The Daily Courier

CADILLAC ELDORADO

An enormous car with an enormous pricetag that was also a giant hit.

- By MALCOLM GUNN Special to The Okanagan Weekend

It was a car that gave very literal meaning to “crushing the competitio­n.” Horsepower drove the 1960s while conspicuou­s consumptio­n pushed the 1970s to new physical limits.

Stand at the front corner of a Cadillac Eldorado and gaze — forever — down its long flanks and you’ll get the picture. There was no end in sight and no boundaries that Cadillac wasn’t prepared to push.

The company was by no means dining all alone on a full refrigerat­or of parts. Plenty of Detroit iron, from Mustangs to Matadors, were gaining weight, growing soft around the middle — and getting bigger — just as the outputs of their smog-strangled engines began heading in the opposite direction. In fact Ford went so far as to brag that its giant 1977 LTD was actually comparable in length to a Cadillac Sedan de Ville. Conspicuou­s consumptio­n was clearly reaching new — some would say disturbing — lengths, widths and curb weights.

Despite being positioned as a personal-luxury car with sporting flair, the Eldo that rolled out on Sept. 29, 1970, was enormous: six metres long and more than two metres wide. By comparison, the most recent Cadillac DeVille was shorter by a whopping 38 centimetre­s and narrower by about 15 centimetre­s. Tipping the scales at close to 2,300 kilograms, the Eldorado was the undisputed heavy-weight champion of the highways, ready to crush the asphalt at a moment’s notice.

As the “sport” model, the Fleetwood Eldorado — the Eldo’s official name — maintained a tradition as a somethinge­xtra Cadillac since the first limitededi­tion show-car-based model appeared back in 1953. Over the decades that followed, the marque earned a special position in the Cadillac hierarchy, receiving unique trim, luxury content and added power that would have made its more mundane DeVille, Seville and Fleetwood siblings green with envy. In 1967, the Eldorado became the first front-wheel-drive Caddy, sharing its platform with the Oldsmobile Toronado.

The bulked-up second-generation 1971 Eldorado maintained its frontwheel-drive, but brought back a convertibl­e version for the first time since 1958. Both coupes and ragtops featured massive chrome grilles and bumpers, tufted leather interiors and rear fender skirts that accentuate­d the car’s extraordin­ary physical dimensions.

Also exceptiona­l was the Eldorado’s massive powerplant, a 400-horsepower 500-cubic (8.2-litre) V8 that was actually introduced in 1970. Two years later, the big mill was detuned and its horsepower rating, at 210, was expressed in “net” terms (calculated with all the engine accessorie­s attached) adopted by the entire auto industry. Around town, Eldo drivers had to use a light touch on the gas pedal to make a tank last, but cheap gas meant few owners really cared, other than having to stop every two hours for fuel.

Eldorado base prices started at about $7,400 ($7,750 for the convertibl­e), but a tempting options list that included climate control, power door locks, padded vinyl roof, tilt-telescopin­g steering wheel and cruise control, helped to balloon many as-delivered amounts.

To those on the lower end of the socioecono­mic scale, the Eldorado looked prepostero­us, bordering on the ridiculous. Still, demand remained strong among Cadillac loyalists with coupes outselling convertibl­es three to one.

Validation, of sorts, followed in 1973, when an Eldorado convertibl­e, piloted by former driving champion Jim Rathman, was selected as the pace car for the Indianapol­is 500. Perhaps there was something to this puffed-up land yacht’s sporting claim after all.

As a knee-jerk reaction to a brief period of gasoline shortages, Eldorado sales hiccuped in 1974, but the coupes quickly rebounded stronger than ever for 1975. Convertibl­e sales lagged by a wide margin.

Sensing that the drop-top era was coming to an end — due to the proliferat­ion of sun roofs and/or air conditioni­ng — General Motors brass ordered the plug pulled on all such models. Cadillac’s marketing team used the occasion to trumpet the ’76 Eldo as “the last convertibl­e”, and ordered a special run of fully-loaded 200 all-white finalediti­on models (pictured above) that stickered for a no-nonsense $14,000. A feeding frenzy among would-be collectors hoping to cash in on the limitededi­tion craze ensued, which briefly drove prices into the $20,000 range.

The Eldo coupe soldiered on alone and untouched for another couple of model years, although its 500-cube monster engine had been supplanted by a more sane and sensible (for Cadillac, anyway) 425-cubic-inch V8.

By 1979, a crisp and very formal looking down-sized Eldorado coupe arrived, equipped with a V8 that displaced half as many cubic inches as its predecesso­r and easily doubled the older Eldo’s fuel economy.

As attractive as the replacemen­t was, the new Eldorado was never able to duplicate the glitz and glamour that made its enormous predecesso­r an even bigger success.

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 ??  ?? The stunning 1967 Eldorado became the first front-wheel-drive Cadillac, sharing its platform with the Olds Toronado.
The stunning 1967 Eldorado became the first front-wheel-drive Cadillac, sharing its platform with the Olds Toronado.
 ?? GM archive photo ?? Queen Elizabeth II rides in a 1976 Eldorado, the last year for the convertibl­e body style, which had been in sales decline since 1974.
GM archive photo Queen Elizabeth II rides in a 1976 Eldorado, the last year for the convertibl­e body style, which had been in sales decline since 1974.

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