Jump to content
Create New...
  • William Maley
    William Maley

    Spying: Cadillac CTS, Now On The Streets

    William Maley

    Editor/Reporter - CheersandGears.com

    April 17, 2012

    We last saw a next-generation CTS mule running around the frozen tundras of Canada undergoing some cold-winter testing back in February. Fast forward two months and two CTS mules are roaming the streets in a new set of spy shots.

    As we reported back in February, the new CTS will use an extended version of the "Alpha" platform to help it better compete with the BMW 5-Series, Mercedes-Benz E-Class, and Audi A6.

    On this test mule, you can make out a large grill with two bold bars, projector headlamps with LED daytime runners, lots of radar sensors, and dual exhaust tips around the back.

    The engine lineup will likely include 2.0T as the base engine, the 3.6L DI V6, and a turbocharged V6.

    The next CTS is due sometime in late 2013 as a 2014 model.

    Source: Automobile Magazine

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    So that means the Honda Accord is 5 years of "C&D 10 Best" better than the 3 series.

    Well the Accord has been pretty much benchmark for midsize cars for almost 30 years, and a really strong seller. In the past 25-30 years, I'd say only the Camry has been as successful. The Taurus had a run from 1986-1996 when it sold pretty well, but no single model in the mid-size segment has had the success of Accord or Camry, and the Accord was always much better reviewed than the Camry was.

    The 3-series is pretty much the Accord of the entry-lux segment. I'm sure GM in 2040 would like to look back over the previous 30 years and see the CTS in the top 3 in luxury sales every year, with 25 10 Best awards on the shelf to boot.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Being on the "10 best" list of import humping magazines like Honda & Driver or BMW Trend tells me nothing of how good the car really is.

    Honda & Driver had their 3-Series test car have catastrophic brake system failure to the point of nearly wrecking and gave it first place while complaining about the thickness of the steering wheel on the CTS.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I do hope that the ATS AND the CTS are not just price-competitive with the 3 and the 5 series. Both need to be better than those BMWs just to get luxury buyers into them.

    I would have to say as a CTS owner, the pricing is competitive and the Quality is better than BMW. I compare my friends M3 to the V and I have to say I like what GM has built. I think his seats are too hard for a big guy like me and yet he thinks the seats in the V are too soft.

    You will not be able to please everyone, but I do think GM hit the head with the CTS series and I believe they will continue to improve it.

    • Agree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    The ATS and CTS both need to take that big step and not just be almost as good or as good in class, this time they need to be best in class in most general areas. Quality, Ergo, Handling, over all performance in comparible models and it needs to be better than just 6 months than the compitition.

    GM is to the point they need to take charge and move ahead and lead. They are now dealing with a new platform, restructured rules in building cars and more development money than they ever had. This time they need to get it right.

    The ATS and new CTS are the cars that will pave the way of trust to buyers who will pay more money for cars like the coming flag ship. You prove your worth and value with the lesser priced cars that people will take a chance on they will spend the kind of money on the higher priced models when they are ready.

    If you can't win trust with a $35,000 ATS how and the hell do you expect someone to pony up close to $100,000 on a unproven Cadillac. People spending this kind of money or more want to know they are going to get their moneys worth and not somthing that will be on a used car lot for $25,000 in 2 years with price drop off of some of the past expensive Cadillacs.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    CTS has a lot of plastic in the interior, it still feels cheaper and not as well built as the German cars to me. As a GM car owner that has spent a lot on maintenence, I still question if a current CTS 10 years from now will hold up, or will power windows/mirrors break, leather crack and wear out, interior trim pieces come loose, engine mounts break, engine sensors go bad, air conditioning compressor break, etc.

    Cadillac has to win people over time with rock solid build quality to keep people coming back. Cadillac for example offers 5 year roadside assistance, Mercedes is forever. Unlimited miles, years, and owners shows Mercedes has confidence in their product. Mercedes in Europe also offers a 30 year anti-corrosion warranty.

    I think you need a flagship too. Infiniti has two strong cars with the G37 and M37/M56 yet where are they? No flagship or halo car, no status, no image.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I disagree with the ideal that 'it MUST be the BESTEST EVR!!!'

    This is stated over & over with each new upcoming generation, and all it does it set the stage for "See, it didn't make it, again". It's a lot of self-fufilling nonsense.

    Too many of the criteria for buying Car A over Car B is subjective; ergonomics, seat comfort/support, etc etc.

    In the same vein, performance stats, while certainly influential, are intangible to the buyer, IE: these cars are not raced heads-up.

    Chasing the hardcore fan boys is futile in any arena, those are a strict minority demographic anyway.

    No; be competitive with vehicle dynamics & amenities, stylistically modern (and unique if you can also) & quality-driven... the buyers will follow. The CTS has already proven that.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Mercedes invented the car after all.

    When was the last time you bought a TV from Farnsworth Television and Radio Corporation? The person or company that invents something has little to do with who builds it well decades later. Sure Mercedes can brag about it, but it has zero relevance to their current products.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Too many of the criteria for buying Car A over Car B is subjective; ergonomics, seat comfort/support, etc etc.

    In the same vein, performance stats, while certainly influential, are intangible to the buyer, IE: these cars are not raced heads-up.

    I agree with that, there are many factors that lead buyer one way or the other. Some might not care at all about performance, others might make that their main priorty. But I do think on luxury cars brand image matters. This is where Cadillac falls short and what they need to repair.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    CTS has a lot of plastic in the interior, it still feels cheaper and not as well built as the German cars to me. As a GM car owner that has spent a lot on maintenence, I still question if a current CTS 10 years from now will hold up, or will power windows/mirrors break, leather crack and wear out, interior trim pieces come loose, engine mounts break, engine sensors go bad, air conditioning compressor break, etc.

    Cadillac has to win people over time with rock solid build quality to keep people coming back. Cadillac for example offers 5 year roadside assistance, Mercedes is forever. Unlimited miles, years, and owners shows Mercedes has confidence in their product. Mercedes in Europe also offers a 30 year anti-corrosion warranty.

    I think you need a flagship too. Infiniti has two strong cars with the G37 and M37/M56 yet where are they? No flagship or halo car, no status, no image.

    There are four kinds of Mercedes here in Europe.

    1. Taxis

    2. Sprinter work vans and variants

    3. Former taxis now privately owned and beat to hell

    4. The few and far between non-E-Class, non-C-Class cars that are privately owned.

    The vast majority of Benzes, probably over 90%, both here in Cologne and in Paris fall into the first 3 categories.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    CTS has a lot of plastic in the interior, it still feels cheaper and not as well built as the German cars to me. As a GM car owner that has spent a lot on maintenence, I still question if a current CTS 10 years from now will hold up, or will power windows/mirrors break, leather crack and wear out, interior trim pieces come loose, engine mounts break, engine sensors go bad, air conditioning compressor break, etc. Cadillac has to win people over time with rock solid build quality to keep people coming back. Cadillac for example offers 5 year roadside assistance, Mercedes is forever. Unlimited miles, years, and owners shows Mercedes has confidence in their product. Mercedes in Europe also offers a 30 year anti-corrosion warranty. I think you need a flagship too. Infiniti has two strong cars with the G37 and M37/M56 yet where are they? No flagship or halo car, no status, no image.
    There are four kinds of Mercedes here in Europe. 1. Taxis 2. Sprinter work vans and variants 3. Former taxis now privately owned and beat to hell 4. The few and far between non-E-Class, non-C-Class cars that are privately owned. The vast majority of Benzes, probably over 90%, both here in Cologne and in Paris fall into the first 3 categories.

    and as I thought about it more, there is no way to discern those Benzes in group 4 that are company cars bought for employees and Benzes that were sold retail to someone who really wanted a Benz... other than the fact that company cars rarely come in a color other than black, silver, or beige. Very few Benzes here are ANY color other than black, silver, or beige.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    The Image of Mercedes is different in Europe vs the States. Same for China. Hell Buick means more to many more in China than here.

    While this is a global industry the cars are not always playing to the same criteria in each market.

    I do have to agree image in the luxury group goes a long way here in the states. Cadillac has been repairing it's image but it still has work to do in this area. You can not just design in image and desire for the buyer, you have to earn it. Cadillac is doing it right by getting the ATS and CTS to the point where the general luxury car buyer will consider them. The price is right. I expect the performance to be pretty much right and the styling on the new ATS and from what we see here on the CTS is more in line what the general buyer is looking for but still with a Cadillac edge. It may not be as hard edged but it is still there.

    BMW and Benz did not take over from Cadillac and Lincoln in one year as it took years to take the market. It also was taken from two weak players at the time they did it. While Benz and BMW are the end all be all of cars they are still strong players and the segment leaders as far as the buying public is concerned. GM can win this back with the right moves and time. As for Lincoln Dan is right they need Holy Water and billions in investment just to get to where Cadillac is at. It is late in the game for them and I am not sure Ford can pull it off if a weak economy remains and the models do not improve a lot over what they have now.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    There are four kinds of Mercedes here in Europe.

    1. Taxis

    2. Sprinter work vans and variants

    3. Former taxis now privately owned and beat to hell

    4. The few and far between non-E-Class, non-C-Class cars that are privately owned.

    The vast majority of Benzes, probably over 90%, both here in Cologne and in Paris fall into the first 3 categories.

    And yet, the CTS still has a plasticy interior, and Cadillac can't manage to get any sales in Europe. And Cadillac is still drifing around 5th place in sales in their home market. If Mercedes is so flawed, it should be easy for Cadillac pass them by and make a $100k car that sells 75,000 units globally per year, and get 500k sales out of the CTS and ATS.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    There are four kinds of Mercedes here in Europe.

    1. Taxis

    2. Sprinter work vans and variants

    3. Former taxis now privately owned and beat to hell

    4. The few and far between non-E-Class, non-C-Class cars that are privately owned.

    The vast majority of Benzes, probably over 90%, both here in Cologne and in Paris fall into the first 3 categories.

    And yet, the CTS still has a plasticy interior, and Cadillac can't manage to get any sales in Europe. And Cadillac is still drifing around 5th place in sales in their home market. If Mercedes is so flawed, it should be easy for Cadillac pass them by and make a $100k car that sells 75,000 units globally per year, and get 500k sales out of the CTS and ATS.

    It would be easy but people are hung up on a name and GM still has to overcome 20+ years of Consumer reports and news bashing them even when they did not deserve it. No they still get no respectible press.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    There are four kinds of Mercedes here in Europe.

    1. Taxis

    2. Sprinter work vans and variants

    3. Former taxis now privately owned and beat to hell

    4. The few and far between non-E-Class, non-C-Class cars that are privately owned.

    The vast majority of Benzes, probably over 90%, both here in Cologne and in Paris fall into the first 3 categories.

    And yet, the CTS still has a plasticy interior, and Cadillac can't manage to get any sales in Europe. And Cadillac is still drifing around 5th place in sales in their home market. If Mercedes is so flawed, it should be easy for Cadillac pass them by and make a $100k car that sells 75,000 units globally per year, and get 500k sales out of the CTS and ATS.

    It would be easy but people are hung up on a name and GM still has to overcome 20+ years of Consumer reports and news bashing them even when they did not deserve it. No they still get no respectible press.

    Righ so how does one change that image? Better product, flagship sedan, halo sports car, longer warranty, expanded roadside assistance, better service/dealer experience, advertising, etc. But mainly better product, and not a Chevy Impala with extra wood trim and a touch screen.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    GM also needs to force dealerships to invest in upgrading their place of business. The Caddy dealership I have bought my last 3 from is soooooo dated. They still have Olds, Pontiac and Hummer on their signage out front and the inside has not been remodeled since 92 as I asked.

    I remember some pictures of some beautiful Caddy dealerships in China. They need to do this here. The local Lexus dealership went from an old building to a 3 story amazing swank digs with an awesome drop off and pick up area. They really need to have all Caddy dealerships modern and world class in addition to the cars and trucks they sell.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    There are four kinds of Mercedes here in Europe.

    1. Taxis

    2. Sprinter work vans and variants

    3. Former taxis now privately owned and beat to hell

    4. The few and far between non-E-Class, non-C-Class cars that are privately owned.

    The vast majority of Benzes, probably over 90%, both here in Cologne and in Paris fall into the first 3 categories.

    Quite true- mercedes has an abysmal private ownership rate in Germany. This is where mercedees falls short and what they need to repair.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    There are four kinds of Mercedes here in Europe.

    1. Taxis

    2. Sprinter work vans and variants

    3. Former taxis now privately owned and beat to hell

    4. The few and far between non-E-Class, non-C-Class cars that are privately owned.

    The vast majority of Benzes, probably over 90%, both here in Cologne and in Paris fall into the first 3 categories.

    And yet, the CTS still has a plasticy interior, and Cadillac can't manage to get any sales in Europe. And Cadillac is still drifing around 5th place in sales in their home market. If Mercedes is so flawed, it should be easy for Cadillac pass them by and make a $100k car that sells 75,000 units globally per year, and get 500k sales out of the CTS and ATS.

    The C-class interior is just as plasticy. Cadillac will only get 500k in sales from the CTS if they turn into Mercedes McFleetwhore and flood the taxicab market in Europe with them. C-class and E-class taxis here are as common as Crown Vics in the states. If that is what you want of Cadillac, you are insane.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    There are four kinds of Mercedes here in Europe.

    1. Taxis

    2. Sprinter work vans and variants

    3. Former taxis now privately owned and beat to hell

    4. The few and far between non-E-Class, non-C-Class cars that are privately owned.

    The vast majority of Benzes, probably over 90%, both here in Cologne and in Paris fall into the first 3 categories.

    And yet, the CTS still has a plasticy interior, and Cadillac can't manage to get any sales in Europe. And Cadillac is still drifing around 5th place in sales in their home market. If Mercedes is so flawed, it should be easy for Cadillac pass them by and make a $100k car that sells 75,000 units globally per year, and get 500k sales out of the CTS and ATS.

    The C-class interior is just as plasticy. Cadillac will only get 500k in sales from the CTS if they turn into Mercedes McFleetwhore and flood the taxicab market in Europe with them. C-class and E-class taxis here are as common as Crown Vics in the states. If that is what you want of Cadillac, you are insane.

    NO NO NO, NO FLEET SALES!!! :explode:

    The last thing GM needs to do is Whore out the CTS!

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    There are four kinds of Mercedes here in Europe.

    1. Taxis

    2. Sprinter work vans and variants

    3. Former taxis now privately owned and beat to hell

    4. The few and far between non-E-Class, non-C-Class cars that are privately owned.

    The vast majority of Benzes, probably over 90%, both here in Cologne and in Paris fall into the first 3 categories.

    And yet, the CTS still has a plasticy interior, and Cadillac can't manage to get any sales in Europe. And Cadillac is still drifing around 5th place in sales in their home market. If Mercedes is so flawed, it should be easy for Cadillac pass them by and make a $100k car that sells 75,000 units globally per year, and get 500k sales out of the CTS and ATS.

    The C-class interior is just as plasticy. Cadillac will only get 500k in sales from the CTS if they turn into Mercedes McFleetwhore and flood the taxicab market in Europe with them. C-class and E-class taxis here are as common as Crown Vics in the states. If that is what you want of Cadillac, you are insane.

    NO NO NO, NO FLEET SALES!!! :explode:

    The last thing GM needs to do is Whore out the CTS!

    That is why we have the XTS!

    No matter what they are made of or how they are built Cadillac needs to restore it's precieved image and branding back to what it used to be. While they still need to build the best car in class they still need the public to accept them as the standard. As Toyota has proven with the Camry the best cars is not always seen by the public as the best car.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    There are four kinds of Mercedes here in Europe.

    1. Taxis

    2. Sprinter work vans and variants

    3. Former taxis now privately owned and beat to hell

    4. The few and far between non-E-Class, non-C-Class cars that are privately owned.

    The vast majority of Benzes, probably over 90%, both here in Cologne and in Paris fall into the first 3 categories.

    And yet, the CTS still has a plasticy interior, and Cadillac can't manage to get any sales in Europe. And Cadillac is still drifing around 5th place in sales in their home market. If Mercedes is so flawed, it should be easy for Cadillac pass them by and make a $100k car that sells 75,000 units globally per year, and get 500k sales out of the CTS and ATS.

    The C-class interior is just as plasticy. Cadillac will only get 500k in sales from the CTS if they turn into Mercedes McFleetwhore and flood the taxicab market in Europe with them. C-class and E-class taxis here are as common as Crown Vics in the states. If that is what you want of Cadillac, you are insane.

    NO NO NO, NO FLEET SALES!!! :explode: The last thing GM needs to do is Whore out the CTS!

    Oh no; smk demands Cadillac ape every move made by the mercedees/BMW twins, so that means ballooning fleet sales to 65% of sales! :stupid:

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    If Mercedes and BMW have such poor images and are just fleet whores in Europe, why can't Cadillac make it in Europe? How many Cadillacs sold in Germany last year? And why can't Cadillac compete with BMW or Mercedes in the USA? What about China, where Audi is the government sedan of choice, and Mercedes and BMW are not the taxi, yet they are #2 and #3 selling 150-170,000 cars each there.

    Cadillac sold 28,000 cars in China last year, 3% of the luxury car market there. The Audi Q5 alone sold 32,000 in China, with the Audi brand doing 225,000 sales. China in 2015 is expected to have a larger premium car market than the USA does. Cadillac can't be a 3% player there, and in the USA see sales drop from 235,000 in 2005, to 152,000 in 2011, while having almost no presence in Europe.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Local Buick-GMC and Chevy dealerships just went through their GM-supervised renovation, and the buildings look great. I know Cadillac dealerships are in line for "forced" renovations as well, coming to a Caddy dealership near you soon!

    And Cadillac is at or near the top in sales and service satisfaction scores year after year.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    And Cadillac is at or near the top in sales and service satisfaction scores year after year.

    Which is what I've read also. Looks like that needs to be stricken from smk's bumper sticker response of What's Eternally Wrong with Cadillac. ;)

    • Agree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    +1

    but I will add that there are lots of Cadillac dealerships still out there that need to be bulldozed and rebuilt to today's standards rather than being stuck in 1978 like so many are. The dealer SMK and I both have dealt with has superb service, but highly dated dealership.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    GM has the car line going to where it needs to be. They still need a few tweeks to the CTS and they needs a few more models like the flagship and other cars to fill out the line up. But still the first real step is to get the ATS and the new CTS in the market and really push them. They will be the foundation that Cadillac will be built on from this point forward.

    The Dealers for the most were not a major problem for service. Most that I have had to deal with were top notch. The buildings needed upgraded and like stated a few still need to upgrade or removed.

    The way I see Cadillac from there forward is like what I see planting grass seed in a new lawn. We did a lot of building last year and I had to regrade the soil plant the seed and fertilize it. Now I just need to keep feeding it water and more improvments with fertilizer to keep it's growth in the right direction. If neglected it would wither.

    GM is doing the same now. They have preped the base with great service and now just need to properly tend it to let it grow. With the right mic of care the division image will grow with the public and the right mix of products people want they will seek them out. The quality and technology will help sell these people cars.

    GM can do all that is needed but it will still take time for the division to earn the trust and interest of the public. It is easier to create a new company like like Lexus vs trying to reverse the image of the sins of the past by companies like Cadillac or Lincoln.

    The way I see it Cadillac is well on the way and as long as they keep this path they will do well. Now I see Lincoln they are still at risk as they still have yet to show us any product worth consideration. With the planned investment they will need to change this or they will fail.

    To be honest in this segment I really don't see a single solid player who will dominate in the future. Benz and BMW have done some wonderful things but they also have shown they can fail in product and quality. the Aisan companies can show they can play it too safe. This I feel is the opening here Cadillac can show they are a player with the right product and qaulity. But again they have to earn that trust of the public as you can not design it or engineer it into the car. Only Time and proof you have solid quality product can earn it for you.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    +1

    but I will add that there are lots of Cadillac dealerships still out there that need to be bulldozed and rebuilt to today's standards rather than being stuck in 1978 like so many are. The dealer SMK and I both have dealt with has superb service, but highly dated dealership.

    They are a dated dealer, they also charge a lot. I had a quote a couple years back for $2800 from them to replace a solenid and torque converter, and a transmission repair place did it for $1400. So to me the dealer doesn't matter too much on buying a car, I probably wouldn't go back to it very much anyway. I buy a car, not a dealership, although a fancy dealership may get some people to get a good feeling about the product that is in it.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    All dealers are like that in pricing. I never had any out of warranty work done there, so I don't know if their service prices are high or not. I went to that place because I was treated like crap at the fancy new Cadillac store in Monroeville at the time.

    To be fair, you also have an oddball car to work on.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    All dealers are like that in pricing. I never had any out of warranty work done there, so I don't know if their service prices are high or not. I went to that place because I was treated like crap at the fancy new Cadillac store in Monroeville at the time.

    To be fair, you also have an oddball car to work on.

    True on all acounts. Dealer pricing anywhere is high, I think it is cheaper and easier to deal with the Jiffy Lube, Midas, Mieneke type service shops. And my car is hard to work on. But I will say they are friendly and fix the car right every time in Wexford.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    But one thing I will say the dealerships have going for it. GM warranty's their repairs for life or at least they do here in Seattle as I have had things fixed and had to go back later on and got it covered by GM.

    One thing I really hate is a Grease Monkey changing your oil and they over torque the drain plug and your left with leaky plug. I know the dealerships charge more, my caddy dealership charges $89 for a Mobil 1 synthetic change compared to the $69 at the local Grease Monkey. I do not mind paying the $20 more when they check out the rest of the car and let me know what other services might be coming up or if there is any other issues they came across.

    Yea the Grease monkey followes the schedules service and tells you what is due, but they are not trained in knowing your car like the dealership. If I can do the repair or tune up myself, great I get it done, but other wise take it to the dealership.

    I do wish the Dougs Cadillac dealership on Highway 99 would remodel or rebuild as the building shows its 60 heritage of when it was built. They really need to modernize.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Finding a dealer to service my car is getting hard these days. :P

    I always let my Cadillac dealer service my CTS. Oil changes weren't very expensive and they even would pick the car up from my office for me. The oil life monitor was on a 10k schedule it seemed, so $65 once every 12 months for a full synth oil change wasn't unreasonable.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Yea, caddy does love to pick up the cars from your work and return them. I do love the service I get from my dealership even though the building is way out of date.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    This is the last building that housed Beverly Hills Cadillac. Dated? Maybe a little. But with a little polish and an interior redo I can see them selling Kanye a Ciel or Leonardo an ELR..closeddealerFordBeverlyHillsS503297.jpg

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    This is the last building that housed Beverly Hills Cadillac. Dated? Maybe a little. But with a little polish and an interior redo I can see them selling Kanye a Ciel or Leonardo an ELR..closeddealerFordBeverlyHillsS503297.jpg

    Yes I would agree that this building with a proper interior remodel and an exterior cleaning fresh up would have plenty of potential as a modern Caddy dealership.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Make the new dealer more hip and stick the tail of a 59 out of the front or roof like a Hard Rock Cafe LOL!

    The one in Maui has a near mock up of a custom 59 over the bar.

    I would love to see them incorperate some thing like even a mock up of the CTSV race cars or other image builders.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Make the new dealer more hip and stick the tail of a 59 out of the front or roof like a Hard Rock Cafe LOL!

    That's pure idiocy. You don't desecrate past iconic product by taking a chainsaw & making a wallhanging out of it.

    If you mock yourself, why shouldn't everyone else??

    What would be more sensible & cater to the lux crowd AND the marque's heritage could be, say, large reproductions of factory art, AKA:

    1958CadillacFleetwood60SpecialEnter.jpg

    Edited by balthazar
    • Agree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Make the new dealer more hip and stick the tail of a 59 out of the front or roof like a Hard Rock Cafe LOL!

    That's pure idiocy. You don't desecrate past iconic product by taking a chainsaw & making a wallhanging out of it.

    If you mock yourself, why shouldn't everyone else??

    What would be more sensible & cater to the lux crowd AND the marque's heritage could be, say, large reproductions of factory art, AKA:

    1958CadillacFleetwood60SpecialEnter.jpg

    You seem to be too old to understand.

    First off you would use a fiberglass repo as only an idiot would think to use a chain saw on a real car. Value and weight would be off the chart.

    Second many items are reproduced today into wall fixtures, furniture and items of art.

    It is all in what you like and want. The fact is you want to attract younger buyers you have to think younger art. While I love art deco myself it is not real big with the under 50 crowd.

    Might look around in the high end magazines that cater to home auto items and garage items for the big spender. These guys spend thousands of dollars for Mustang Pool tables and 57 Chevy love seats.

    A table made out of Auto Items also are prized.

    Our one division at work makes a lot of money from rich guys paying much for high mark up items like this.

    One mans mocking is another mans Man Cave.

    While the German dealers are industrial and technical like the new Benz dealer I pass daily the American one should be well more American. I deal with people in Asia and Europe at work that love the things American so I see it even playing well overseas.

    A little art deco from the 30's Cadillac is fine but they should use a little styling too from one of the most remembered eras the 50's.

    Even the Cadillac Ranch is well know and liked world wide.

    Edited by hyperv6
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    You seem to misunderstand the mission here.

    The fiberglas replicas are cheap, inaccurate & low-end, not upscale. They have all the class of kiddie rides outside Wal-Mart.

    Yes, many have taken the gas axe to real actual cars- that's how the whole couch thing started in the late '80s.

    I've seen photo-documentation of ripping a car & creating an empty shell to put up on a wall; hollowed out they're not heavy. Either way, either implying or actually cutting up your own product is not the means to upgrade your image/showroom.

    This is not a personal expression 'man cave', it's supposed to be an upscale, enticing, classy showroom.

    Cadillac Ranch reminds me of the clueless Cadillac dealer that smashed up a '53 for a publicity stunt.

    That stupid stunt was well hated & panned worldwide. Old think & the wrong direction.

    Edited by balthazar
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    ^ I've known about Cadillac Ranch for decades, a LOT of people deride/denounce it.

    I suppose those that find bashing a old car with a sledgehammer would find it 'neat'. :banghead:

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    ^ I've known about Cadillac Ranch for decades, a LOT of people deride/denounce it.

    I suppose those that find bashing a old car with a sledgehammer would find it 'neat'. :banghead:

    Yeah, that's the silly 'art' thing in Texas..the one I'm talking about is a bar...

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    You guys really have little clue to some of the more recent retail trends.

    Summit Racng has built several retail stores that features auto themes with real race cars. The one here in Akron featers vintage front engine rails, Pro mod car, Several NASCAR Stock cars and Swamp Rat 32 Top fuel car hung from the Ceiling. We also have several Quaker Steak and Lube Resturants here that feature many different cars and old petro items. The one in Sharon has everything from a Harley Collection, To a Vette on the ceiling in the Vette Room To a Mario Andretti Indy car on the wall in the Gasoline Alley room. They also have the side of one of the old Castrol XJR9 IMSA racers. they even have a 37 Chevy on the rack with tables under it with many vintage auto items all around. There is even more there. The One in Canton has a Miller Stock car, Corvettes, Indy car in the entry ares with a Funny car going up the wall.

    The way I see it a Cadillac dealer styled with many items from their past. I would not do it too way out but a tail that is a exact repo is easy to find would be nice or even have a old restored classic Caddy in the Showroom. Even something like a 67 in perfect condition would add to the experience.

    The photo above from Tempe is a good example of what could be done.

    Note a Chrysler Dodge dealer here has done this with some old muscle cars like an old Challanger parked next to a new Challanger in the show room. They also were able to get some of the more famous race cars from Dodge's past and have them on display.

    We even had a Goodyear store here in the mall with a real Indy car and even Walker Evens Power Wagon on display for nearly 20 years. They also had Richard Pettys Superbird on display.

    All I am saying is it would be nice to display parts and cars of Cadillacs better times in the past. It could be done tastefully.

    As for the Cadillac Ranch in TX.. Like it or not it is considered a Icon. Storys have been written about it, Songs have been sung about it, Movies have been made around it. No matter if you approve of it or not it has created a lasting image in American history and even if Cadillac vanished from the market in a year it would still carry the legacy.

    The Idea today is to make retail locations more than just a retail location. You want to make them something that will draw people inside to see what you have. If you do it right they will come from miles. While I would tone down what Summit and The Lube have done I would want to make the show room a draw no matter what cars you have in it.

    That is what the Hard Rocks do. They have ok food and they are normally crowded but most will make you wait in line to get a seat as people are drawn in. That is what I would like to see in a new dealer.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • google-news-icon.png



  • google-news-icon.png

  • Subscribe to Cheers & Gears

    Cheers and Gears Logo

    Since 2001 we've brought you real content and honest opinions, not AI-generated stuff with no feeling or opinions influenced by the manufacturers.

    Please consider subscribing. Subscriptions can be as little as $1.75 a month, and a paid subscription drops most ads.*
     

    You can view subscription options here.

    *a very limited number of ads contain special coupon deals for our members and will show

  • Community Hive Community Hive

    Community Hive allows you to follow your favorite communities all in one place.

    Follow on Community Hive
  • Posts

    • I am not aware of travel cases for internal drives. Usually you have the drive and once you have made sure you own static electricity is discharged on your body, open the computer and unplug the power cable and data cable to the HD. Then you unscrew the screws holding the drive in. Put the drive into an Anti-Static bag and then usually into a box that has foam padding on all sides to protect the drive and then tape it up to close it.  With both drives in their proper storage bags, you can then have both drives in between foam insulation for handling any dropping of the box, etc. Pack them in a box and tape shut, should then easily handle going through your carry on or checked in luggage. To ship a hard drive, you need to: Secure the hard drive in its original packaging or anti-static bag. If you don't have an anti-static bag, place the drive into a zipped freezer bag to prevent any moisture getting into the drive during transit. Sandwich the drive between foam or wrap it in bubble wrap to absorb any minor shocks. Put the hard drive in a padded shipping box. Close and seal the box. Label your package. Amazon.com : hard drive shipping box This is pretty much all you need.
    • Either a co-pilot first time landing or something truly went wrong on the plane.
    • The incoming rectangular lamps on many GM cars in that era made them much more attractive.  They made a big difference. Now, as far the powerplant went, the notion of 500 cubic inches was mindboggling even during the malaise era.  If you want to see someone's jaw drop, tell a European that their engines have 8200 cc or 8.2 liters.  For those who aren't driving the occasional Mustang or Camaro you see, they freak out at anything over 2,500 or 3,000 cc.
    • Thank you for the response. I want to reinstall them into the computers, especially the "newer" one.  The old one has been a real champ.   The reason for not leaving them in the desktop is that the basic tower might have to be transported ... and not by me.  That means it will be out of my possession for a while.  Since the HDs would be traveling with me, they'll have to get scanned through airport security a time or two.  I'm guessing that shouldn't mess with the data.   I've already backed up the C drive on several large 1 TB portable hard drives.  I don't want to touch the basic functions and files on the computers since I don't know how that all works.  I stay away from the drives and files I am not familiar with. I tend to donate other things to charity.   I did give the Regal I once owned to charity.   A good friend told me that, about a month or two later, he saw it being driven around the city by its new owner and we had a good laugh. This is what I want to do.  I'm just trying to figure out if the guy or gal at Office Depot can size a case based on looking up the unit and the HD in it.  Any ideas on that part?  Or should I do that and approximate the size and weight of the part to get the cases?
    • I'm wondering about a lot of things related to this.  I am sure that, sadly, the passengers inside were jolted.  This is way different from a rough landing. Why was it even necessary to do it?  What was going on at the airport property at that time?  How does one even pull this off?  I've seen some vids of where they barely touch and then go off again, but this one looks way more complicated.
  • Who's Online (See full list)

    • There are no registered users currently online
  • My Clubs

×
×
  • Create New...

Hey there, we noticed you're using an ad-blocker. We're a small site that is supported by ads or subscriptions. We rely on these to pay for server costs and vehicle reviews.  Please consider whitelisting us in your ad-blocker, or if you really like what you see, you can pick up one of our subscriptions for just $1.75 a month or $15 a year. It may not seem like a lot, but it goes a long way to help support real, honest content, that isn't generated by an AI bot.

See you out there.

Drew
Editor-in-Chief

Write what you are looking for and press enter or click the search icon to begin your search

Change privacy settings