Model hub · Ford
Ford Crown Victoria: History, Generations & Specs
The Ford Crown Victoria is a full-size rear-wheel-drive sedan built on Ford's body-on-frame Panther platform, the same platform shared with the Mercury Grand Marquis and the Lincoln Town Car. The name traces to the LTD Crown Victoria, which debuted for the 1980 model year as the boxy full-size Ford that continued the Panther chassis in the line after the platform arrived for 1979; the LTD prefix was dropped for the 1992 model year, when Ford gave the car a rounded aero body that cut its drag coefficient and replaced the pushrod 5.0L and 5.8L Windsor V8s with the 4.6L SOHC two-valve modular V8. From 1992 the Crown Victoria was sold only as a four-door sedan, after the earlier station wagon was retired. Two variants define the nameplate: the LX Sport, a civilian model with the dual-exhaust high-output 4.6L and firmer suspension, and the Police Interceptor, the P71 fleet car that made the Crown Victoria the dominant police cruiser and taxi in North America. A 1998 update revised the rear suspension and brakes, and a 2003 re-engineering added a hydroformed frame and rack-and-pinion steering. Ford ended United States retail sales after 2008 and built the last Crown Victoria for fleet and export use in September 2011.
Pick your generation
Each generation page covers what changed year by year, what owners call them, and the wall of registered vehicles.
By model year
The wall
The most-documented Ford Crown Victorias in the registry, every photo by the owner.
The Ford Crown Victoria at a glance
- What it is: a full-size, rear-wheel-drive, body-on-frame four-door sedan on Ford's Panther platform
- Platform siblings: the Panther platform is shared with the Mercury Grand Marquis and the Lincoln Town Car
- Generations covered here: the 1982-1991 LTD Crown Victoria, the 1992-1997 aero Crown Victoria, and the 1998-2011 updated Crown Victoria
- Signature engine: the 4.6L SOHC two-valve modular V8, used from 1992 to 2011, replacing the earlier 5.0L (302) and 5.8L (351 Windsor) pushrod V8s
- Transmissions: AOD, then the electronic AODE, then the 4R70W and 4R75E four-speed automatics
- Fleet variant: the Police Interceptor (internal code P71), which made the Crown Victoria the dominant North American police and taxi car
- Civilian performance variant: the LX Sport, with the dual-exhaust high-output 4.6L and a firmer suspension
- End of the line: US retail sales ended after 2008; the final Crown Victoria was built in September 2011 for fleet and export
Ford Crown Victoria generations at a glance
| Years | Generation / nickname | Key engines | What defines it |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1982-1991 | LTD Crown Victoria, "Box Panther" | 5.0L (302) Windsor V8; 5.8L (351 Windsor) V8 (fleet/police) | Boxy full-size Ford on the Panther platform; sold as the LTD Crown Victoria with sedan and station wagon bodies; AOD automatic |
| 1992-1997 | Crown Victoria, "Aero Panther" | 4.6L SOHC 2V modular V8 (190 hp single exhaust, 210 hp dual-exhaust HO) | 1992 aero redesign drops the LTD name and the wagon; the 4.6L modular V8 replaces the pushrod Windsor V8s; P71 Police Interceptor and the 1992-only Touring Sedan |
| 1998-2011 | Crown Victoria, updated "Aero Panther" | 4.6L SOHC 2V modular V8 (200 to 239 hp civilian; up to 250 hp Police Interceptor) | 1998 rear-suspension and brake update; 2003 hydroformed frame and rack-and-pinion steering; LX Sport and the Police Interceptor P71; retail ends 2008, production ends 2011 |
From LTD Crown Victoria to Crown Victoria
The Crown Victoria name began as a trim level and then a model within Ford's full-size LTD line. The LTD Crown Victoria rode on Ford's Panther platform, a rear-wheel-drive body-on-frame chassis introduced for the 1979 model year and shared with the Mercury Grand Marquis and Lincoln Town Car. Through the 1980s the LTD Crown Victoria used pushrod V8s, primarily the 5.0L (302) Windsor with the 5.8L (351 Windsor) reserved largely for fleet and police use, paired with the AOD four-speed automatic. For 1992 Ford dropped the LTD prefix, restyled the car with a rounded aero body, retired the station wagon, and replaced the pushrod V8s with the 4.6L modular V8. From that point the car was sold as the Ford Crown Victoria, a four-door sedan only.
The Panther platform and its siblings
Every Ford Crown Victoria is built on the Panther platform, a full-size rear-wheel-drive chassis with body-on-frame construction and a live rear axle. Ford used the same platform for the Mercury Grand Marquis and the Lincoln Town Car, which is why those three cars share much of their mechanical hardware while differing in styling, length, and equipment. Body-on-frame construction, in which the body bolts to a separate steel frame, is part of why the Crown Victoria became a fleet favorite: it tolerated heavy duty cycles and was straightforward to repair. The 2003 re-engineering kept the body-on-frame layout but switched to a fully boxed, partly hydroformed frame.
The 4.6 modular V8 era
The single engine most associated with the Ford Crown Victoria is the 4.6L SOHC two-valve modular V8, introduced in the car for 1992 when it replaced the pushrod 5.0L and 5.8L Windsor V8s. This is the single-overhead-cam, two-valve-per-cylinder version of Ford's modular family, not the four-valve or dual-overhead-cam engine used in some other Fords. In the Crown Victoria it was offered in a standard single-exhaust tune and a dual-exhaust high-output tune. Output rose over the car's life: roughly 190 horsepower single exhaust and 210 horsepower with the dual-exhaust HO setup in the 1992-1997 cars, 200 to 215 horsepower after the 1998 update, 220 to 235 horsepower for 2001-2002, and 224 to 239 horsepower from 2003. The Police Interceptor used the dual-exhaust engine and reached 250 horsepower for 2004 through 2011 with a revised air intake.
Transmissions of the Ford Crown Victoria
The Ford Crown Victoria used a series of Ford four-speed automatic transmissions. The 1980s LTD Crown Victoria and the earliest 1992 cars used the hydraulically controlled AOD. Ford then moved to the electronically controlled AODE, and from the mid-1990s to the 4R70W, a stronger electronically controlled four-speed derived from the AODE. Later cars used the 4R75E, a further development of the same family. The Crown Victoria never offered more than four forward speeds and was never sold with a manual transmission in its 1992-2011 modular-V8 form.
The Police Interceptor and the LX Sport
The Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor, identified by the internal order code P71, made the Crown Victoria the standard North American police cruiser. Ford built the police package from 1992 and added the "Police Interceptor" name and trunk badge for 1999. The P71 used the dual-exhaust 4.6L V8, a heavy-duty cooling system with external oil coolers, a heavy-duty alternator, a stiffer suspension, and a calibrated rear axle. On the civilian side, the LX Sport offered from 2001 paired the dual-exhaust high-output 4.6L with a firmer suspension, a floor-shifted console with bucket seats, and larger wheels, making it the enthusiast Crown Victoria. Across these variants the Crown Victoria stayed mechanically close to the Grand Marquis and Town Car that share its Panther platform.
Frequently asked questions
What platform is the Ford Crown Victoria built on?
The Ford Crown Victoria is built on Ford's Panther platform, a full-size rear-wheel-drive chassis with body-on-frame construction and a live rear axle. The same Panther platform underpins the Mercury Grand Marquis and the Lincoln Town Car.
What engine does the Ford Crown Victoria use?
From 1992 to 2011 the Ford Crown Victoria used the 4.6L SOHC two-valve modular V8, in a standard single-exhaust tune and a dual-exhaust high-output tune. It replaced the earlier 5.0L (302) and 5.8L (351 Windsor) pushrod V8s used in the 1980s LTD Crown Victoria.
What is the difference between the Crown Victoria and the LTD Crown Victoria?
The LTD Crown Victoria was the 1980s full-size Ford that introduced the name and rode on the Panther platform with pushrod V8s. For 1992 Ford dropped the LTD prefix, gave the car a rounded aero body, retired the station wagon, and fitted the 4.6L modular V8, after which it was sold as the Ford Crown Victoria.
What is a Crown Victoria P71?
The P71 is the internal order code for the Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor, the fleet police version built from 1992. It used the dual-exhaust 4.6L V8 with heavy-duty cooling, electrical, and suspension components. Ford added the "Police Interceptor" name and badge for 1999.
When did the Ford Crown Victoria end production?
Ford ended United States retail sales of the Crown Victoria after the 2008 model year and continued building it for fleet, police, and export use. The final Ford Crown Victoria was built in September 2011 at the St. Thomas Assembly plant in Ontario, ahead of the federal electronic-stability-control requirement for 2012.
Sources
- Ford factory specification sheets and shop manuals for the 1982-2011 Crown Victoria and LTD Crown Victoria
- Wikipedia, Ford Crown Victoria; Ford LTD Crown Victoria; Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor; Ford Panther platform
- Ford Special Service Vehicle and Police Interceptor fleet literature
- VIN and data-plate decoding for engine, transmission, and axle identification
Asked all the time
What platform is the Ford Crown Victoria built on?
The Ford Crown Victoria is built on Ford's Panther platform, a full-size rear-wheel-drive chassis with body-on-frame construction and a live rear axle. The same Panther platform underpins the Mercury Grand Marquis and the Lincoln Town Car.
What engine does the Ford Crown Victoria use?
From 1992 to 2011 the Ford Crown Victoria used the 4.6L SOHC two-valve modular V8, in a standard single-exhaust tune and a dual-exhaust high-output tune. It replaced the earlier 5.0L (302) and 5.8L (351 Windsor) pushrod V8s used in the 1980s LTD Crown Victoria.
What is the difference between the Crown Victoria and the LTD Crown Victoria?
The LTD Crown Victoria was the 1980s full-size Ford that introduced the name and rode on the Panther platform with pushrod V8s. For 1992 Ford dropped the LTD prefix, gave the car a rounded aero body, retired the station wagon, and fitted the 4.6L modular V8, after which it was sold as the Ford Crown Victoria.
What is a Crown Victoria P71?
The P71 is the internal order code for the Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor, the fleet police version built from 1992. It used the dual-exhaust 4.6L V8 with heavy-duty cooling, electrical, and suspension components. Ford added the "Police Interceptor" name and badge for 1999.
When did the Ford Crown Victoria end production?
Ford ended United States retail sales of the Crown Victoria after the 2008 model year and continued building it for fleet, police, and export use. The final Ford Crown Victoria was built in September 2011 at the St. Thomas Assembly plant in Ontario, ahead of the federal electronic-stability-control requirement for 2012.