2023 Lincoln Corsair Debuts With Bigger Maw, ActiveGlide Driver Assist

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

Now they’ve binned everything that is not an SUV, Lincoln is free to spend its allowance as it sees fit on new clothes and tech for its crossover lineup. To be fair, that style of vehicle is the beyond-dominant preference of most shoppers in the Lincoln demographic – and the brand would be ill-advised to walk away from those profits. Doesn’t make us pine any less for a Continental with coach doors.


Corsair – a good, pronounceable which rounds out a lineup that has finally binned the MK-Soup – is Lincoln’s best-selling nameplate, representing the cutthroat luxury crossover segment that’s inhabited by well-established players from Japanese and German brands. For 2023, car spotters will immediately spy the larger grille, one which now dips dramatically towards the pavement yet seems to work pretty well with the vertically arranged drops that look like miniature denuded Lincoln logos. Those DRL wings under the headlamps have also been massaged.

Driver assists are all the rage these days, and the Blue Oval Lincoln seems determined not to miss the boat. Their take on the feature is called ActiveGlide, which may sound like a tool used to aid the insertion of a suppository but is actually a suite of tools to assist with lane changes and it also uses AI to predict the flow of traffic at curves. Specifically, the Lane Change Assist can perform a hands-free lane change when the driver taps the turn signal and suggests a lane change in slow-moving traffic.

Meanwhile, Predictive Speed Assist automatically adjusts the car’s speed as drivers approach a sharp curve, signaling the driver ahead of time when a speed change is about to occur. Toss in lane keeping which is more than just ping-ponging off lane markers and a next-gen Intersection Assist system to help keep drivers from mowing down pedestrians while turning and you have the makings of a decently robust roster of tools – even if it does sound a step behind SuperCruise for now.


The little Lincoln will be available with either a 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder gas engine making 250 horsepower or a 2.5-liter plug-in hybrid in the Grand Touring trim. That model’s internal combustion and electrons tag team to produce a combined 266 ponies. An intelligent all-wheel drive system switches between front- and all-wheel drive, as most of these systems do, depending on road conditions.

Lincoln continues to being the heat with its interior design, introducing a Smoked Truffle colorway along with a zesty Eternal Red. The sooner Ford and its divisions get back to the deep bordello reds and thick ocean blues they used to offer in the ‘80s and ‘90s, the better. I want these options on my next F-150. Lincoln suit Liam Butler, who toils in the brand’s color and materials department, seems to agree. “Color plays a major role,” he said, explaining that “shift the mood of the interior, creating a warm environment and a luxurious experience.” He’s right.

The ‘23 Corsair will be built in Kentucky, with orders being taken immediately. These machines should begin arriving in showrooms early in the 2023 calendar year.

[Images: Lincoln]

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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

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  • Kcflyer Kcflyer on Sep 13, 2022

    But can you actually go to a dealer and buy one? For MSRP or less? If not than why bother.

    • Cprescott Cprescott on Sep 13, 2022

      I agree. Current situation makes it so undesirable to buy anything from a dealer. You just know you are going to get played. I'll keep my current ride until i MUST buy something. Assuming I can get parts to get this current car repaired, it makes no sense to pad a dealer's pocket while instantly making myself upside down.


  • MaintenanceCosts MaintenanceCosts on Sep 14, 2022

    The grille looks like Lincoln; the rest looks like a reasonable but derivative matchup of Audi and Land Rover cues. The real question in my mind, and one I can't answer until I see one in person, is whether the interior materials have suffered from Farley cost-cutting to the point where the car can't compete.

  • EBFlex Interesting. We are told there is insatiable demand for EVs yet here is another major manufacturer pivoting away from EV manufacturing and going to hybrid. Did these manufacturers finally realize that the government lied to them and that consumers really don’t want EVs?
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X What's worse than a Malibu?
  • MaintenanceCosts The current Malibu is poorly packaged; there's far more room inside a Camry or Accord, even though the exterior footprint is similar. It doesn't have any standout attributes to balance out the poor packaging. I won't miss it. But it is regrettable that none of our US-based carmakers will be selling an ordinary sedan in their home market.
  • Jkross22 You can tell these companies are phoning these big sedans in. Tech isn't luxury. Hard to figure out isn't luxury.This looks terrible, there are a lot of screens, there's a lot to get used to and it's not that powerful. BMW gave up on this car along time ago. The nesting doll approach used to work when all of their cars were phenomenal. It doesn't work when there's nothing to aspire to with this brand, which is where they are today. Just had seen an A8 - prior generation before the current. What a sharp looking car. I didn't like how they drove, but they were beautifully designed. The current LS is a dog. The new A8 is ok, but the interior is a disaster, the Mercedes is peak gaudy and arguably Genesis gets closest to what these all should be, although it's no looker either.
  • Ajla My only experience with this final version of the Malibu was a lady in her 70s literally crying to me about having one as a loaner while her Equinox got its engine replaced under warranty. The problem was that she could not comfortably get in and out of it.
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