Los Angeles Times

A TRULY GRAND TOURING SEDAN

Cadillac’s CT6 Platinum is jampacked with perks

- By Charles Fleming

Cadillac has nailed it. The 2017 CT6 3.0 TT Platinum, the General Motors subsidiary’s top-trim-level luxury grand touring sedan, is a sublime combinatio­n of power, performanc­e and perks.

Especially perks. Despite the many pleasures of driving this car, the real action is in the back seat. This is a car to be driven in, as much as a car to drive.

Cadillac has been undergoing a years-long campaign to rebrand itself and escape its land yacht legacy.

Vehicles such as the CTS, DTS, ATS and XTS sports sedans have been an attempt to forget the Deville, Eldorado and Seville cruisers on which the 100-year-old Detroit company built its fortune.

The CT6, which debuted last year as Cadillac’s top-of-the-line luxury sedan, pushes that to a new level.

The Platinum trim line I drove can be had, and should be had, with a 3.0-liter twin turbo V-6. (Entry-level versions are pushed by a 2.0-liter twin turbo or a 3.6-liter V-6.) That pumps the horsepower to 404 and the torque to 400 pound-feet, enough to propel this 4,350-pound sedan from 0 to 60 miles per hour in a reported five seconds.

On the road, the CT6 drives smaller than it looks, and smaller than it weighs. (Cadillac says it’s 1,000 pounds lighter than a comparably equipped MercedesBe­nz S-class, and lighter than its own mid-sized CTS.) The nonadjusta­ble suspension feels dialed somewhere between “comfort” and “sport” — firm but not stiff — which means cornering is confident but comes with a little roll in tight spots.

Cornering is also assisted by a four-wheel steering system, which increases maneuverab­ility. This sys-

tem was designed specifical­ly for the CT6.

It’s sportier with the drive mode turned from Normal to Sport — though the bigger sound that accompanie­s this setting may be more due to “engine sound enhancemen­t” than actual engine noise — and despite a bit of turbo lag it knows what to do with a passing lane. (A third driving mode, Snow and Ice, seemed unsuited for summer Southern California motoring.)

A manual setting allows for more engaged shifting, but the eight-speed automatic transmissi­on does a very good job of keeping the pedal connected to the metal, and keeping the car connected to the road.

Also helpful in that regard is a very good adaptive cruise control system, which powers the car up or down in traffic, gently and gracefully.

The front seats are a wonder of modern transporta­tion technology — adjustable 20 ways, heated, ventilated, with massage functions and clad in a glorious “semi-aniline” leather that must be sorely missed by the animal that once wore it.

A four-zone climate control system cooled the interior air nicely on a 107-degree midday drive through Ojai, augmented by an onboard air ionizer and a 34-speaker Panaray sound system.

But the truly platinumle­vel CT6 Platinum experience isn’t in the driver’s seat at all. It’s in the rear passenger compartmen­t.

The real estate here is vast. The massive seats (two, with a flip-up center console that can become a narrow third back seat and also functions as a passthroug­h to the huge trunk space) are as capacious and comfortabl­e as first-class airline seats.

They recline. They adjust. They’re heated and cooled. They offer a surfeit of legroom and headroom. They seem designed more for a limousine or town car than a four-door sedan.

The sense of personal space and privacy increases with push-button side and rear sunshades. At a click, iPad-sized entertainm­ent screens rise from the seat backs and connect to wireless headphones, then retract when not needed. The center console has plug-ins for phones, laptops or game consoles.

But Cadillac is betting you won’t need that. The CT6 offers optional state-ofthe-art Wi-Fi and HDMI-enabled connectivi­ty that allows access to Netflix and Hulu. Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are standard.

It’s an environmen­t that suggests you’re going to an awards show, or about to hold a board meeting, or claim diplomatic immunity. You can also deploy the twin-section sunroof for parading.

With all this performanc­e, comfort and topdrawer technology, Cadillac is inviting comparison­s with German and Japanese luxury cars. Cross shoppers could be looking at equivalent Audi, BMW, Lexus and Mercedes-Benz sedans. And at this price point, they could even be looking at the Tesla Model S.

But are they American buyers, or Chinese? Much was made at the time of the 2016 CT6’s debut of the vast back seat real estate. It was assumed this prestige acreage was meant to attract Chinese luxury car buyers, who tend to favor cars in which they are driven over cars they drive themselves.

Cadillac President Johan de Nysschen said at the unveiling of the Escala concept car at this year’s Pebble Beach car show that his company was determined to return to “the pinnacle of premium.” The XT5 SUV and this CT6 were, he said, “the first salvos in a product offensive.”

At the time, De Nysschen described the Escala as “a chauffeur-driven Cadillac you would want to drive yourself.”

He could have been talking about the CT6.

 ?? Photograph­s by General Motors ?? FOR YEARS, Cadillac has been undergoing a campaign to rebrand itself and escape its land yacht legacy. The automaker has pushed its top-of-the-line CT6 sedan to a higher level of luxury with the 2017 model.
Photograph­s by General Motors FOR YEARS, Cadillac has been undergoing a campaign to rebrand itself and escape its land yacht legacy. The automaker has pushed its top-of-the-line CT6 sedan to a higher level of luxury with the 2017 model.
 ??  ?? AT A CLICK, entertainm­ent screens rise from the seat backs and connect to wireless headphones.
AT A CLICK, entertainm­ent screens rise from the seat backs and connect to wireless headphones.
 ??  ?? THE 2017 Cadillac CT6 3.0 TT Platinum comes standard with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.
THE 2017 Cadillac CT6 3.0 TT Platinum comes standard with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.
 ?? Photograph­s by General Motors ?? THE CT6 is a car to be driven in, as much as a car to drive — with luxury and tech in the front and rear seats. Below, the car features a four-wheel steering system.
Photograph­s by General Motors THE CT6 is a car to be driven in, as much as a car to drive — with luxury and tech in the front and rear seats. Below, the car features a four-wheel steering system.
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