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2008 Cadillac CTS4 --- [ TEST DRIVE ]


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Review: 2nd Generation CTS

Most of you know that I have recently found employment in the automotive

business again. I am now working at a large Chevrolet-Cadillac dealer in

New Hampshire as a sales representative.

It's been a very busy week. I swapped in a 2007 Suburban LTZ for a very

selective lease customer & also sold XP715's girlfriend a gently-used 2005

Pontiac G6 with the sky-view roof.

Tomorrow is a really big day for me, more on that later. My computer is

being difficult but I wanted to share a quick review of the 08 CTS with all

of you fellow CheersAndGears members. As requested by several of you,

I took another quick drive in the white diamond 2008 Cadillac CTS 4 that

we received on Wednesday. This particular Caddy is loaded, it's a CTS-4

which designates AWD. It is powered by the much talked about natrually

aspired Direct Injection V6 which puts out 300+ horsepower and yet

displaces only 3.6 liters.

Another logistical issue was taking a joy ride in a car that has been under

a microscope since the second it came off the back of the car carrier. I

was the first salesman to take it out on Wed. morning, I had a legitimate

customer interested in the car. When I got back to the dealership two of

the big bosses were observing my customer's not so perfect parking job

from in front of the Atomic Orange Corvette Indy Pace Car behind the big

picture window on the second floor.

Well I drove the car and I have to tell you I was NOT dissapointed. A few

weeks ago Motor Trend pronounced, on the front page no less that the

all new 2008 CTS is the "best Cadillac in 50 years". At the time, I instantly

thought that the 1959, 1961 & 1967-1968 deVilles & 1967-1968 Eldorados

are much better cars, esp. in terms of styling, comfort and elegace.

Now my preferance for classic cars is not changing any time soon but I

will say that as far as a 2008 model year car the Cadillac CTS4 is a very

well priced and in some ways class leading car.

I wish I had the chance to REALLY open up the car on a "closed circuit"

but as it stands I can honestly say the car is powerful, sure footed and

more importantly luxurious in all the right ways. Brakes, steering, throttle

response & the awsome RWD chassis are tuned first and foremost to

go for BMW's throat while not giving up near-DTS style comfort.

What I loved:

- Instant throttle response

- Near-Northstar levels of horsepower and torque available at almost any RPM

- One of the cleanest designs since the 1960s.

- Knife edge styling inside & out

- Excellent mix of comfort & cornering ability engineered into the suspension

- Fits like a glove sports-sedan interior, cozy but not cramped

- Excelelnt ergonomics, a real driver's car

What I was not so impressed with:

- Ultra-view sunroof adds needless weight, cost and complexity

- Small trunk for a car of this size

- Rear seat access, door opening is a bit cramped for a Cadillac

- Plastic "RubberMaid Deluxe" engine cover & underhood dust covers

What I hated:

- Cheap look & feel of the power sun shade on the monroof, droops low like a canopy

These photos are very poor quality since I took them using my Razor phone.

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Edited by Sixty8panther
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I''ll take some photos with my digital camera on Monday.

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Edited by Sixty8panther
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Teehee, there's a good chance I've already sat in that exact car! haha

Please do explain...

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I drove the 3.6 liter 258 hp awd version yesterday. I was really impressed. I'm a gearhead so I'm definitely getting the 300hp DI motor but the base motor was superior to the Audi A4, Mercedes new 350 sport, the Volvo S80. Linclon AWD Sedan I've driven lately.

Forgetting even the performance or good exterior looks. I thought the interior was stunning. Not to be a pia and disagree but the trunk space I saw in the new CTS was HUGE!

Congratulations on your new position.

I can't tell from the photos..whats your opinion of the 18 inch rims both in polished and painted versions?

JB

Edited by JBsZ06
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This car had polished rims and they looked FANTASTIC.

I guess in terms of trunk space it's not a fair to compare this to the last

three Cadillacs I've daily driven, the TWCC demo 1971 Sedan deVille,

my old (& XP's new) 1977 Coupe deVille & a 1986 Fleetwood Brougham.

Now THOSE have some serious trunk space. :yes:

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JBsZO6 - About the polished versus the painted wheels. I ordered the painted, figuring if they weren't shiny enough I could have them stripped and chromed for less than the polished option. When I got the car, I was very happy with the painted wheels. I'd describe them as "satin." They look very nice. I won't be having them chromed.

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cadillac will combine 'near DTS' comfort with 3 series capabilities. its what will distinguish caddy and set it apart from 'just a 3 series' or 'just an audi'

re: big ass moonroofs, i admire that they all think customers want them, and some do, but please also offer just the regular sized moonroof. On the edge, for example, I cannot get a plain SE or SEL with a regular sunroof. you gotta have the huge thing. I don't like the big ones because they let way too much sun in the car. the sunshades never are completely light blocking and are often flimsy. your interior will go toast fast and driving with sun rays in my face is not desired. i'd also rather prefer that the BAMR's get proven for awhile before I ante up for one.

The SRX had one of my favorite interiors this year at the auto show. so i know the CTS's will be good too. i liked the last gen 3 series interior a lot but the new 3 series and other BMW's have interior deficiencies. i am sure the CTS will stand out in relation to the economy car interior in the new 3 series.

interestingly enough, i saw a new c class on the road the other day. i had been warming up to them in pictures after initial 'no'. well, seeing them live re affirms my 'NO' big time. they look like econocars, a deliberate effort to dumb down the looks of the merc so the twentysomethings with their first paycheck will be attracted to them. they do not give off any sort of vibe about them that says 'expensive car' because they want to attract the image conscious young pups who might have money in the future, they just don't have any real wealth now. they look more like riced up lancers with merc badges on them for people who want to move up from japanese to german but don't really have anything on the personal balance sheet. they just now finally can get credit and still have enough money leftover for 4 different kinds of 'axe' in their shower.

the CTS will NOT have to take a backseat to the new Merc in the style dept.

Edited by regfootball
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I look forward to driving one as well, I need to be at the dealer for an inspection in a couple weeks so I hope they have one. I am a few years away from buying a car, but my step dad is kind of looking, although he has a V8 BMW which I suspect could mop the floor with a new CTS, so I don't know if he'd want one. He drove a G35 and thought it was crap.

I think Cadillac dropped the ball with the plastic on the grille and base wheels. If they spent and extra $1000 and raised the base price $1000 they could have fixed that. GM never wants to go the distance, they go 90% of the way and think it is good enough. To get ahead of the competition they need to go the distance, hold nothing back.

I fear the CTS's weight will be an issue, I read a review today where they tested it at Leguna Seca, and said even with the 304 hp engine, it wasn't enough to get up the long hill with any kind of excitement. To me, a 4000 lb car needs 300 hp base and about 380 optional to be competitive now, the CTS doesn't have that. I hope to buy a Cadillac as my next car, but I don't think the CTS is top of the class yet, I think they have crushed Lincoln, Volvo, Sabb, Acura, etc, but not yet taken down the big boys. Plus it is only 1 car, Cadillac needs 3-4 more vehicles that are fantastic to get their image back.

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I think Cadillac dropped the ball with the plastic on the grille and base wheels. If they spent and extra $1000 and raised the base price $1000 they could have fixed that. GM never wants to go the distance, they go 90% of the way and think it is good enough. To get ahead of the competition they need to go the distance, hold nothing back.

I fear the CTS's weight will be an issue, I read a review today where they tested it at Leguna Seca, and said even with the 304 hp engine, it wasn't enough to get up the long hill with any kind of excitement. To me, a 4000 lb car needs 300 hp base and about 380 optional to be competitive now, the CTS doesn't have that. I hope to buy a Cadillac as my next car, but I don't think the CTS is top of the class yet, I think they have crushed Lincoln, Volvo, Sabb, Acura, etc, but not yet taken down the big boys. Plus it is only 1 car, Cadillac needs 3-4 more vehicles that are fantastic to get their image back.

90% of the way? Please, the CTS is much farther than 90% of the way to being perfect. The plastic grill will be fine... most grills are plastic. Base wheels are base wheels... that's why there are optional ones that I suspect most people will get. Last I checked, the wheels on the base 3er and C-Class are nothing to write home about, either.

The CTS w/DI clocked 0-60 in 5.8s. That's plenty respectable.

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I still don't see me trading in my BMW 330i for a CTS anytime soon. I bought a BMW because I wanted a driver's car...that does not appear to be the CTS's mission in life. That pump to set e-brake with a manual trans would drive me nuts. The Pontiac G8 stands a better chance of getting my money.

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90% of the way? Please, the CTS is much farther than 90% of the way to being perfect. The plastic grill will be fine... most grills are plastic. Base wheels are base wheels... that's why there are optional ones that I suspect most people will get. Last I checked, the wheels on the base 3er and C-Class are nothing to write home about, either.

The CTS w/DI clocked 0-60 in 5.8s. That's plenty respectable.

The CTS is a big improvement over the old one, but they still have more work to do. I am concerned about it overlapping classes in size and price, it is like the CTS was penalized because Cadillac has poor lineup planning. I also hope it doesn't become irrelevant in 2 years like what happened with the STS. The STS was made to catch up with the class, then everyone blew by them in a year and now the STS is on death row. The 320 hp Northstar was class competitive in 2005, now it is a joke, they better not repeat with the CTS. I think the DI V6 should be standard and a turbo with 360 hp should be optional. They have to get ahead of the class for once, or make a CTS hybrid, because the BMW and Lexus can beat it in gas mileage.

I've read 5.9 for a DI V6 with manual. A 2008 Honda Accord is 5.8 seconds, but comparing to cars in it's class, the 335i is 4.9 seconds 0-60. IS350, G35/G37, 535i are all 5.2-5.6 seconds.

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for me, the nice part of the CTS is it's human sized, the 3 series has always been too small for what I really want in a car, especially for driving around in cold winters and on crappy roads. you want something that is solid during inclement weather and takes the pounding on the suspension from frost heave and the effects of freezing on your shocks and stuff. the CTS is pretty close to 'right sized' albeit maybe a bit heavy....but check the curb weights of many of your German cars and they are all pretty heavy on average too. The 3 series may weigh less than a CTS but traditionally cars like the A4 and 3 series have been pretty small, too.

this is why something like an accord or camry would not feel substantial enough, it would feel like a wet noodle after a few years and who knows how many times you'd be in for suspension work. I've never known anyone to have to take in a caddy because it got beat up or was flimsy.....

Edited by regfootball
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The CTS is a big improvement over the old one, but they still have more work to do. I am concerned about it overlapping classes in size and price, it is like the CTS was penalized because Cadillac has poor lineup planning. I also hope it doesn't become irrelevant in 2 years like what happened with the STS. The STS was made to catch up with the class, then everyone blew by them in a year and now the STS is on death row. The 320 hp Northstar was class competitive in 2005, now it is a joke, they better not repeat with the CTS. I think the DI V6 should be standard and a turbo with 360 hp should be optional. They have to get ahead of the class for once, or make a CTS hybrid, because the BMW and Lexus can beat it in gas mileage.

I've read 5.9 for a DI V6 with manual. A 2008 Honda Accord is 5.8 seconds, but comparing to cars in it's class, the 335i is 4.9 seconds 0-60. IS350, G35/G37, 535i are all 5.2-5.6 seconds.

The STS is as good as dead, so the CTS having any overlap is not a concern. The CTS will not be irrelevant in two years... all of the competition is relatively new as well. G35, C-Class, 3er, IS all have been redesigned in the past couple of years. What's going to blow it out of the water? The A4 is about the only thing coming. Otherwise, we won't see anything else until ~2011 (new 3er). The STS was also not able to be considered competitive it's first year. It struggled to be mid-pack.

You are acting as though the CTS has not even come out. "They better not repeat with the CTS"... well, obviously they didn't because the CTS is without a doubt challenging for the class lead.

C&D or MT tested the CTS to 60 at 5.8, don't remember which. Who tested the Accord to 60 in 5.8? The C&D I read estimated 6.5. You think the normal person cares about .2-.6 in a 0-60? People don't race cars on the normal road most of the time. The CTS will be plenty fast for whoever is testing it, and only the real gearheads are going to care, and they'll go for the CTS-V, anyways.

Should there be something between the regular CTS and the V? Probably, but the UV8 is not ready yet, and what's the point of certifying the Northstar for a 2 years when it only has 16hp more than the 3.6 DI?

People buying $40k+ cars aren't that concerned about MPG.

"Only" going from 0-60 in 5.8 seconds and having a little bit of overlap with a slow-selling, uncompetitive product that's going to be going away soon does not make the CTS only "90% of the way to being perfect." The average person really doesn't give a $h! about drag racing in their luxury car. If they do, they get a V, M, AMG, etc.

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But what class is the CTS in? Is it in the 3-series/G35 class, or the 5-series class? Personally I think it is in 3-series class, some think it competes with the 5-series because they are the same size. Cadillac really needs a smaller car, because a CTS or 5-series sized car just can't accelerate or handle with a 3-series. The CTS wears too many hats, I suspect they'll nail it when they do the MCE, and have other cars in the lineup so the CTS can focus on it's real demographic.

Gas mileage does matter to people buying $40k cars. My mom buys luxury cars and drives about 24,000 miles per year, so gas mileage is a big concern. If it didn't matter, Lexus wouldn't make hybrids, and BMW/Mercedes wouldn't be planning hybrids. Although in Europe BMW has a car that gets 50 mpg and Mercedes is pretty advanced with diesels, so it is just a matter of making it for this market.

Cadillac needs the UV8 badly, I hope the engine is great because the new 5-series (with all new platform, not a carryover) comes out in 2 years and they are doing a twin turbo V8 with 408 hp and more fuel efficient than the current V8. But on the flip side, they also need a CTS that averages 25 mpg because of cars there is going to be a 5-series hybrid also and Lexus has hybrids, Mercedes diesels, etc.

What I really want to see is Cadillac step up an go head on with Lexus, BMW and Mercedes. They need a lot more products to do that. The CTS is the first step of getting out of the Acura, Lincoln, Volvo tier, now they need a product and technology assault to get up with the big 3.

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I had the pleasure of getting some time with a nearly identical car (in that devastating red) this past weekend.

While it certainly is stunning in the metal, I can't help but wonder about the positioning of this vehicle. At $45K+ for a loaded example, Cadillac is competing with some awfully tempting import nameplates.

I wonder about the ability to put current CTS drivers into the new car: from what I've heard, the new car prices out quite a bit higher per month than the outgoing model. Yes, it's a major leap forward, but abandoning existing customers is something that GM can't begin to afford.

Finally, does anyone else see the 300C/SRT8 as a viable alternative? More exclusive (SRT) or more affordable ©, and certainly more spacious. A thought.

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Finally, does anyone else see the 300C/SRT8 as a viable alternative? More exclusive (SRT) or more affordable ©, and certainly more spacious. A thought.

yeh, if you like commuting in a fast, yet scary plastic dungeon.

i think the CTS carries more exclusivity than a dodge anything.

Edited by jbartley
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CTS is getting a hybrid version as well as diesel. get over it. the engine choices in the CTS are not its fault. In fact, the car has no faults, as long as you don't want a 3-series. As you say, no matter how well engineered the CTS is, a car weighing 400 lbs more will not match a small athletic sedan of the 3's caliber. If that's what you want, and you want a Cadillac, you will have to wait for the Alpha Cadillac.

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Sixty8, pardon my asking, but what Cadillac dealership do you work for? The ones in my neck of the woods are Banks in Concord and Cantin in Laconia.

Just curious, I might have to come introduce myself at some point, seeing we share a state (mind you, one of the best) :P

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But what class is the CTS in? Is it in the 3-series/G35 class, or the 5-series class? Personally I think it is in 3-series class, some think it competes with the 5-series because they are the same size. Cadillac really needs a smaller car, because a CTS or 5-series sized car just can't accelerate or handle with a 3-series. The CTS wears too many hats, I suspect they'll nail it when they do the MCE, and have other cars in the lineup so the CTS can focus on it's real demographic.

SMK - last weekend's Toronto Star article, Jim Kenzie's review stated it was like buying a 5 series BMr at a 3-series price (don't quote me on that). Last week, we (as sales staff) had the opportunity to test drive the 328i against the CTS4 and I must say that although the BMr seemed to be great around the track, the interior I found rather sparse (not unlike an old Skoda). They brought the 3 series in as it was most comparable in price. When you compare the CTS against the 5 series BMW, however, it is almost the identical size.

In addition, they also included the Infinity G35 - likely the worst performer.

I can vouch for the versatility of the AWD system. We started on the track in a pool of soapy water to simulate ice and the guy giving me the signal warned me: "Hold on, cuz you're just gonna launch outta here". He wasn't too far wrong. By far the CTS4 was the fastest one of the group to pull away.

Definitely heavier than the CTS (rwd) but not in a sloppy way... more in a planted-on-the-ground-go-ahead-and-give-er kind of way :AH-HA_wink:

We got our first CTS4 on the lot last week and there has been a flurry of people in to see it already. Enjoyed reading this thread, it should be a great seller and I'm looking forward to getting a lot of people into this luxury car,

J

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I wonder about the ability to put current CTS drivers into the new car: from what I've heard, the new car prices out quite a bit higher per month than the outgoing model. Yes, it's a major leap forward, but abandoning existing customers is something that GM can't begin to afford.

Here in Ontario, the drop in lease rates and big credits have only been on the CTS for the past couple of years. From what I've been told, someone in a current 3 or 4 yr lease who is due back in the next 6 months will not notice much of a leap in lease payment - if they purchased a 2003 or 2004 my CTS which had lots of bells and whistles on it.

Janette

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CTS is getting a hybrid version as well as diesel. get over it. the engine choices in the CTS are not its fault. In fact, the car has no faults, as long as you don't want a 3-series. As you say, no matter how well engineered the CTS is, a car weighing 400 lbs more will not match a small athletic sedan of the 3's caliber. If that's what you want, and you want a Cadillac, you will have to wait for the Alpha Cadillac.

.....or look at it this way.....a 328i (230hp I6) goes 0-60 in 6.1sec with a manual.....not that far off from the 5.8sec of the 3.6L DI CTS (both from C&D.)

The CTS is overweight for it's segment.....even a bunch heavier than a 5-series.

I like the CTS......but it seems that GM is still struggling to find their place in the luxury segments.

I took a long look at a CTS at my Caddy dealer today......and while I'm mostly impressed with the interior, there are some GLARING fit-and-finish faults that you simply don't find in the CTS's competitors. The "silver effect" trim on the center console is incredibly cheesy (especially when combined with the cupholder cover) and reminds me of the cheap crap that I had on the center stack of my Corvette. Why not a "textured" surface like on the BMW (aluminum trim) or G35 (wasabi what-ever paper trim) competitors? Plus, the instrument cluster was a "tack-on" item that wobbled and wiggled with the slightest tug from the driver's seat. Not exactly world-class quality.

That being said, the rest of the interior was beautiful....especially the soft-touch, leather-like stitched trim on the dash, door panels, etc....and certainly, as C&D agreed, upstages the new C-Class. The ultimate finish of the interior, however, I feel, lacks the detail of current BMW and Audi interiors.

I still feel the CTS will do really well. I just wish Cadillac in general was more in touch with the overall luxury market.....and had a FULL line of vehicles to compete with BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Lexus, and Audi.

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.....or look at it this way.....a 328i (230hp I6) goes 0-60 in 6.1sec with a manual.....not that far off from the 5.8sec of the 3.6L DI CTS (both from C&D.)

The CTS is overweight for it's segment.....even a bunch heavier than a 5-series.

I like the CTS......but it seems that GM is still struggling to find their place in the luxury segments.

I took a long look at a CTS at my Caddy dealer today......and while I'm mostly impressed with the interior, there are some GLARING fit-and-finish faults that you simply don't find in the CTS's competitors. The "silver effect" trim on the center console is incredibly cheesy (especially when combined with the cupholder cover) and reminds me of the cheap crap that I had on the center stack of my Corvette. Why not a "textured" surface like on the BMW (aluminum trim) or G35 (wasabi what-ever paper trim) competitors? Plus, the instrument cluster was a "tack-on" item that wobbled and wiggled with the slightest tug from the driver's seat. Not exactly world-class quality.

That being said, the rest of the interior was beautiful....especially the soft-touch, leather-like stitched trim on the dash, door panels, etc....and certainly, as C&D agreed, upstages the new C-Class. The ultimate finish of the interior, however, I feel, lacks the detail of current BMW and Audi interiors.

I still feel the CTS will do really well. I just wish Cadillac in general was more in touch with the overall luxury market.....and had a FULL line of vehicles to compete with BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Lexus, and Audi.

Look at the numbers below and then tell me the CTS is overweight:

CTS weight 3.6 DI w/auto: 3845

335i weight w/auto): 3825

The 335i is 13 inches shorter, has a narrower track by 2-3 inches, and is 2 inches shorter. Which vehicle is overweight?

As for lacking detail...

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How much more spartan can you get?

The CTS is much more detailed, IMO. Unless you mean something other by "detailed" than I do...

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SMK - last weekend's Toronto Star article, Jim Kenzie's review stated it was like buying a 5 series BMr at a 3-series price (don't quote me on that). Last week, we (as sales staff) had the opportunity to test drive the 328i against the CTS4 and I must say that although the BMr seemed to be great around the track, the interior I found rather sparse (not unlike an old Skoda). They brought the 3 series in as it was most comparable in price. When you compare the CTS against the 5 series BMW, however, it is almost the identical size.

I think there is a problem with 5-series size and 3-series price. The cars in that group are the Acura TL, Lincoln MKZ and Lexus ES350, all front drive entry lux cars, not the best in performance. And Lexus and Acura both offer a smaller car, Cadillac has nothing small, big lineup gap there.

The other problem is the 5-series has so much equipment the CTS isn't even close on, like 13 speaker 7.1 stereo vs 10 speaker 5.1 stereo, 20 way power seats vs 10 way seats, adaptive cruise control vs nothing, head up display vs nothing, etc. The 5-series has far more technology and equipment and a 360 hp V8, soon to be 408 hp in 2 years. The Camry is the size of a CTS, no one compares them, a 300C is the size of a 750i, but no one compares them. Comparing a CTS to a 5-series is kind of like that.

I think the new CTS will sell better than the old, but the 3-series sells 600,000 cars per year world wide. That is a sales success. The CTS should at least top 100,000 worldwide, really they should do better than that with ease or something is wrong with their car and/or marketing.

I think Cadillac and GM in general don't realize that matching the competition won't do it. People that gave up on domestics 10, 20, 30 years ago are not going to all of a sudden come back for an equal car. They have to surpass and become the benchmark car to get people to change buying habits.

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The CTS is overweight. A 335Xi which is all wheel drive is 3825 pounds, in rear drive it is 3605 lbs, and 3582 lbs for the coupe, all with automatic.

Car and Driver's as tested weight for an all wheel drive CTS was 4034 lbs. A rear drive CTS starts around the 3840 lb mark.

By comparison a 535xi awd is 3946, and the V8 550i is 3968 pounds with an automatic. The G35 sedan is 3508 lbs and with all wheel drive it is 3704, thus making is over 300 pounds less than the CTS. The CTS has a weight problem.

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Then so does the 5-series- it's only 90 lbs lighter. I look forward to mentions of this fact in your next 10 posts.

What's really overweight is the 3-series: it's nearly a foot shorter & it's narrower than the CTS, with a much less detailed and equipped interior, yet it's only 200 lbs lighter (AWD ><AWD). Pound-for-inch, it's heavier. Of course, we've been over this already.

smk: just curious: are you around 85 years old? I've yet to meet anyone so firmly entrenched & fixated on the same 4 'points' as you almost always are... unless they were in the beginning stages of Alzheimers.

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I have to agree with smk's assessment that the CTS is neither fish nor fowl. It's priced too low to match the 5-series on technology (including extensive use of aluminum to lower weight) and equipment, and is sized to big to match the 3-series and IS on performance and handling. On the other hand, the European segment standard is shifting from compacts such as the 3-series and C-Class to true midsize sedans—the Saab 9-3 (actually downsized after the introduction of the 9000/9-5) and Alfa 159 already match the G35 in size and the new A4 also leaps up into this size bracket (around 4.7 m long, the middle of the D/E segment the E-Class and 5-series have only recently vacated—the CTS is at the low end of the higher E/F segment occupied by the 5-series, XF, STS and M series etc.). This is also roughly the same size as Holden's Torana TT36 concept, often seen as the archetype for the smaller, lighter Alpha rwd architecture.

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PEOPLE.....

the CTS is a RIGHT SIZED car. 3 series is tiny. yet still packs on the pounds. the CTS is habitable for humans.

when i first saw the new dash design for the current 3 series it totally reminded me of the same cheesy look as the last sebring/stratus sedan. and the picture above rekindles that memory for me. maybe in the most expensive trims it can start to look ok, but its clearly a retrograde step in comparison to the last 3 series which is ok, but not stunning but for the highest trim levels.

It might be fair to suggest the CTS lose 200 pounds but at least cadillac builds a car that can take major punsihment, frost heaves, hard jolts to the suspension in cold winter tire and suspension conditions, etc. Asian brands underengineer their frames and suspension components in the interest of 'efficiency' but the solidity does not stay over time. when you buy any caddy you know the integrity of the chassis will hold up over time.

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Then so does the 5-series- it's only 90 lbs lighter. I look forward to mentions of this fact in your next 10 posts.

What's really overweight is the 3-series: it's nearly a foot shorter & it's narrower than the CTS, with a much less detailed and equipped interior, yet it's only 200 lbs lighter (AWD ><AWD). Pound-for-inch, it's heavier. Of course, we've been over this already.

smk: just curious: are you around 85 years old? I've yet to meet anyone so firmly entrenched & fixated on the same 4 'points' as you almost always are... unless they were in the beginning stages of Alzheimers.

I am actually 26, and never owned anything but a GM car. I want to see GM make better products, so this 20 year decline they are on ends. If you sit in a 335i, the interior is pretty nice, I don't like BMW's styling, but the materials are high level. Where as I like the design and layout of the STS, but the plastics are bad, there are gaps, etc.

The 5-series and E-class offer a V8, that makes up for their 3900 pound weights. The CTS is going to be compared to the 3-series, IS and G, and the weight will hurt it in handling and gas mileage. Luckily the Lexus IS is a gas hog too, but Cadillac could really benefit from the 30 mpg car, whether it be a hybrid (good for CTS) or small turbo direct injection engine (this would be good for the BTS).

As far as size, I personally like 190 inch long cars, that is a popular size (Camry, Accord, Malibu, CTS, etc). But for people without kids that dirve alone 95% of the time, I see the appeal of a smaller car that is sportier and more fuel efficient like the 3-series. Cadillac has to get their lineup straightened out, then they can morph this CTS into a great car. Personally I'd call the Alpha car the CTS, and the Sigma car STS, because CTS is known as entry level.

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Sixty8, pardon my asking, but what Cadillac dealership do you work for? The ones in my neck of the woods are Banks in Concord and Cantin in Laconia.

Just curious, I might have to come introduce myself at some point, seeing we share a state (mind you, one of the best) :P

MacMulkin in Nashua, NH. :)

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Review: 2nd Generation CTS

Most of you know that I have recently found employment in the automotive

business again. I am now working at a large Chevrolet-Cadillac dealer in

New Hampshire as a sales representative.

It's been a very busy week. I swapped in a 2007 Suburban LTZ for a very

selective lease customer & also sold XP715's girlfriend a gently-used 2005

Pontiac G6 with the sky-view roof.

Tomorrow is a really big day for me, more on that later. My computer is

being difficult but I wanted to share a quick review of the 08 CTS with all

of you fellow CheersAndGears members. As requested by several of you,

I took another quick drive in the white diamond 2008 Cadillac CTS 4 that

we received on Wednesday. This particular Caddy is loaded, it's a CTS-4

which designates AWD. It is powered by the much talked about natrually

aspired Direct Injection V6 which puts out 300+ horsepower and yet

displaces only 3.6 liters.

Another logistical issue was taking a joy ride in a car that has been under

a microscope since the second it came off the back of the car carrier. I

was the first salesman to take it out on Wed. morning, I had a legitimate

customer interested in the car. When I got back to the dealership two of

the big bosses were observing my customer's not so perfect parking job

from in front of the Atomic Orange Corvette Indy Pace Car behind the big

picture window on the second floor.

Well I drove the car and I have to tell you I was NOT dissapointed. A few

weeks ago Motor Trend pronounced, on the front page no less that the

all new 2008 CTS is the "best Cadillac in 50 years". At the time, I instantly

thought that the 1959, 1961 & 1967-1968 deVilles & 1967-1968 Eldorados

are much better cars, esp. in terms of styling, comfort and elegace.

Now my preferance for classic cars is not changing any time soon but I

will say that as far as a 2008 model year car the Cadillac CTS4 is a very

well priced and in some ways class leading car.

I wish I had the chance to REALLY open up the car on a "closed circuit"

but as it stands I can honestly say the car is powerful, sure footed and

more importantly luxurious in all the right ways. Brakes, steering, throttle

response & the awsome RWD chassis are tuned first and foremost to

go for BMW's throat while not giving up near-DTS style comfort.

What I loved:

- Instant throttle response

- Near-Northstar levels of horsepower and torque available at almost any RPM

- One of the cleanest designs since the 1960s.

- Knife edge styling inside & out

- Excellent mix of comfort & cornering ability engineered into the suspension

- Fits like a glove sports-sedan interior, cozy but not cramped

- Excelelnt ergonomics, a real driver's car

What I was not so impressed with:

- Ultra-view sunroof adds needless weight, cost and complexity

- Small trunk for a car of this size

- Rear seat access, door opening is a bit cramped for a Cadillac

- Plastic "RubberMaid Deluxe" engine cover & underhood dust covers

What I hated:

- Cheap look & feel of the power sun shade on the monroof, droops low like a canopy

These photos are very poor quality since I took them using my Razor phone.

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I agree about the dislikes and would add that a nice optional bodyside molding would tart up the too plain sides of this car otherwise you are spot on.

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I think there is a problem with 5-series size and 3-series price. The cars in that group are the Acura TL, Lincoln MKZ and Lexus ES350, all front drive entry lux cars, not the best in performance. And Lexus and Acura both offer a smaller car, Cadillac has nothing small, big lineup gap there.

The other problem is the 5-series has so much equipment the CTS isn't even close on, like 13 speaker 7.1 stereo vs 10 speaker 5.1 stereo, 20 way power seats vs 10 way seats, adaptive cruise control vs nothing, head up display vs nothing, etc. The 5-series has far more technology and equipment and a 360 hp V8, soon to be 408 hp in 2 years. The Camry is the size of a CTS, no one compares them, a 300C is the size of a 750i, but no one compares them. Comparing a CTS to a 5-series is kind of like that.

I think the new CTS will sell better than the old, but the 3-series sells 600,000 cars per year world wide. That is a sales success. The CTS should at least top 100,000 worldwide, really they should do better than that with ease or something is wrong with their car and/or marketing.

I think Cadillac and GM in general don't realize that matching the competition won't do it. People that gave up on domestics 10, 20, 30 years ago are not going to all of a sudden come back for an equal car. They have to surpass and become the benchmark car to get people to change buying habits.

So the 5-series will finally catch up to the CTS's 400hp in 2 years.... one year after the CTS goes to 500hp?

If 20 way v. 10 way seats and 3 extra speakers <that you can't fully use without special CDs/DVDs> is a real deal breaker for you, then sure go spend an extra 10k just to get the BMW.

What about the things the CTS has that the 5-series doesn't? Ultra-view roof, 40gb hard drive, Traffic-Nav, magnetic ride control, a considerable lack of iDrive....

As for the 3-series topping 600k worldwide.... you realize most of those are 320 diesels with base cloth interior right? They're the equivalent of the highschool senior blond girl VW Jetta in this country. Not something Cadillac should aspire to.....

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I sat in the '08 CTS over the weekend. Interior wise I have 3 gripes.

1. the carpet looked nappy... almost as if there had been water in the car and it wasn't cleaned up.

2. the rear headrests are useless, the ones in mine are actually useful and comfortable

3. there is a large bulge that intrudes into the front passenger side foot well.

Otherwise, ergonomics have improved, even though they were pretty good in the version 1.1, however many buttons now seem reachable without removing your hand from the shifter.

Materials and styling... well you already know those bits.

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