Lincoln Continental rear air suspension stop working? The air suspension on your 1995 Lincoln continental broke? Lincoln Continental accessories from AutoAnything and your automobile: the way a car should be. If America’s big automakers want to recapture their competitive edge and carve a new niche in the market, perhaps they should look back to their classics-classics like your Lincoln Continental. Lincoln Continental rear doors were designed this way because they were too heavy to be front-hung, especially on the convertible models. In the mid-60s, a two-door Continental was made and it carried a bigger engine.

Lincoln Continentals are the vehicles I’ve seen the most of this on, although other manufacturers also use air suspension. They normally have 2 sensors (one for each front wheel)in front and a single sensor for the rear. Lincoln Continentals are Jewish if driven by someone over the age of 65. Skee ball is Jewish, Bowling is Goyish except as a Saturday night camp trip in the 80′s. The way to detect air leaks in air springs is to turn off the air suspension moter while the car is running(located in the truck,) turn it off and then leave the car sit overnight or leave it running and take it for a drive. It should not lose air. If one corner or area is sagging then there is a leak.

It will be perfectly drivable for a while, but evetually the air pump will go out since it is have to work more regularly just to keep air in the springs. You say your motor is kicking on randomly. If it is ramdomly and frequently, then I’d say this might be your problem. Cheaper to fix it now than later. A humped trunklid, modest taillamps in the rear fender trailing edges, and a toned-down Mark grille were stylistic links with the past, but the car was clearly aimed at a very different clientele: younger, affluent buyers who’d been defecting to high-dollar, high-status imports, a group Lincoln had never courted before. It was also a bold challenge to Cadillac’s Eldorado, which was still relatively overblown.