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2009 Lincoln MKS
Christening a new flagship
Mac Demere / autoMedia.com
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Lincoln has a new flagship: The 2009 Lincoln MKS full-size sedan. Its styling is classic and understated, except for Lincoln’s traditional aggressive chrome grille. The 2009 Lincoln MKS’ list of standard features is impressively long, and includes a 275-horsepower* engine, heated front and rear seats, and a six-month subscription to SIRIUS Satellite Radio. Both interior and trunk room is expansive. Perhaps most significantly, the 2009 Lincoln MKS offers a very attractive starting price of just over $38,000—about $9,000 less than a 2008 Lincoln Town Car. It’s less than the Lincoln LS was in 2006, the last year it appeared.
Style and Space
With the Lincoln MKS’ elegant styling, the company followed a very different road than the edgy Cadillac CTS and STS. The Lincoln has a look that should remain fresh far into the future. Front passenger room is just slightly smaller—less than an inch for head- and legroom—than the CTS or the Cadillac STS, but rear space is considerably larger than the CTS and slightly bigger than the STS. Also, the Lincoln MKS’ trunk room tops both Cadillacs’ cargo capacity by almost five cubic feet.
The 2009 Lincoln MKS is based on the same platform as the Ford Taurus, Volvo XC90, the Mercury Sable, and the new Ford Flex. It features four-wheel ventilated disc brakes, electronic stability control and a suite of six standard airbags, including full-length side-curtain airbags. The Lincoln MKS comes standard with front-wheel drive and offers all-wheel drive as an option.
Engines and Performance
The first models of the Lincoln MKS will be equipped with a 3.7-liter version of the successful double overhead cam Duratec V6. This engine* makes 275 horsepower, which is about 30 more than the 4.6-liter V8 in the Town Car. It features variable valve timing, which increases power for merging onto fast-moving highways then aids fuel economy at cruising speed. This engine makes 276 lb.-ft. of torque*. It’s mated to a six-speed Selectshift automatic transmission, which offers both a low first gear for good acceleration and a high top gear for improved fuel economy. The EPA rates the Lincoln MKS in front-wheel drive at 17 miles per gallon for city driving and 24 mpg on the highway.
Later, perhaps in some late 2010 models, the Lincoln MKS will be the first Ford product to receive the company’s EcoBoost engine, which is designed to produce the power of a V8 but get better fuel mileage and release carbon dioxide equal to that of a V6. The EcoBoost will accomplish these goals with a combination of twin turbochargers and direct-into-the-cylinder fuel injection. Save for the big-rig diesels, almost all gasoline fuel-injected engines squirt fuel above the valves, thus must do so before the valves close on the compression stroke. The EcoBoost engine will emply ultra-high-pressure (perhaps 1500 pounds per square inch or more) injector nozzles inside the combustion chamber near the spark plug. This allows the computer to precisely deliver the right amount of fuel at the correct moment.
Theoretically, the computer could wait until an instant before the spark plug fires to deliver fuel. Direct injection is especially beneficial at reducing emissions during cold starts: Cars release more pollution during cold starts than any other time because the catalyst is not at operating temperature yet. Lincoln projects a 3.5-liter EcoBoost V6 will produce and amazing 340 horsepower and 340 lb.-ft. of torque, something that would make many V8s envious.
Copyright autoMedia.com 2000-2008
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