Now you're talking Adam!!! This Lincoln Continental has timeless elegance & is one of the best looking Lincolns ever!!! Thanks for sharing this exciting video!!! 👍👍🙂
That retractable center AC unit is a one of a kind for 61. This owner does not have it lowered all the way. There is one horizontal vent that is still not in view. One of the craziest car features ever.
This car started my favorite design period for classic cars. The early-mid 60's were a great time for simple straight lines, tasteful use of chrome, and thinner whitewalls. Then the "Great Brougham Epoch" happened, and cars once again started looking heavy and droopy
I look at this car as pure luxury, the period of less is more, the amount of detail that went into the design and assembly of these Lincoln’s is a whole story in itself
My brother up in Michigan had a fully restored 1962 Continental Convertible in beautiful blue aqua paint, frost blue interior and a white top. Has the optional air conditioning and even more rare cruise control.
I love those Lincoln's! As a teenager I had a 1968 Thunderbird - 1969 Lincoln Continental - 1969 Ford LTD - 1970 Thunderbird.... I guess my buddies thought I was a dork but I loved those sleds! I had a couple of more later on but I got addicted to Germán Fords & Brittish stuff But now at 60yo I just love your content of American Iron ... Many Thanks
I wanted a Mustang or Cougar but my Dad said at the price you can afford, either of those would have been abused by their typically aggressive drivers. In 1976, Dad's buddy, a Lincoln collector, found a '70 Town Car that was a weekend/vacation car owned by a farmer with only 68,000 miles. It was so grand roomy and comfortable as well as a cinch to work on. My job put me in up to 5 cities in a business day, each with a different rental car. After hundreds of rentals, I"m 6'2" and that '70 Lincoln is one of VERY few that can be adjusted to where I can barely reach the pedals. One classmate had a 60's era Benz with a vertical speedometer. My '70 had a horizontal rolling speedometer that was similarly unique. Sure people thought I was a nerd, but that fine car was my pride and joy. Two people hired me to be their limo driver for the prom in my car. How cool is that!
You always have some of the most stunning automobiles on your channel. The interior of this Lincoln is beautiful especially the dashboard. It just screams luxury inside and outside.
8:08 Regarding the wipers, it's also interesting to note the wipers run on power steering fluid, and that the power steering pump is not run by a belt, but it is on the front of the crankshaft.
This car is simply stunning. I lived in Chattanooga from 2008-2010 and a bout two miles from my house was a little shop that restored this generation of Continentals. They had one for sale, a navy blue one and one that drove around that part of town. It was a white convertible that had after-market chrome wheels on it that were actually very tasteful for that body. Man, they both were just something to see in person.
Thank you Adam. I had a 1962 baby blue convertible in 1994. Super fun car. Had to sell it when I bought my first house, got married and had my daughter.
The movie "Topkapi" with Peter Ustinoff includes a white convertible version with the power retracting fabric top. Almost becomes a character in itself and steals the show, a must see.
This is one of the 4 autos on my Mt Rushmore of car design. The other 3 being the 1963 Riviera 1963 Avanti & 1967 Eldorado imho. You've got Elwood Engel Bill Mitchell & Raymond Loewy. Not a bad group of stylists there
I'm NUTS about the 63-65 Riviera's. I was a car-crazy 12 year old when the body style debuted in '63 and it blew me away. My dad's business finally took off in '68 and he started buying luxury cars (he was a Ford man all the way, so our first luxury car was a '68 T-Bird).....I always wanted him to buy the Riviera (preferably the '64), but he just couldn't justify it at the time. I would have kept that car forever if he had.
This car is in amazing condition, and one of my all-time favorites. One of the many wonderful features is that black and white leather interior, which contrasts beautifully with the walnut trim.
Wonderful cameo presentation of the all-new slab-sided Lincoln Continental for 1961! These Kennedy-era Lincoln’s were such a departure from their predecessors and they benefitted from engineering and assembly line precision similar to the 1956-57 Mark II. I think the wiper design may have been to provide maximum clearing of the windshield nearest the driver at the initial part of the sweep from the parked position - we saw Mercedes-Benz adopt a similar design with the introduction of the W116 twelve years later and they promoted that feature in their brochures. The high compression Lincoln engine supplied substantial power and this new chassis was much lighter than the 1960 Lincoln resulting in very fine acceleration. We see a great deal of design influence in Cadillac, Buick, Oldsmobile and Chrysler in the years just after this model’s release.
This is a MEL block not a Lincoln "Y" block. All Lincolns, Mercury's and some T-Birds had MEL's starting in 1958. The biggest Lincoln Y block is 368 c.i., and it's last year for Lincolns and Mecurys was 1957. Whether in a Lincoln or Mercury it was known as the Lincoln "Y" block line of engines. Ford had their own line of "Y" blocks, known as Ford "Y" blocks ot just "Y" blocks.
I have had a 61 for decades and have never gotten one lead on way the wipers are like that. & I can attest to the fact that they do NOT clear the drivers view any better like this. The Avanti also has its wipers like this & personally I think they were just trying to add a "Euro-flaire" to both cars but who knows!!
Yes, Ford was considering dropping the Lincoln from their lineup and bringing out a new luxury car which would've been a mistake. The '61 slabside 4dr with rear suicide doors was a brilliant move that saved Lincoln from extinction and redefined what a luxury sedan should be.
My first car was a Lincoln Continental. A '62. I bought it in '65 when I was 21. I once got it up to 120 and still had plenty of pedal. The speedometer went to 130. It was like riding on a cloud. It would cruise all day at 90 mph.
The fact some of the design tropes in modern Lincoln trace their roots to this car sixty years later and could easily look like it was designed today speaks on how iconic the design is in my opinion. BTW, the Cadillac next to the Lincoln is a beauty also. God, I love 1960s designs.
This car is stunning now! I can only imagine what this car would have been like to see in it's day! This vehicle would have been the envy of every driver in 1961! Incredible!
Ironic too that Elwood Engel was the designer and later went to Chrysler and in fact was the designer for the baby blue Imperial next to the Lincoln in your video - which was a Lincoln inspired design.
I had a 64 convertible. White,white top, red leather. I loved 🎉that car. People were always fascinated by the beautiful simplicity of it’s style. I felt like a rock star driving it. I have several framed pictures of it hanging in my garage. The styling was simple. The engineering was very complex.
What strikes me Adam are a few notable design features. The oversized front wheel openings, peak just inches from the fender tops. The severe windshield angle with slender "A" pillars. And the extreme inward curved side glass angle, "tumblehome", with the greenhouse nestled between the raised fenderline blades. Taken in combination with unadorned, slab-sides and the result is a truly sublime automobile, timeless in execution with little brightwork to detract from the sheer elegance of a well proportioned automobile. Thank you, Adam.
Looking at this masterpiece and the truly classic cars parked next to it shows just how far the American automotive industry has fallen . Back in the 60s no other country came close too bad they couldn’t get the old tooling and just start manufacturing these cars again.
6:30 Regarding the dash "center stack," don't forget the A/C unit "closes up" so the dash is perfectly smooth in the center. And, that A/C unit in the center as shown, will go down another few inches, revealing another vent at the top. In my life, I think the '61 Continental is the _only_ car I know of with such a A/C setup.
My first car in high school circa 2004 was a 1962 continental I pulled out of my grandpa's garage. Little did I know that was the most difficult car to learn how to work on cars. Power steering pump.. Lol even my dad was confused ( mounted on the crankshaft). Also parts were either impossible to find or ungodly expensive even then.
This vehicle speaks luxury, not garish luxury but true luxury from a craftsmanship standpoint, quality in every detail this in itself was real change for American car manufacturers. It would be nice for you to detail that craftsmanship that went into the assembly , design and quality of parts used in manufacturing each and every car, the fact that they tore down every engine to guarantee proper break in the tuning system they used to isolate road noise etc etc, at a time when Cadillac was still slapping more chrome on Cadillacs to achieve the feel and look of quality, yes Cadillac has some great technology but Lincoln was all about understated excellence
A timeless elegant understated design. One of my favorite Lincolns. In my mind it will always be associated with one of the darkest days in the history of our country 11 22 63. JFK had good taste!
Nice job on the video! Rear auto drop windows on the convertibles is pretty cool. There were a couple hardtops made in ‘61 however using the convertible rear glass and the auto drop mechanisms seemed to costly … although today guys are doing what we refer to as the b pillar delete. Basically using the convertible rear glass and removing the b pillar for that seamless flow when all 4 windows are down. Some also add the auto drop function. One more thing is the vent under the radio pulls down a tad more which reveals another vent. This is a beautiful ‘61. A+
The 50's and 60's are my favourite period for American classics, in terms of how they worked to create such beautiful cars. This thing looks magnificent, both inside and out. I know it's cliche', but cars like this are artworks!
Iconic car and styling indeed. It is amazing to this day the image and heritage this vehicle has. I think about the many films this car has been in. Especially recall the one destroyed in Animal House. I think about the 1960's and the United States presidents when I see the car as well. The attention to detail and the elegance is something else indeed. Thank you so much Adam.
My folks had exactly this car but in beige. They kept it nearly 10 years although it wasn’t exactly trouble-free. The color combination of this car is absolutely stunning! I doubt Lincoln would have the nerve to do something this bold again, all their current cars seem to be some kind of “me too” SUV contraption.
Just an elegant car. A couple of shots really showed the incredible amount of tumblehome from beltline to roof. Were there any complaints about the headroom? You're getting close to 100K subscribers. Congratulations!
My Dad had the 1963 Lincoln Continental ragtop and the 1959 Thunderbird. I loved that Lincoln. As a little kid when he put that top down and it folded into the trunk it was mesmerizing
So interesting to see Engel's Imperial imitation, er follow-up, in the background - and indeed Cadillac's ultimate response on the other side. Set the tone for 25 years really - the coke bottle ecpliced it for awhile, and both the Mopar fuselage and GM 71 B/C bodies took things in a slightly different direction, but they came back in the end. I would not turn down any suicide Continental (and I actually like the 68-69 better than 66-67), but my favorite is either the 63 or 64 - 63 for purity (the original grille was a bit heavy handed), 64 for the legroom and better dash. Just classic.
In 1970, my stepfather bought my mother a used baby blue ‘64 Continental that had 1,500 original miles on the clock for $2,000. It was from an estate sale… the proverbial “old lady’s” car. I got to drive it to prom that year.
Well, regarding the windshield wipers, I do think it was same philosophy behind as was within release of W140 MB. The idea is that when raining starts, or you’re getting sudden splash of water on your windshield, this configuration allows to clear driver’s side considerably quicker than within traditional wipers layout. Adam, as always, thank you for the video!
Regarding the unusual wipers, I think the Avanti had the same arrangement that was attributed to a draftsman's error. These cars are excellent drivers and feel very modern. The ride is not squishy and the handling is crisp. I would not mind having one today as my daily driver.
That's why my dad preferred big Ford products vs GM, they had a better ride to handling balance and I agree. Ford reached the height of this with the 80s-10s Panther platforms.
@@HAL-dm1eh Cadillac from that time used body-on-frame, the frame used by Cadillac from 57-64 was the 'X-frame' also used by other GM divisions until 1970. The X-frame was used so the cars could have a low silhouette but still allow for low door sill. X-frame cars were known for flexing and being squeaky.
@@MrSloika I'm talking about in general. It must have something to do with corporate priority due to philosophy, much along the same lines as GM cars being more fancy in exterior design, Ford products are more understated and handsome, leaving it to be a "taste" thing for individual buyers really. From the 60s all the way to the Panther platform Ford has made their full size platforms a little more nimble yet at least as good riding. The Cadillac took out an edge over the Lincoln in the 90s with their last body on frame product, but again the Lincoln rode on the Panther platform that was very difficult to be for handling. To give you an example of what I'm talking about, I recently purchased a 2002 Mustang and was a little shocked to find my old 98 Crown Vic rode AND handled better!
One of my paper route customers in the 1970's had a salmon pink Lincoln sedan, either a 1961 or 1962. Several years later, I went to a rummage sale at their house and spotted a Lincoln Continental hood ornament paper weight, which I bought and still have today. At some point in time, the car disappeared from the garage. I remember it as being in good condition although I do not believe it was driven often in its later years. Even in the 1970's and 1980's, these cars were considered as somewhat collectable.
One of the finest industrial designs of all time. The contemporaneous T-bird would qualify as well, but for the overwrought taillights. These still turn heads, 60 years later.
He also had a mobile phone unit installed in the car. Mobile phone was a very different system from cell phone and only the most important people could get a mobile phone. On one occasion Johnson was out in the Lincoln when it broke down. Johnson called Henry II directly from the car and said, "Henry, you sure don't build them like you used to."
My aunt and uncle drove a ‘61 Lincoln, which they bought in 1965. Even for a four-year-old car, it seemed so up to Dante. I used to love riding in it. At any rate, this is one car that has aged beautifully.
I’d love to see you do a video on the 64-66 imperials like the one parked next to this lincoln. Those were also styled by Elwood Engel as was this lincoln.
Adam, Another thing about this car. Lincoln gave this car unusually long, soft springs. In order for it to handle reasonably well, they kept the height to a minimum. To accomplish both the regular height and long springs, Lincoln raised everything under the car to the highest position possible to avoid bottoming out.
They did not sit low when they were new at all. Only in promotional photos. They actually sat unusually high and sporty. Look at the road test photos in 61. Especially CAR LIFE. The car sits high and perky. We are restoring one now and trying to get the correct height thru exhaustive viewing of original non promotional photos.
@@chuckpeterson3262 I corrected my wording. Raising everything to its maximum height underneath was first done on the Thunderbird and that was carried through to their downsixing in the late 70s.
I owned a nice survivor 1965 Continental Convertible in my 20’s…I was BMOC for awhile during that time..! (see also: Animal House) You could pile in a bunch of girls & guys to see the polo matches at the old Milwaukee Polo Club..! I still find them absolutely game-changing luxury cars for the 1960’s and will always respect them for their quiet restraint and quality… Always great to remember them…but absolute bank-busters to restore, maintain and operate today… RESPECT
Elwood Engel was one of the designers of this car. In 1961 he moved to Chrysler when he was not made head of Ford design, and brought many of the design features of the Lincoln.
7:50 Those key guards, both the ones on the door locks and the emblem guards they put on trunk lids during that era, looked good and kept grit out of the lock cylinder. But what a pain they were, especially on icy mornings. I'm surprised that no automakers (as far as I know) offered key guards which automatically retracted when tapped.
These Continentals are extremely complicated for their time. Parts and finding a mechanic who is well-versed working on these are becoming quite scarce. I’d love to drive somebody else’s some day!
Great video!! The automatically retracting door glass was necessary because of the rear door glass interfering with the front door glass, not the top. If you open both side doors at the same time with the glass up on a 61-67 Lincoln convertible you have a potential disaster in the making. And you also have a real mess trying to close a rear door because the glass weatherstrip will not go behind the front door glass for a tight seal. The windows will literally be fighting each other with out one lowering first. The glass windows will actually collide. The rear door glass really does not interfere with the top much at all. At least on 1961-63 it doesn't. It all comes down to not having a center pillar to separate the windows.
Now you're talking Adam!!! This Lincoln Continental has timeless elegance & is one of the best looking Lincolns ever!!! Thanks for sharing this exciting video!!! 👍👍🙂
A truly great vehicle, with an iconic design that has stood the test of time.
Agreed completely.
That retractable center AC unit is a one of a kind for 61. This owner does not have it lowered all the way. There is one horizontal vent that is still not in view. One of the craziest car features ever.
This car started my favorite design period for classic cars. The early-mid 60's were a great time for simple straight lines, tasteful use of chrome, and thinner whitewalls. Then the "Great Brougham Epoch" happened, and cars once again started looking heavy and droopy
I look at this car as pure luxury, the period of less is more, the amount of detail that went into the design and assembly of these Lincoln’s is a whole story in itself
Stunning car, looks good in the shade.
It’s still totally gorgeous today
My brother up in Michigan had a fully restored 1962 Continental Convertible in beautiful blue aqua paint, frost blue interior and a white top. Has the optional air conditioning and even more rare cruise control.
I love those Lincoln's! As a teenager I had a 1968 Thunderbird - 1969 Lincoln Continental - 1969 Ford LTD - 1970 Thunderbird.... I guess my buddies thought I was a dork but I loved those sleds! I had a couple of more later on but I got addicted to Germán Fords & Brittish stuff But now at 60yo I just love your content of American Iron ... Many Thanks
I wanted a Mustang or Cougar but my Dad said at the price you can afford, either of those would have been abused by their typically aggressive drivers. In 1976, Dad's buddy, a Lincoln collector, found a '70 Town Car that was a weekend/vacation car owned by a farmer with only 68,000 miles. It was so grand roomy and comfortable as well as a cinch to work on. My job put me in up to 5 cities in a business day, each with a different rental car. After hundreds of rentals, I"m 6'2" and that '70 Lincoln is one of VERY few that can be adjusted to where I can barely reach the pedals.
One classmate had a 60's era Benz with a vertical speedometer. My '70 had a horizontal rolling speedometer that was similarly unique. Sure people thought I was a nerd, but that fine car was my pride and joy. Two people hired me to be their limo driver for the prom in my car. How cool is that!
Wow! You definitely had good taste in cars.
You always have some of the most stunning automobiles on your channel. The interior of this Lincoln is beautiful especially the dashboard. It just screams luxury inside and outside.
Did you know the 2003-05 Lincoln Aviator's dashboard was fashioned after this car's dashboard? One of the most beautiful modern era dashboards ever.
Interesting tidbit!
8:08 Regarding the wipers, it's also interesting to note the wipers run on power steering fluid, and that the power steering pump is not run by a belt, but it is on the front of the crankshaft.
Absolutely Gorgeous!!!
What dream to own that!
This car is simply stunning. I lived in Chattanooga from 2008-2010 and a bout two miles from my house was a little shop that restored this generation of Continentals. They had one for sale, a navy blue one and one that drove around that part of town. It was a white convertible that had after-market chrome wheels on it that were actually very tasteful for that body. Man, they both were just something to see in person.
Awesome video on a timeless Lincoln 😎👍
My perfect dream car
Understatement, perfect proportioning, and cutting edge design. This car and the Porsche 928.
Timeless-
We scrapped a 928 a money pit no one wanted to fix it.
Thank you Adam. I had a 1962 baby blue convertible in 1994. Super fun car. Had to sell it when I bought my first house, got married and had my daughter.
On my best looking cars of all time list. As much as I liked the Cadillac of this era, I like this even more.
The movie "Topkapi" with Peter Ustinoff includes a white convertible version with the power retracting fabric top. Almost becomes a character in itself and steals the show, a must see.
Also, the film THE ROMAN SPRING OF MRS STONE (1961) has a 61 conv as a leading character!
LOL
The clean look, it was revolutionary.
It was very European.
This is one of the 4 autos on my Mt Rushmore of car design. The other 3 being the 1963 Riviera 1963 Avanti & 1967 Eldorado imho. You've got Elwood Engel Bill Mitchell & Raymond Loewy. Not a bad group of stylists there
I'm NUTS about the 63-65 Riviera's. I was a car-crazy 12 year old when the body style debuted in '63 and it blew me away. My dad's business finally took off in '68 and he started buying luxury cars (he was a Ford man all the way, so our first luxury car was a '68 T-Bird).....I always wanted him to buy the Riviera (preferably the '64), but he just couldn't justify it at the time. I would have kept that car forever if he had.
One of the most iconic and handsome cars ever. I'd love one.
What a beaut! That Caddy is a heckuva yacht too
This car is in amazing condition, and one of my all-time favorites. One of the many wonderful features is that black and white leather interior, which contrasts beautifully with the walnut trim.
Just wanted to thank you for all your videos. It is just fun to go back and remember these cars.
Wonderful cameo presentation of the all-new slab-sided Lincoln Continental for 1961! These Kennedy-era Lincoln’s were such a departure from their predecessors and they benefitted from engineering and assembly line precision similar to the 1956-57 Mark II.
I think the wiper design may have been to provide maximum clearing of the windshield nearest the driver at the initial part of the sweep from the parked position - we saw Mercedes-Benz adopt a similar design with the introduction of the W116 twelve years later and they promoted that feature in their brochures. The high compression Lincoln engine supplied substantial power and this new chassis was much lighter than the 1960 Lincoln resulting in very fine acceleration.
We see a great deal of design influence in Cadillac, Buick, Oldsmobile and Chrysler in the years just after this model’s release.
This is a MEL block not a Lincoln "Y" block.
All Lincolns, Mercury's and some T-Birds had MEL's starting in 1958.
The biggest Lincoln Y block is 368 c.i., and it's last year for Lincolns and Mecurys was 1957. Whether in a Lincoln or Mercury it was known as the Lincoln "Y" block line of engines. Ford had their own line of "Y" blocks, known as Ford "Y" blocks ot just "Y" blocks.
I have had a 61 for decades and have never gotten one lead on way the wipers are like that. & I can attest to the fact that they do NOT clear the drivers view any better like this.
The Avanti also has its wipers like this & personally I think they were just trying to add a "Euro-flaire" to both cars but who knows!!
Yes, Ford was considering dropping the Lincoln from their lineup and bringing out a new luxury car which would've been a mistake. The '61 slabside 4dr with rear suicide doors was a brilliant move that saved Lincoln from extinction and redefined what a luxury sedan should be.
Stunning vehicle. I'm 49 and have owned two Lincolns over the past few years and wish a sedan was still offered in the US.
My first car was a Lincoln Continental. A '62. I bought it in '65 when I was 21. I once got it up to 120 and still had plenty of pedal. The speedometer went to 130. It was like riding on a cloud. It would cruise all day at 90 mph.
Almost at 100k subscribers, way to go Adam
Absolutely gorgeous vehicle. Back when we use to make amazing cars.
By far the best looking dash of any vehicle in 1961.
The fact some of the design tropes in modern Lincoln trace their roots to this car sixty years later and could easily look like it was designed today speaks on how iconic the design is in my opinion.
BTW, the Cadillac next to the Lincoln is a beauty also.
God, I love 1960s designs.
This car is stunning now! I can only imagine what this car would have been like to see in it's day! This vehicle would have been the envy of every driver in 1961! Incredible!
When I hear the term luxury car, this is what I see in my mind. I love these, such timeless, understated styling.
Beautiful Lincoln!!!!
I would love a 61. I have a lovely 66 model but would really like to add a 61 as well.
Ironic too that Elwood Engel was the designer and later went to Chrysler and in fact was the designer for the baby blue Imperial next to the Lincoln in your video - which was a Lincoln inspired design.
Great video, I love the minimalist design and history.
I had a 64 convertible. White,white top, red leather. I loved 🎉that car. People were always fascinated by the beautiful simplicity of it’s style. I felt like a rock star driving it. I have several framed pictures of it hanging in my garage. The styling was simple. The engineering was very complex.
What strikes me Adam are a few notable design features. The oversized front wheel openings, peak just inches from the fender tops. The severe windshield angle with slender "A" pillars. And the extreme inward curved side glass angle, "tumblehome", with the greenhouse nestled between the raised fenderline blades. Taken in combination with unadorned, slab-sides and the result is a truly sublime automobile, timeless in execution with little brightwork to detract from the sheer elegance of a well proportioned automobile. Thank you, Adam.
My all time favorite. A neighbor had one. 1961 Lincoln Continental convertible , black on black with red leather.
Beautiful
Looking at this masterpiece and the truly classic cars parked next to it shows just how far the American automotive industry has fallen .
Back in the 60s no other country came close too bad they couldn’t get the old tooling and just start manufacturing these cars again.
Just a beautiful time piece.
6:30 Regarding the dash "center stack," don't forget the A/C unit "closes up" so the dash is perfectly smooth in the center.
And, that A/C unit in the center as shown, will go down another few inches, revealing another vent at the top.
In my life, I think the '61 Continental is the _only_ car I know of with such a A/C setup.
Gorgeous car!
The field that this car show is held on is amazing - the groundskeeper should get a raise he’s doing an amazing job
Thank you Adam, Made me miss my ‘63 Sky Blue with A/C. That was real wood inside. Loved the Dash look on these early models.
I so want one of these cars. I love those slab sided cars !! The light blue car next to it is pretty to as is the caddy !
The 1961 Lincoln Continental is One of My ALL-Time Fav Cars, Adam....Just Perfect IMHO....Cheers fm Damo😊🙌
what a beauty! this car is what you think of as quintessential mid-century design, not the over-wrought gaudy excesses of the 50's.
I have a -61 convertible here in Finland 👍
You bet they are even more rare in here than in USA 😀
Adam, excellent as always! And you are getting close to 100 k subscribers!! Congratulations!!
My first car in high school circa 2004 was a 1962 continental I pulled out of my grandpa's garage. Little did I know that was the most difficult car to learn how to work on cars. Power steering pump.. Lol even my dad was confused ( mounted on the crankshaft). Also parts were either impossible to find or ungodly expensive even then.
Lucky!!
They are a nightmare!!! You poor kid!!
This vehicle speaks luxury, not garish luxury but true luxury from a craftsmanship standpoint, quality in every detail this in itself was real change for American car manufacturers. It would be nice for you to detail that craftsmanship that went into the assembly , design and quality of parts used in manufacturing each and every car, the fact that they tore down every engine to guarantee proper break in the tuning system they used to isolate road noise etc etc, at a time when Cadillac was still slapping more chrome on Cadillacs to achieve the feel and look of quality, yes Cadillac has some great technology but Lincoln was all about understated excellence
Beautiful 🚘
A timeless elegant understated design. One of my favorite Lincolns. In my mind it will always be associated with one of the darkest days in the history of our country 11 22 63.
JFK had good taste!
I always think of JFK when I see one of these cars.
Thanks Adam, such an interesting and elegant car. I don’t want a modern SUV, I’d much prefer one of these please!
Nice job on the video! Rear auto drop windows on the convertibles is pretty cool. There were a couple hardtops made in ‘61 however using the convertible rear glass and the auto drop mechanisms seemed to costly … although today guys are doing what we refer to as the b pillar delete. Basically using the convertible rear glass and removing the b pillar for that seamless flow when all 4 windows are down. Some also add the auto drop function. One more thing is the vent under the radio pulls down a tad more which reveals another vent. This is a beautiful ‘61. A+
Still stunning and elegant 60+ years later. Thanks Adam
Adam, cool car as usual!! Thanks for sharing your knowledge
The 50's and 60's are my favourite period for American classics, in terms of how they worked to create such beautiful cars. This thing looks magnificent, both inside and out. I know it's cliche', but cars like this are artworks!
Best year. Simple and smart.
That has class very nice ride. 😊
This styling is pure design genius. A timeless classic.
Another 1961 classic to me is the Pontiac Ventura bubble top which was also clean sided like this ‘Connie”
Iconic car and styling indeed. It is amazing to this day the image and heritage this vehicle has. I think about the many films this car has been in. Especially recall the one destroyed in Animal House. I think about the 1960's and the United States presidents when I see the car as well. The attention to detail and the elegance is something else indeed. Thank you so much Adam.
I prefer the 1968 Mercury Park Lane, but this 1961 Continental is a work of art. A timeless beauty. Adam’s commentary nailed it, as usual.
Another great video~! Keep up the good work!
That entire generation of continental was a real work of art. I doubt we'll ever see anything like it again
My folks had exactly this car but in beige. They kept it nearly 10 years although it wasn’t exactly trouble-free. The color combination of this car is absolutely stunning! I doubt Lincoln would have the nerve to do something this bold again, all their current cars seem to be some kind of “me too” SUV contraption.
they tried something different the 2017 to 2020 continental it sold like crap they went back to SUV's
@@TwoDollarGararge Yes, their intentions were good but the proportions were awkward due to the fwd platform it was based on.
@@markdc1145 yeah the world as is RWD platforms are dead it's cheap to just make a FWD base and add awd as an option
Just an elegant car. A couple of shots really showed the incredible amount of tumblehome from beltline to roof. Were there any complaints about the headroom? You're getting close to 100K subscribers. Congratulations!
They went to flat door glass in 1964 because of headroom complaints in 61-63.
Sadly, they killed the extreme tumblehome.
My Dad had the 1963 Lincoln Continental ragtop and the 1959 Thunderbird. I loved that Lincoln. As a little kid when he put that top down and it folded into the trunk it was mesmerizing
So interesting to see Engel's Imperial imitation, er follow-up, in the background - and indeed Cadillac's ultimate response on the other side. Set the tone for 25 years really - the coke bottle ecpliced it for awhile, and both the Mopar fuselage and GM 71 B/C bodies took things in a slightly different direction, but they came back in the end. I would not turn down any suicide Continental (and I actually like the 68-69 better than 66-67), but my favorite is either the 63 or 64 - 63 for purity (the original grille was a bit heavy handed), 64 for the legroom and better dash. Just classic.
In 1970, my stepfather bought my mother a used baby blue ‘64 Continental that had 1,500 original miles on the clock for $2,000. It was from an estate sale… the proverbial “old lady’s” car. I got to drive it to prom that year.
I thought the "suicide' doors locked when the car was in motion. Am I wrong?
Well, regarding the windshield wipers, I do think it was same philosophy behind as was within release of W140 MB. The idea is that when raining starts, or you’re getting sudden splash of water on your windshield, this configuration allows to clear driver’s side considerably quicker than within traditional wipers layout.
Adam, as always, thank you for the video!
Regarding the unusual wipers, I think the Avanti had the same arrangement that was attributed to a draftsman's error. These cars are excellent drivers and feel very modern. The ride is not squishy and the handling is crisp. I would not mind having one today as my daily driver.
That's why my dad preferred big Ford products vs GM, they had a better ride to handling balance and I agree. Ford reached the height of this with the 80s-10s Panther platforms.
@@HAL-dm1eh Cadillac from that time used body-on-frame, the frame used by Cadillac from 57-64 was the 'X-frame' also used by other GM divisions until 1970. The X-frame was used so the cars could have a low silhouette but still allow for low door sill. X-frame cars were known for flexing and being squeaky.
@@MrSloika I'm talking about in general. It must have something to do with corporate priority due to philosophy, much along the same lines as GM cars being more fancy in exterior design, Ford products are more understated and handsome, leaving it to be a "taste" thing for individual buyers really.
From the 60s all the way to the Panther platform Ford has made their full size platforms a little more nimble yet at least as good riding. The Cadillac took out an edge over the Lincoln in the 90s with their last body on frame product, but again the Lincoln rode on the Panther platform that was very difficult to be for handling.
To give you an example of what I'm talking about, I recently purchased a 2002 Mustang and was a little shocked to find my old 98 Crown Vic rode AND handled better!
Beautiful Lincoln.
One of my paper route customers in the 1970's had a salmon pink Lincoln sedan, either a 1961 or 1962. Several years later, I went to a rummage sale at their house and spotted a Lincoln Continental hood ornament paper weight, which I bought and still have today.
At some point in time, the car disappeared from the garage. I remember it as being in good condition although I do not believe it was driven often in its later years. Even in the 1970's and 1980's, these cars were considered as somewhat collectable.
One of the best downsizing that changed the course of car design history
Being a GM guy that black Caddy beside it sure looks good too 😊
One of the finest industrial designs of all time. The contemporaneous T-bird would qualify as well, but for the overwrought taillights. These still turn heads, 60 years later.
🎯
I'd stay outta Dealey Plaza with that car....but with the hardtop you may be A-OK.
My first car was a '62 Continental. I bought it in '65 when I was 21.. Great car.
President Johnson owned one and would use it on his large Texas Ranch to take guests on tours on his Ranch
That is correct. It recently sold for $172,000 on Bring A Trailer.
He also had a mobile phone unit installed in the car. Mobile phone was a very different system from cell phone and only the most important people could get a mobile phone. On one occasion Johnson was out in the Lincoln when it broke down. Johnson called Henry II directly from the car and said, "Henry, you sure don't build them like you used to."
I like the split bumper grill. Yes very T-bird. They should have kept it a few more years. Instrument panel pods were 10 yrs ahead of their time.
Likely my most favorite classic car. An amazingly elegant and minimalist design in the era of excess.
My aunt and uncle drove a ‘61 Lincoln, which they bought in 1965. Even for a four-year-old car, it seemed so up to Dante. I used to love riding in it. At any rate, this is one car that has aged beautifully.
When you say Lincoln, this is the car I picture in my mind.
Elwood Engel's masterpiece. He did a fine job on that blue Imperial too, which is what I prefer.
A masterpiece of design
I’d love to see you do a video on the 64-66 imperials like the one parked next to this lincoln. Those were also styled by Elwood Engel as was this lincoln.
The 1956-57 MKII and the 1961-63 Continental were the ultimate.
Adam, Another thing about this car. Lincoln gave this car unusually long, soft springs. In order for it to handle reasonably well, they kept the height to a minimum. To accomplish both the regular height and long springs, Lincoln raised everything under the car to the highest position possible to avoid bottoming out.
They did not sit low when they were new at all. Only in promotional photos. They actually sat unusually high and sporty. Look at the road test photos in 61. Especially CAR LIFE. The car sits high and perky. We are restoring one now and trying to get the correct height thru exhaustive viewing of original non promotional photos.
@@chuckpeterson3262 I corrected my wording. Raising everything to its maximum height underneath was first done on the Thunderbird and that was carried through to their downsixing in the late 70s.
@@waynejohnson1304
No that I believe!! They did sit very very low!!
Thanks for that info.
I owned a nice survivor 1965 Continental Convertible in my 20’s…I was BMOC for awhile during that time..!
(see also: Animal House)
You could pile in a bunch of girls & guys to see the polo matches at the old Milwaukee Polo Club..!
I still find them absolutely game-changing luxury cars for the 1960’s and will always respect them for their quiet restraint and quality…
Always great to remember them…but absolute bank-busters to restore, maintain and operate today…
RESPECT
Ford jumped from a sinking ship to a speedboat with the 1961 Lincoln.
Elwood Engel was one of the designers of this car. In 1961 he moved to Chrysler when he was not made head of Ford design, and brought many of the design features of the Lincoln.
7:50 Those key guards, both the ones on the door locks and the emblem guards they put on trunk lids during that era, looked good and kept grit out of the lock cylinder. But what a pain they were, especially on icy mornings. I'm surprised that no automakers (as far as I know) offered key guards which automatically retracted when tapped.
These Continentals are extremely complicated for their time. Parts and finding a mechanic who is well-versed working on these are becoming quite scarce.
I’d love to drive somebody else’s some day!
Wow ! Great Looking front end grille , headlights , beautiful design , correct tires and I like Cadillac's 1
Great video!!
The automatically retracting door glass was necessary because of the rear door glass interfering with the front door glass, not the top.
If you open both side doors at the same time with the glass up on a 61-67 Lincoln convertible you have a potential disaster in the making. And you also have a real mess trying to close a rear door because the glass weatherstrip will not go behind the front door glass for a tight seal. The windows will literally be fighting each other with out one lowering first.
The glass windows will actually collide.
The rear door glass really does not interfere with the top much at all. At least on 1961-63 it doesn't.
It all comes down to not having a center pillar to separate the windows.
Ah, the 60s Continentals, some of my favorite cars of the era. I really love the big mean-looking mid 60s models, but I like 'em all.
The cowl panel was shared with the Thunderbird. They were both new style this year. This was done to save manufacturing costs.