Home » All Hail The Also-Rans: 1977 Plymouth Gran Fury vs 1988 Mercury Cougar

All Hail The Also-Rans: 1977 Plymouth Gran Fury vs 1988 Mercury Cougar

Sbsd 3 10 2025
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Good morning! I thought we’d do another theme week this week: dead brands. But not defunct makers; just the brands that have been canceled. I’m not too fussed on prices, just picking things that catch my eye. I have, however, set a rule for myself that I can’t use the same marque twice. Today we’re scratching Plymouth and Mercury off the list.

Friday’s choices didn’t have much in common besides Ford engines, manual gearboxes, and rear-wheel-drive, and since they seemed to complement each other, I allowed a “both” option in the poll. And I always find it amusing when one car beats out “both” when the votes are tallied. It was a fairly even distribution of votes, actually, but more of you wanted just the TVR than both the TVR and the Ranchero.

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Honestly, I’d have a hard time choosing between them as well. I think I’d have more day-to-day fun with the Ranchero. It’d be a hit in the hardware store parking lot, I’m sure. But after years of showing up to British car shows and parking in a row of fifteen other MGB GTs nicer than mine, I can see the value in a super-rare car. I would love to arrive at a gathering of car folks in that TVR.

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The last twenty or so years have seen a serious thinning of the ranks in car nameplates, for a lot of reasons. But with a few exceptions, most of their products are barely missed. The old GM philosophy of “a car for every purse and purpose” made sense once upon a time, and was copied by rivals Ford and Chrysler, but starting in the 1970s, different versions of the same car across multiple divisions started to look an awful lot alike. And you can only do so much with trim to hide it. At some point, you start to wonder: if you have Dodge, do you really need Plymouth? And if you have Ford, what’s the point of Mercury? Let’s take a look at a couple cars from those also-ran brands.

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1977 Plymouth Gran Fury Brougham – $5,000

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Image: Craigslist seller

Engine/drivetrain: 360 cubic inch overhead valve V8, three-speed automatic, RWD

Location: Tomah, WI

Odometer reading: 52,000 miles

Operational status: Runs and drives well

The late 1970s were brutal on Detroit. Two gas crises, new emissions and safety regulations, and the arrival of more and better offerings from Japan and Europe hit sales hard, especially when it came to traditional full-sized sedans. All three big US automakers downsized their full-sized offerings during this time, but while GM slashed the size of whole model lines in 1977 and again in 1978, Ford and Chrysler didn’t do it all at once. Plymouth’s popular Fury nameplate moved to a smaller platform in 1975, but realizing that some buyers wouldn’t accept the smaller cars, it kept the big version in production for a couple more years, as the Gran Fury.

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Image: Craigslist seller

Big engines were still the order of the day, but this particular Fury has the smallest of three V8s offered: 360 cubic inches, instead of 400 or 440. There is an advantage to that; the larger V8s were equipped with Chrysler’s notorious Electronic Lean Burn system starting in 1976, and this engine does not appear to have it – usually there’s a control computer in a housing attached to the air cleaner. From the information I was able to find, Lean Burn didn’t rear its ugly head on the small-blocks until the year after this car was built. We don’t get much information on this car; the seller just says it’s in good shape for its age – but a cast-iron V8 and a Torqueflite automatic is a pretty bulletproof combination.

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Image: Craigslist seller

The odometer reads 52,000 miles, and looking at the interior, I believe that is probably original. This car belonged to someone’s grandparents, I assume, and didn’t get driven much. I saw a lot of old American cars like this when I worked at a service station in St. Paul; we’d see the cars twice a year, once in the spring and once in the fall, with a few hundred miles added to the odometer each time. We’d dutifully change it to “winter” or “summer” oil, test the antifreeze, and send them on their way. I always kind of hoped I’d be in the right place at the right time to buy one, but knowing how I treated cars back then, I probably would have just trashed it. Hopefully whoever ends up with this one treats it well.

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Image: Craigslist seller

Outside, it’s pretty much rust-free, which actually tracks with a senior-owned car, even in northern Wisconsin. I bet this car was washed once a week, and stored in a garage when it wasn’t in use. I see a couple of spots here and there, but the trim is all there, as are all four hubcaps – which, as we all know from watching TV cop shows, means it has never been in a high-speed chase.

1988 Mercury Cougar LS – $8,000

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Image: Craigslist seller

Engine/drivetrain: 3.8-liter overhead valve V6, four-speed automatic, RWD

Location: Plano, TX

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Odometer reading: 69,000 miles

Operational status: “Drives like a new car”

The Mercury Cougar bounced around between a lot of platforms over the years. It started out as a fancy Mustang, then became a fancy Torino, then it became a sister model to the Thunderbird, where it stayed well into the 1990s. When Ford restyled the Fox-platform Thunderbird in 1983, the Cougar got a new style too, but nowhere near as swoopy; it had a “formal” upright rear window instead of the Thunderbird’s fastback style, apparently intended to appeal to older buyers. Unfortunately, this roofline lent itself to that terrible ’70s styling holdover: the landau top.

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Image: Craigslist seller

The standard engine in the Cougar and Thunderbird of this era was Ford’s 3.8 liter Essex V6, which is one of the least inspiring powerplants of all time. It does its job, and nobody really cares one way or another about it. At least by 1988 it had received multiport fuel injection, and was backed by an AOD overdrive automatic in place of the old three-speed. The seller says this one runs and drives like a new car, with only 69,000 miles on the odometer, and it comes with a big folder of service receipts.

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Image: Craigslist seller

Inside, it looks practically new as well. The upholstery and carpet both look nice, and the seller says everything works including the air conditioning. It has a weird combination of equipment inside, though; you don’t often see a digital dash, bucket seats, and a column-mounted shifter. I assume the column shifter is another concession to Mercury buyers who were put off by the Thunderbird’s modernity.

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Image: Craigslist seller

It’s clean as a whistle outside, and it’s a nice color, but man, does that landau top look out of place. The fake wire wheel covers don’t help much either. The sportier versions of this car actually look pretty good, even with the weird roofline, but this broughamed-up version looks older than 1988. Still, I bet it would be a big hit with the ’80s nostalgia crowd.

I like seeing survivors like these still out and about. Neither one was a special car when it was new, except to the person who signed the paperwork and drove it home for the first time. Those original owners are likely gone, their brands are gone too, and a lot has changed in the world since they first rolled off their assembly lines – but these cars have hardly changed at all, and there’s a comfort in that. Driving a well-preserved old car like one of these two is about as close as you’ll get to a time machine. How far back do you want to go?

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ColoradoFX4
ColoradoFX4
3 hours ago

Objectively the Plymouth is probably the better buy here, but car preferences aren’t always logical. My grandmother had an ’86 Cougar in tan with the same wire wheel covers and landau roof as this ’88. Hopefully this one doesn’t have the same cigarette smell as grandma’s car, though I might have to source a pack of NOW cigarettes just to complete the homage.

SlowCarFast
SlowCarFast
4 hours ago

Wow that Cougar is clean, but $8,000 clean? Not for a car that never looked properly styled. I remember liking these when they first came out, with the vertical, Lincoln-style grille. After that, I feel nothing for them.

Different designs for different folks, I guess.

MY LEG!
MY LEG!
4 hours ago

The Plymouth looks like the peak malaise barge car and it has a V8. Why look at the Cougar at all?

My Other Car is a Tetanus Shot
My Other Car is a Tetanus Shot
5 hours ago

Mad Max: Gran Fury Road for me.

I like survivors for another era. Putter around town during the summertime in a yacht of yore. Not a muscle car restored to ‘better than new condition’, but a workaday vehicle one could drive once in awhile without fear of scratches.

Maybe I throw a set of cylinder heads, a 4-bbl, and a camshaft at the 360 to wake it up a bit. Maybe I don’t and just enjoy it stock.

Baja_Engineer
Baja_Engineer
5 hours ago

I was about to say that Cougar is asking Turbo Coupe’s money until I googled the later. Say what!!? $20K is now the average for a clean-ish Turbo Coupe?
Nevermind, I’m still not picking up a Broughamtastic, pokey Cougar with a HG-prone V6.

I guess the Gran Fury can become an acquired taste?

Fuzz
Fuzz
6 hours ago

You can’t get rid of that landau top, but you can improve it. It’s a cougar, right? Well with the right material you could make it a fuzzy mane. And yes, I know cougars don’t have manes, which makes it a conversation starter. Plus, you know, fuzzy roof. I guess you could dress it up as a mullet, too, if you went for long and flowy.

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
6 hours ago

I trust the Gran Fury more the V6 Ford. And it’s cheaper.

JDE
JDE
6 hours ago

I don’t particularly like the styling of the Gran Fury, but I do appreciate the 360. I would probably end up making it look like a cop car and just drive it occasionally. I would likely never drive the cougar. not because it is necessarily bad, it just is not as attractive as the similar T-Bird design and it has the base motor. If it was 5.0, and trust that a swap to a 5.0 is pretty easy, I would perhaps drive it a little more, but it would still be slow by modern standards and i don’t like the styling enough to invest in such a venture.

Hoser68
Hoser68
6 hours ago

I’m a big fan of old school V8s. A couple weekends and whatever that lump is under the Fury’s hood can be woken up to make it a capable highway cruiser.

What’s strange is that the engine mods wouldn’t just improve power, but also improve fuel economy and thus the emissions. For some reason or another back in that era, the Big 3 thought the best way to improve fuel economy was to choke off the engines. Low flow heads, restrictive exhaust and cams that barely had any lift cut 100+ hp out off the engine. Fix that and you not only unlock that extra power, but also improve the fuel economy since the engine isn’t using a ton of power just to suck in air.

I wouldn’t go crazy with the motor and make it into some sort of drag car, but it could be a good highway cruiser with a mild engine tune.

JDE
JDE
6 hours ago
Reply to  Hoser68

retarded ignition too. And the biggest lie, a 2 barrel versus spreadbore 4 barrel. Sure a 2 barrel usually limited top end, but the compromise was big venturis and the spreadbore with small primary venturis was a fuel sipper and ran smoother.

I'm an Evil Banana
I'm an Evil Banana
6 hours ago

Both asking prices are about $2500 too high, but the Fury has a V8 and that has a lot more potential than the 3.8 L Ford V6.

JDE
JDE
6 hours ago

a 360 no less.

Boring Bloke
Boring Bloke
6 hours ago

I cant help but thinking it looks like the rear windows have been installed upside down

Tbird
Tbird
6 hours ago
Reply to  Boring Bloke

They were! I’m pretty sure the pre-facelift Cougar used the same side glass as the TBird, just flipped.

S13 Sedan
S13 Sedan
7 hours ago

That Cougar is nice but 8k for a V6 Fox Cougar is too rich for my blood. Give me the Gran Fury, not only cheaper but it’s the more interesting choice.

TDI_FTW
TDI_FTW
7 hours ago

Neither, but since I have to choose I’m choosing the cheaper one. Gimme that Fury.

StillPlaysWithCars
StillPlaysWithCars
6 hours ago
Reply to  TDI_FTW

That was my conclusion as well. I have a soft spot for that body style as my Mom had a T-bird of that vintage when I was a kid. But $8k for a rolling novelty is too rich. If it was the V8, maybe, but $8k still feels too high there.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
7 hours ago

I can change the wheels on that Cougar to something more appropriate – and since that’s an aftermarket roof, I’d bet that a weekend with a heat gun and a lot of Goo-Gone will make that Landau past-tense.

Max Headbolts
Max Headbolts
6 hours ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Sadly, that’s not an aftermarket roof, and you won’t find serviceable paint under there.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
3 hours ago
Reply to  Max Headbolts

Mercury did not offer a factory vinyl/landau roof on Cougars after 1982.
https://www.auto-brochures.com/makes/Mercury/Cougar/Mercury_US%20Cougar_1988.pdf

Max Headbolts
Max Headbolts
2 hours ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Looks OEM, but I can’t refute it, I still suspect there’s a lot mroe than glue going on underneath that.

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
7 hours ago

Gran Fury for me. Wouldn’t DD either of these. And thus for a weekend or C&C car, the Plymouth wins.

I would take that Gran Fury and rent it on Turo.

FlyingMonstera
FlyingMonstera
7 hours ago

I spent most of 90s wanting to put bleach in my eyes every time I saw one of these Cougars and I’m not ready to forgive it yet. So I’ll be Fury-ous for the rest of the day.

Bill C
Bill C
7 hours ago

I liked those Cougars, but that one is a bit overpriced and the landau toupee kills it.

AlfaAlfa
AlfaAlfa
7 hours ago

When he was in college in the mid 80’s my brother had the 2 door version of the Plymouth in fire engine red. What a sloppy, ungainly, gas-sucking pile of crap it was.
For that reason alone – meow.

Shop-Teacher
Shop-Teacher
7 hours ago

Imma sail away on that yacht.

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
7 hours ago
Reply to  Shop-Teacher
Shop-Teacher
Shop-Teacher
7 hours ago

Exactly. I’m sure we can find it on 8-track.

Dogisbadob
Dogisbadob
7 hours ago

cop tires, cop shocks, cop engine… :p

I chose the Fury because of the extra doors and lower price lol

Is it easier to swap a Godzilla into the Fox body, or a Hellcrate into the Fury?

Hoser68
Hoser68
2 hours ago
Reply to  Dogisbadob

Hellcat by miles. That engine bay on the Fury could fit anything Dodge made at the time.

But if you are going to dream stupid budgets, I would look at the NRE Twin-Turbo Mopar Hemi- 572. It puts out more power than a Hellcat Redeye and the new Mega-gozilla COMBINED, but admittedly, costs more than those engines combined too.

Since it runs on Alcohol, I would expect the entire backseat and trunk would have to be made into a fuel cell to take on cruises much over a 1/4 mile long.

The Stig's Misanthropic Cousin
The Stig's Misanthropic Cousin
8 hours ago

I like land yachts, so I’m going with the Plymouth. I have a feeling it isn’t quite as nice as the pictures suggest and I think I can do better for $5,000. This would be a fun car to own, though. I might offer $3,800 and see what happens. I doubt the owner would accept that, but you never know.

The Cougar is nice, but I am strongly biased against this generation of Cougar. I went to high school with two guys that drove Cougars of this generation. Both guys were tremendous douchebags. Unfortunately, I came to associate ’80s Mercury Cougars with extremely unlikeable people, which obviously negatively impacts my view of this vehicle. If I am being objective, I will say it is nice, but probably not worth $8,000. It is interesting as a preserved ordinary car, but it has little appeal otherwise.

Boulevard_Yachtsman
Boulevard_Yachtsman
8 hours ago

$5K for a 4-door 3-box sedan is the way 2 go for 1 nice old car.

Argentine Utop
Argentine Utop
8 hours ago

The Fury is less ugly, but there is visible rust. A closer look at the underside will show the extent of the damage.
The Cougar is incredibly awful. The dispropportionate front and rear overhangs make them look narrower than an elongated K-car, and the short wheelbase looks cartoonish. The wire wheel covers (why? Why? WHYYYYYY¨?) can be easily replaced, but the vinyl is a torment to the eyes.
Actually, I’d love to read an Adrian piece on this shiny turd. Lots of popcorn would be in order.

Hautewheels
Hautewheels
8 hours ago

That Fury is a real beaut! I love to see an older car like that that’s been well cared for. I bet it’s even got the Truecoat. Plymouth all the way.

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
8 hours ago

I know nothing of either of these cars, but “Fury” comes closer to describing me than “Cougar”.

I knew a guy in a band once. He knew nothing at all about cars, so picked a Mitsubishi Carisma based entirely on the name and the assumption that it would have some. It did not.

Hoser68
Hoser68
3 hours ago
Reply to  Captain Muppet

My dad always mis-pronounced the Mitsubishi Precis as the Feces. We had a friend with one. I think either name was accurate.

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