The Mark VII was the first really downsized of the Lincoln Mark series, since while the previous Mark VI was definitely smaller than its supertanker-sized predecessor, it still shared its Panther platform with the full-size Ford LTD Crown Victoria and Mercury Grand Marquis sedans.
The Mark VII, on the other hand, rode on the Fox platform of the Thunderbird and Mustang.
For the first couple model years you could get a BMW-sourced 2.4L turbodiesel inline six under the hood, but 'Murrica was not ready for diesel luxury cars at the time... thanks, Oldsmobile! ...so pretty much any Mark VII you run into will be motivated by Ford's trusty 5.0L Windsor pushrod V-8. All of them were fitted with four-speed automatic transmissions.
The Arctic White one in the picture is, going by the combination of third brake light and the style of the wheels, is a late one. By this time it only came in two flavors, the Bill Blass designer edition and the LSC, for "Luxury Sport Coupe". The only powerplant available was the 5.0L H.O. V-8 with Sequential Electronic Fuel Injection, which was shared with the Mustang GT and put out 225 SAE Net horsepower.
Car and Driver tested a 1988 model with the 225-pony H.O. mill and recorded a zero-to-sixty time of 8.0 seconds and a 16.1 quarter mile at 88mph through the traps. Top speed was measured at 120 and the LSC circled the skidpad at 0.74g, which was fairly sporty by plush-bottomed luxobarge standards of the day.
This one was photographed in December of 2018 using a Fujifilm XF1.






