.

      Zephyr Z7

      Mercury Zephyr Z7, rear ¾ view

      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 (the body was also used by some Ford Fairmont Futuras). Influenced by the larger Ford Thunderbird, the Z-7 was a 2-door coupe featuring a wrapover roof design (also inspired by the Crown Victoria of the 1950s) with wraparound taillights. Many Z-7 models included a two-tone paint job; under the hood, the powertrain usually featured either the inline-six (I6) or one of the V8 engines (very few Z-7s had the four-cylinder engine).

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      Discontinuation

      In the early 1980s, Ford started to phase out the Fox platform as a basis for compact and mid-size family cars. Although the Zephyr weighed well under 3,000 lb (1,400 kg), efforts were under way to replace it with a lighter front-wheel drive car to improve the company's fuel economy numbers. The Zephyr and Fairmont were discontinued after the 1983 model year, and were most directly replaced by the Mercury Topaz and Ford Tempo, based on a stretched Ford Escort platform.

      The discontinuation of the Zephyr did not spell the end for the Fox-body Mercury sedan, however. In 1983, the sedan and wagon versions of the Cougar were reskinned and rebadged as the Mercury Marquis, as Mercury downsized that product line into the mid-size segment. The flagship full-size Grand Marquis was introduced as a stand-alone model. 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; however, it continued production into early 1986, albeit without the 5.0L option.

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      Last modified on 7 March 2013, at 14:40