Lincoln Continental Air Suspension Shock Conversion
Written by Author on November 17th, 2009The earliest Lincoln Continental was the automotive equivalent of Catherine Zeta-Jones — it ought to have come with a warning label that read “May Cause Shortness of Breath.” Based on the Lincoln Zephyr, the Continental got its start as a one-off drop top commissioned by Edsel Ford in the late 1930s. Serving as his vehicle of choice during his annual jaunts to Palm Beach, the car’s exquisite shape generated so much buzz that Lincoln decided to put the Continental air ride suspension into production. Available as both a cabriolet and a coupe, the Continental debuted in 1940.
World War II and other events resulted in stops and starts in the car’s air suspension production over the next decade or so, but by the mid-’50s, the Continental was back — this time as its own brand. That arrangement didn’t last (the Continental brand was folded back into the Lincoln marque in 1957), but the Continental did. For more than two decades, it served as Lincoln’s flagship model.
As a recipe for ailing sales, the Lincoln Continental air suspension was redesigned in 1961. Now available as either a sedan or a four-door convertible (the nation’s first in more than a decade) it was hailed for its clean good looks and winning performance. That era’s photogenic First Family was often snapped riding in the Continental; it came to be known as the “Kennedy Lincoln” and enjoyed a wave of popularity. Another redesign took place for 1966 and again in 1970, which left the Continental with a blocky, more formal look (highlighted by hidden headlamps and a larger grille) and a coil-link rear suspension.
