1997 Lincoln Town Car Fullsize Car Reviews & Ratings

  Read this 1997 Lincoln Town Car review at UsedCarsChannel.com. These professional and consumer 1997 Lincoln Town Car reviews include car comparisons, road tests, interior and exterior options and features, safety information, specs, and more.
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1997 Lincoln Town Car Reviews

 

Welcome to the car reviews section of UsedCarsChannel.com, where you can search for consumer 1997 Lincoln Town Car car reviews for all trims! How does this car handle? What kind of 1997 Lincoln Town Car ratings did the car receive? How large is in the interior? Is it comfortable to drive? Learn all of this and more in each of the consumer 1997 Lincoln Town Car reviews at UsedCarsChannel.com.

 
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Lincoln Town Car Interior Review

The Signature Series has almost everything you can get on a Town Car,

with room left on the option list for just a few more items. The Cartier

gets special wheels, larger tires, rear vanity mirrors, a JBL sound system,

leather seating, traction assist and heated seats, most of which our test

car had as options anyway.

If there is a single attribute that places the Town Car above the rest

of the cars in this class, it is sheer interior spaciousness. The Town

Car's interior is simply huge.

The instrument panel uses blue-green electronic digital readouts for

all of the instrumentation, which are somewhat incongruous in a car like

this, but they are large, easy to read and not cramped together. The main

display is recessed and hooded so that sunlight never obscures the information,

and some of the lenses have been changed to reduce reflection and glare

on 1997 models.

We should all be more concerned about automotive seats than we are,

and the Lincoln designers have addressed some of our concerns by giving

us orthopedic equipment masquerading as lounge chairs. While they don't

look even remotely sporty, and they won't hold you in place in a hard corner,

the Town Car seats have more adjustment techniques than a chiropractor,

with long tracks, front and rear tilt, and power recline, not to mention

a five-zone heating system. We found the seats enormously comfortable and

supportive, and we thank the designers for finally removing the embossed

Lincoln star from the seatback, where it was neither luxurious nor necessary.

Five-star seats coupled with generous head, hip, leg and shoulder room

make the Town Car interior ideal for two couples living together, and the

22.3 cubic-foot trunk leads the industry in width, depth, breadth and utility.

The electrically-operated trunk lid goes all the way down to bumper level,

and is easy to load and unload. Our only criticism here is the trunklid

itself, which should open a little more toward the vertical.



Lincoln Town Car Road Test

Like many luxury cars these days, the Lincoln Town Car has a single

powertrain combination, a 4.6-liter single overhead cam V8 that makes an

adequate 190 horsepower (210 in the dual-exhaust Cartier version) and a

useful 265 pound-feet of torque (275 for the Cartier), coupled to an electronically

controlled four-speed automatic transmission. While these engines are adequate

for the need of most Town Car customers, even those who tow light trailers,

they are not a competitive match for the powertrain sophistication found

in the Cadillac Northstar engine--275 or 300 hp--or most of the import

entries in this class.

Ford's corporate 4.6-liter V8 is a smooth, quiet and economical engine

and has an enviable record in terms of durability, but this two-ton car

really should be using the 290-hp version from the Mark VIII or the 255-hp

version from the front-drive Continental.

Ford's corporate product planners undoubtedly rationalize the Town Car's

engine in terms of fuel economy, and the car does escape the gas-guzzler

penalty. But even so, it could use more muscle.

Engine quibbles aside, the Town Car covers ground quietly, almost serenely,

when it is in its element, tooling about town or cruising the highway.

A new intake manifold takes induction noise down to the lowest level yet,

and the four-speed automatic is quiet and efficient. Steering effort can

be adjusted by a sliding-bar switch on the left side of the dashboard,

although effort does not equate with road feel.

The Michelin XW4 tires, coil spring/air suspension and gas-filled shock

absorbers do an outstanding job of separating a Town Car's occupants from

the lumpy realties of the outside world, coping admirably with potholes

and broken pavement. The P215/75R-15 tires are quiet, though we would prefer

more rubber on the ground, such as the optional P225/60R-16 all-weather

tires, even if there were a slight noise penalty to pay.

There is lots of lean and wallow in the Town Car's luxurious ride, and

the speed-sensitive power steering is numb on-center, these factors combine

to make this car unhandy on winding two-lane roads, but quite stable and

comfortable on interstates and boulevards.

The ABS brakes were authoritative in their power and especially quiet

when the antilock circuits were active, emitting only a mild, high-pitched

buzz when we encountered icy pavement.



Lincoln Town Car Lineup



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