The 1992 model year brought the redesigned Ford Crown Victoria, the car that dropped the LTD prefix used in the 1980s and adopted a rounded aero body that lowered the sedan's drag coefficient. Built on the same rear-wheel-drive, body-on-frame Panther platform shared with the Mercury Grand Marquis and Lincoln Town Car, the 1992 Crown Victoria was offered only as a four-door sedan after the previous station wagon was retired. The biggest mechanical change was the engine: the 4.6L SOHC two-valve modular V8 replaced the pushrod 5.0L (302) and 5.8L (351 Windsor) Windsor V8s. The 4.6L came in a standard single-exhaust tune of about 190 horsepower and a dual-exhaust high-output tune of about 210 horsepower. The transmission progressed from the AOD through the electronic AODE to the 4R70W four-speed automatic during this run. All 1992 Crown Victorias received standard four-wheel disc brakes, and a 1992-only Touring Sedan paired the dual-exhaust engine with police-derived suspension and a limited-slip rear axle. The Police Interceptor, identified by the internal order code P71, was built across this generation and made the Crown Victoria the standard North American police cruiser. The 1992-1997 Crown Victoria used recirculating-ball steering; the later 2003 update changed it to rack and pinion.
The 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria at a glance
- What changed for 1992: aero redesign drops the LTD name and the station wagon; sold only as a four-door sedan
- Platform: rear-wheel-drive, body-on-frame Panther platform, shared with the Mercury Grand Marquis and Lincoln Town Car
- Engine: 4.6L SOHC two-valve modular V8, about 190 hp single exhaust and 210 hp with the dual-exhaust high-output tune, replacing the pushrod 5.0L and 5.8L Windsor V8s
- Transmissions: AOD, then the electronic AODE, then the 4R70W four-speed automatic across the run
- Steering: recirculating ball (rack-and-pinion arrived later, for 2003)
- Brakes: four-wheel disc brakes standard across the 1992 Crown Victoria line
- Touring Sedan: 1992 only, with the dual-exhaust engine, police-derived suspension, and a limited-slip axle
- Police variant: Police Interceptor, internal order code P71, with the dual-exhaust engine and heavy-duty components
Ford Crown Victoria 1992-1997 year by year
| Year | Ford Crown Victoria changes | Engine / drivetrain |
|---|---|---|
| 1992 | Aero redesign drops the LTD name and the station wagon; the 4.6L modular V8 replaces the Windsor pushrod V8s; the 1992-only Touring Sedan arrives with the dual-exhaust engine and police-derived suspension | 4.6L SOHC 2V V8 (about 190 hp single, 210 hp dual HO); AOD automatic |
| 1993 | Ford adds the electronic AODE automatic during the run; the Crown Victoria continues as a four-door sedan | 4.6L SOHC 2V V8; AODE automatic |
| 1994 | The 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria carries over with the modular V8 and the electronic automatic | 4.6L SOHC 2V V8; AODE automatic |
| 1995 | Ford adopts the stronger 4R70W four-speed automatic, derived from the AODE, on the Crown Victoria | 4.6L SOHC 2V V8; 4R70W automatic |
| 1996 | The 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria continues with the 4.6L V8 and the 4R70W automatic | 4.6L SOHC 2V V8; 4R70W automatic |
| 1997 | Final year of the original aero Crown Victoria before the 1998 update revised the rear suspension and brakes | 4.6L SOHC 2V V8; 4R70W automatic |
The 1992 aero redesign
The 1992 Ford Crown Victoria replaced the boxy 1980s LTD Crown Victoria with a rounded, aerodynamic body that lowered the sedan's drag coefficient. Ford dropped the LTD prefix, so the car was now sold simply as the Crown Victoria, and retired the station wagon, leaving a four-door sedan as the only body style. The car stayed on the rear-wheel-drive, body-on-frame Panther platform shared with the Mercury Grand Marquis and the Lincoln Town Car, so the redesign was primarily new sheet metal, interior, and powertrain rather than a new chassis layout.
The 4.6 modular V8 replaces the Windsor V8s
The defining change of the 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria was the engine. The new 4.6L SOHC two-valve modular V8 replaced the pushrod 5.0L (302) and 5.8L (351 Windsor) Windsor V8s used in the 1980s LTD Crown Victoria. This is the single-overhead-cam, two-valve-per-cylinder modular engine, not a four-valve or dual-overhead-cam version. In the 1992-1997 Crown Victoria it was offered in a standard single-exhaust tune rated about 190 horsepower and a dual-exhaust high-output tune rated about 210 horsepower. The dual-exhaust engine was used by the Touring Sedan and the Police Interceptor and was available on civilian cars through a handling and performance option.
Transmissions and steering
The 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria used a sequence of Ford four-speed automatics. The earliest 1992 cars used the hydraulically controlled AOD, after which Ford moved to the electronically controlled AODE and then, from the mid-1990s, to the stronger 4R70W that was derived from the AODE. The Crown Victoria did not offer a manual transmission in this generation. The car used recirculating-ball power steering throughout the 1992-1997 run; the change to rack-and-pinion steering did not come until the 2003 re-engineering.
The 1992 Touring Sedan
For 1992 only, Ford offered the Crown Victoria Touring Sedan, a performance-oriented version that paired the dual-exhaust high-output 4.6L V8, rated about 210 horsepower, with suspension components drawn from the police package. It added a limited-slip rear axle, wider tires, rear air suspension, and unique trim, while four-wheel disc brakes were standard across the 1992 Crown Victoria line rather than unique to the Touring Sedan. The Touring Sedan was produced only for the 1992 model year and is the rarest civilian Crown Victoria of this generation. After 1992 the dual-exhaust engine and firmer suspension remained available on civilian cars through a handling and performance package rather than a separate Touring Sedan model.
The Police Interceptor (P71)
The 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor, identified by the internal order code P71, was the fleet police version built across this generation. It used the dual-exhaust 4.6L V8 along with heavy-duty cooling, electrical, and suspension components and calibrated rear-axle ratios suited to police duty. The P71 made the Crown Victoria the standard North American police cruiser through the 1990s. Ford did not add the separate "Police Interceptor" name and trunk badge until the 1999 model year, on the later updated generation, so 1992-1997 police cars were Crown Victoria sedans built to the P71 order code.
Frequently asked questions
What changed on the 1992 Ford Crown Victoria?
The 1992 Ford Crown Victoria received an aero redesign that dropped the LTD prefix and the station wagon, leaving a four-door sedan only, and replaced the pushrod 5.0L and 5.8L Windsor V8s with the 4.6L SOHC modular V8. It stayed on the rear-wheel-drive, body-on-frame Panther platform.
What engine does the 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria use?
The 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria uses the 4.6L SOHC two-valve modular V8, rated about 190 horsepower with single exhaust and about 210 horsepower with the dual-exhaust high-output tune. It replaced the earlier pushrod 5.0L (302) and 5.8L (351 Windsor) Windsor V8s.
What transmission is in the 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria?
The 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria used Ford four-speed automatics: the AOD on the earliest cars, then the electronic AODE, then the stronger 4R70W from the mid-1990s. No manual transmission was offered in this generation.
What was the 1992 Crown Victoria Touring Sedan?
The 1992 Ford Crown Victoria Touring Sedan was a performance-oriented version offered for the 1992 model year only. It paired the dual-exhaust high-output 4.6L V8 of about 210 horsepower with police-derived suspension, a limited-slip rear axle, and wider tires; four-wheel disc brakes were standard across the 1992 Crown Victoria line rather than unique to it. It is the rarest civilian Crown Victoria of this generation.
Is a 1992-1997 Crown Victoria Police Interceptor a P71?
Yes. The 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor used the internal order code P71 and the dual-exhaust 4.6L V8 with heavy-duty cooling, electrical, and suspension components. Ford did not add the separate "Police Interceptor" name and trunk badge until the 1999 model year.
Sources
- Ford factory specification sheets and shop manuals for the 1992-1997 Crown Victoria
- Wikipedia, Ford Crown Victoria; Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor; Ford Panther platform
- Ford fleet and Police Interceptor literature (P71)
- VIN and data-plate decoding for engine, transmission, and axle identification
Asked all the time
What changed on the 1992 Ford Crown Victoria?
The 1992 Ford Crown Victoria received an aero redesign that dropped the LTD prefix and the station wagon, leaving a four-door sedan only, and replaced the pushrod 5.0L and 5.8L Windsor V8s with the 4.6L SOHC modular V8. It stayed on the rear-wheel-drive, body-on-frame Panther platform.
What engine does the 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria use?
The 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria uses the 4.6L SOHC two-valve modular V8, rated about 190 horsepower with single exhaust and about 210 horsepower with the dual-exhaust high-output tune. It replaced the earlier pushrod 5.0L (302) and 5.8L (351 Windsor) Windsor V8s.
What transmission is in the 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria?
The 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria used Ford four-speed automatics: the AOD on the earliest cars, then the electronic AODE, then the stronger 4R70W from the mid-1990s. No manual transmission was offered in this generation.
What was the 1992 Crown Victoria Touring Sedan?
The 1992 Ford Crown Victoria Touring Sedan was a performance-oriented version offered for the 1992 model year only. It paired the dual-exhaust high-output 4.6L V8 of about 210 horsepower with police-derived suspension, a limited-slip rear axle, and wider tires; four-wheel disc brakes were standard across the 1992 Crown Victoria line rather than unique to it. It is the rarest civilian Crown Victoria of this generation.
Is a 1992-1997 Crown Victoria Police Interceptor a P71?
Yes. The 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor used the internal order code P71 and the dual-exhaust 4.6L V8 with heavy-duty cooling, electrical, and suspension components. Ford did not add the separate "Police Interceptor" name and trunk badge until the 1999 model year.
The wall · registered 1992–1997 Crown Victorias
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