zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Buying
/
At $4,000, Is This 1984 Lincoln Continental Diesel A Bustle-Back Bargain?
At $4,000, Is This 1984 Lincoln Continental Diesel A Bustle-Back Bargain?-January 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:09:33

Nice Price or No Dice: 1984 Lincoln Continental Diesel

One of the most interesting stories to come out of 1980s autodom was Ford’s purchase of BMW diesel engines for its Lincoln brand. Today’s Continental is a rare surviving example of that ill-fated plan. Let’s see if historical value holds any sway over that of the car.

About halfway through the Pixar movieUp, Carl and Russel, having reached South America via house-balloon, meet a talking dog named Dug. Dug becomes their new best friend, except for when he’s side-eyeing an errant rodent while shouting “Squirrel!”

I think that when it comes to small cars in general, and hot hatchbacks in particular, a lot of car buyers are just like Dug. Instead of focusing on a compact, easy-to-park and fuel-efficient fun car, their attention gets swayed by a tall crossover or SUV with a plaintive shout of “RAV4!” “CR-V!” or “Evoque!” Well, OK, maybe not “Evoque.”

I’m not saying that’s what happened to yesterday’s , I’m just making an observation. The thing of it is, that seemingly fun little car didn’t win many friends at its $11,990 price. In the end, it faced rejection in a sizable 86 percent No Dice loss.

Chevy’s Sonic was one of the last attempts by the carmaker to offer a really fuel-efficient model built here in the U.S.A. Back in the 1980s, all of the U.S. automakers were scrambling to boost their fuel economy numbers. That standard was called Corporate Average Fuel Economy, or CAFE, and was first enacted in 1975 as a means of making the U.S. less dependent on foreign oil. The U.S. automakers took different paths to meet the federally mandated standards.

The path that GM took for its big cars was to create a homegrown diesel V8 by adapting an Oldsmobile gas engine. GM also attempted a variable displacement engine with the Cadillac 8-6-4 but the less said about that, the better. Chrysler, meanwhile, decided it was best to churn out as many variations of its fuel-efficient four-cylinder K-cars as it could to bolster the company’s overall miles per gallon.

Image for article titled At $4,000, Is This 1984 Lincoln Continental Diesel A Bustle-Back Bargain?

The strategy at Ford was somewhere in between. The company did introduce some smaller, more fuel-efficient cars built in the States, but also offered diesel engines for those seeking the ultimate in efficiency. Very wisely, however, Ford didn’t develop its own diesels, instead buying existing oil burners from other manufacturers. That meant Mazda diesel engines in Escorts and Tempos, and a small run of BMW M21 turbodiesels for the Lincoln brand.

The BMW engine proved a bit of a sales disaster for Lincoln. The M21 was offered in 1984 in both the Mark VII and the baby baroque Continental. Between the two models, Lincoln sold fewer than 2,000 diesels, and the story goes that the remaining engine stock was sold to the company building the Vixen motorhome.

Image for article titled At $4,000, Is This 1984 Lincoln Continental Diesel A Bustle-Back Bargain?

That all makes this an amazing piece of automotive history. Add to that the weird mix of a European drivetrain and styling that’s a pastiche of both past Continentals and the bustle-back boot lid that Caddy had grafted onto the Seville and you’ve got yourself one truly weird car.

The Continental switched from the Panther to the Fox platform for the 1982 model year, and it was with this car that Ford actually started taking the model’s handling and ride seriously. It may look like a Holiday Inn off the New Jersey Turnpike, but underneath the car carried rack and pinion steering, four-wheel disc brakes and gas-charged shocks.

Image for article titled At $4,000, Is This 1984 Lincoln Continental Diesel A Bustle-Back Bargain?

The ad for this Continental is a bit confusing since the seller is actually offering it and a diesel Mark VII at the same time. Puzzlingly, the seller lists $4,500 as the price in the headline, but reading further that is revealed to be the price for the coupe.

The seller claims that the car “runs and drives great!” and says it features both a new timing belt and replacement radiator. This being a European diesel of the 1980s, it’s far more tortoise than hare, offering up a modest 114 horsepower from its 2.4 liters. Ford bought the diesels from BMW with transmissions attached, so this car runs a ZF four-speed automatic.

The engine compartment looks a bit grungy, but that’s to be expected, I suppose. The body wrapped around that actually doesn’t seem to be all that bad. It features two-tone metallic blue paint with only some modest chipping in the side stripes. One turning lamp (yes, that was once a thing) seems to have lost its lens, but the car does appear to have all four of its full wheel covers intact.

Image for article titled At $4,000, Is This 1984 Lincoln Continental Diesel A Bustle-Back Bargain?

The interior looks to be leather, but we don’t really see much of that. We do get a glimpse of the digital dash, and that has seen better days.

The mileage given is 100,000, but that seems like a placeholder for the ad and nothing more. On the plus side, the title is clear, and at $4,000 this four-door Continental is the cheaper of the two cars that the seller is trying to unload.

What do you think, is there $4,000 worth of value in this rare but fated Continental? Or, is there no price that will get this diesel Lincoln in anywhere but the history books?

You decide!

Columbus, Ohio, , or go if the ad disappears.

Help me out with NPOND. Hit me up at and send me a fixed-price tip. Remember to include your Kinja handle.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Buying
At $9,500, Might This Small Block-Powered 1983 Porsche 944 Really Be a Big Deal?
At $9,500, Might This Small Block-Powered 1983 Porsche 944 Really Be a Big Deal?
One complaint that could be leveled at Porsche’s 944 is that it never had enough pushrods and rocker arms. Today’s ’83 addresses that dearth with an SBC. Let’s see if its price needs addressing too. I once had a boss whose mantra was ‘No bad news on Friday.’ His line...
Jan 13, 2026
One of You Maniacs Needs to Buy This Porsche Cayenne GTS With a Manual Transmission
One of You Maniacs Needs to Buy This Porsche Cayenne GTS With a Manual Transmission
Remember what seems like ages ago, Porsche said it was going to make an SUV and everyone lost their damn mind? Now the is a staple of luxury crossovers and it drives way better than you expect for such a large car. But at one time Porsche was so crazy...
Jan 13, 2026
Audi's Plan to Sell the Electric 2019 E-Tron Is Actually Pretty Smart
Audi's Plan to Sell the Electric 2019 E-Tron Is Actually Pretty Smart
Audi’s all-new, all-electric SUV, the , will be the first electric offering from the automaker with a starting price of $74,800. It’s a considerable amount of money, even for a luxury car, and Audi has plans on how to best sell it. Unlike for traditional cars, Audi dealers won’t have...
Jan 13, 2026
This Monarch Convertible Is A Mercury By Another Name
This Monarch Convertible Is A Mercury By Another Name
Back in the late 1940s, Ford of Canada decided to invent a new automobile company name for rebadged Mercury cars. That name was Monarch, and it died twice. First, with the introduction of Edsel, FoC killed the Monarch name, but brought it back when Edsel was a flop. Then, it...
Jan 13, 2026
The 2019 Subaru Forester Looks Tougher and Rides Better, but Is Desperate for Power
The 2019 Subaru Forester Looks Tougher and Rides Better, but Is Desperate for Power
It may not look too different, but the is all-new, with better handling, reduced road noise, an impressive amount of standard features and an almost ironically-named new Sport trim that altogether almost make up for its desperately slow acceleration. But there’s still plenty on offer if you’re okay with not...
Jan 13, 2026
At $6,500, Would You Side With This Side Pipe-Sporting 1979 Chevy Corvette?
At $6,500, Would You Side With This Side Pipe-Sporting 1979 Chevy Corvette?
You probably can’t afford a side chick or bro, but you could potentially swing the asking for today’s Corvette which has something even better—side pipes! Let’s see if its price is on your side. Barbra Streisand, Jimmy Durante, and Rostand’s Cyrano de Bergerac are all notable for, among other things,...
Jan 13, 2026
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved