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Thanks to dino for the pics 

















The M45 will be the same exact thing except it will have a V8, but your right this specific one is a 35.The359Actually that's a Nissan Fuga 350GT, which would be the equivilant of an Infiniti M35...
$5500 Dang that is crazy. Why so cheap for such a excellent luxourish car? Other than how old it is and the miles.M5PowerThe charm is all gone.
The "ugly" charm, that is.
Say what you will about the last M45, but it was a deal. And now used '02 are going in the high-20s. For a 345-horsepower $45000-new car. Anyway you slice it, that's the deal of the century.
Though the real deal of the century is a '96 Lincoln Continental. You can get one with 70k and every luxury feature known to mankind in 1996 for like $5500, it's crazy.
pimp racer$5500 Dang that is crazy. Why so cheap for such a excellent luxourish car? Other than how old it is and the miles.
M5PowerWell, when Lincoln brought the Continental name back in 1988, it wasn't a very good car - so it got huge criticism from the motoring press. Like, scary criticism (to the point where Lincoln wouldn't let the very worst critics drive the new Town Car when it debuted in 1990).
When Lincoln redesigned the car in 1995 they decided to make it a new flagship for the company, so they stocked it with way ahead-of-its-time features; stuff like pre-sets for power steering settings, rear air suspension, memory for suspension settings and mirrors, electronic instruments, HomeSafe (which made it possible to, if the transmission failed, drive home in second or third gear), and platinum-tipped spark plugs. It also featured RESCU (Remote Emergency Satellite Cellular Unit, if I recall) - a Ford-sponsored predecessor to OnStar.
Problem was, when it debuted, its base price was $44000 - about $8000 more than the BMW 5-series, which, unfortunately for Lincoln, debuted at nearly the exact same time. Not to mention that the Cadillac Seville STS, which was very technologically-advanced as well and much quicker than the Continental, cost only $43000 at the time. Consequently, Lincoln couldn't find buyers who wanted lots of gadgets but no performance. Mainly because they didn't exist. So they were hard to sell new - and they're just as hard to sell used, unless people are tempted with a low price, which is exactly what happens.
Anyway, if anyone wants a full-luxury used car for under $10000 with a 4.6-liter V8, look Lincoln; '95 models shouldn't cost more than $5500 and side airbag-equipped '99 models aren't going for much over $11000.
pimp racerHmm... Kinda reminds me of the Catrea.
Yeah thats true. But didnt Lincoln "redeem" themselves with the LS?M5PowerAt least Cadillac redeemed themselves with the CTS.
pimp racerYeah thats true. But didnt Lincoln "redeem" themselves with the LS?
Hmm.. I know someone who has a black LS V8 and that thing is just amazing I love it overall. I have sat in it too and drive the **** out of it. I think it was a stick cant rember.M5PowerI think so, but a lot of the people Lincoln wants as potential LS buyers don't like it. Too big, bad image.
I've always thought the Lincoln LS is the perfect politician's car - they can afford a foreign car but they have to buy American, otherwise it reflects poorly on them. So they get the LS, which seems to be the perfect alternative. I envision all the big-name politicians driving one.
pimp racerHmm.. I know someone who has a black LS V8 and that thing is just amazing I love it overall. I have sat in it too and drive the **** out of it. I think it was a stick cant rember.
Oh I guess it was semi-auto but that thing can haul ass! and it has a great sound. I love the interior.M5PowerThey're all automatics - V8 has semi-auto, though.
Yeah, the V8 models are great. Loaded and cheap. I'd get one if I were looking in that segment.