The Denver Post

High octane and a stick shift: standouts as era starts to end

- By Lawrence Ulrich

For speed demons — or demons wedded to hellacious fossil-fuel power — the Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing checks off quite a list. A supercharg­ed, 668horsepo­wer V-8. A top speed above 200 mph. Allday track thrills that would leave any electric vehicle depleted and gasping, as demonstrat­ed on my endorphin-rushing test laps at Virginia Internatio­nal Raceway.

Another feature pushed the Blackwing into toogood-to-be-true territory: a manual transmissi­on. That optional six-speed puts these supersedan­s (there’s also a smaller Blackwing, the CT4-V) in rare company. Fewer than 1% of American cars are sold with a stick.

The Blackwings are also among models that have a gasoline engine and manual transmissi­on, a pairing that increasing­ly appears to be a last dance of technology. Showroom EVS have no driver-selectable gears whatsoever. And Cadillac says the Blackwing models will be the last of its ultrahigh-performanc­e cars to employ internal combustion.

All future V-series models will be electrifie­d. Whether General Motors and Cadillac can keep their electric promises remains to be seen. But if they can, these Blackwings — and models like them — may be Americans’ last chance to twirl a stick shift in a new car.

Blackwing fans have gotten the message: Nearly 70% of early adopters are choosing the manual, though that should settle closer to 20%, said Tony Roma, the Blackwings’ chief engineer. That’s despite the fact that automatics left manuals in their dust years ago. Whether General Motors’ snappy 10-speed or Porsche’s dualclutch PDK gearbox, automatic transmissi­ons make cars faster, more durable and more fuel-efficient.

Even for top racers and factory drivers, “the fastest thing to do is let the car shift for you and not even worry about shifting with paddles,” said Luke Vandezande, a Porsche spokespers­on.

“A human being cannot surpass that, all things being equal,” he added.

Those facts don’t dissuade manual loyalists, who prefer a human touch and the sense of mastery that comes from smartly rowed gears. A manual transmissi­on, Roma said, imbues a car with soul and personalit­y.

“So much of the driving dynamics we obsess over is about that,” he said. “You feel so much more connected to the car and powertrain. It’s a joy.”

If this is the end, Cadillac is going out with a bang. Roma and his team are busily developing EVS like the Celestiq sedan and Lyriq SUV. But they’re proud of their moonshot engineerin­g effort on the Blackwings, a love letter to a waning age.

I recently drove three of the world’s hottest manual holdouts. All are expensive. But fans can still find DIY pleasure on a budget, including with a Mazda Miata, a Ford Mustang and the kissing-cousins Subaru BRZ and Toyota GR 86.

2022 Porsche 911 GTS: Porsche actually sells a much higher percentage of manual-transmissi­on cars in the United States than in Europe — including roughly 1 in 4 911 models that offer a stick, and up to 70% for its track-assassin 911 GT3. The latest is the 911 GTS, whose silken, sevenspeed manual is a no-cost option on five versions, including a Carrera GTS, which starts at $138,050, and a sexy, open-roofed Targa 4 GTS, at $158,150.

I drove those GTS models through the north Georgia mountains, on roads that rival Europe’s or California’s for Tilt-awhirl amusement. Every new 911 is a wunderkind of tech that includes electronic anti-roll bars, a torque-vectoring rear differenti­al and a twin-turbocharg­ed, flat-six engine that’s boosted to 473 horses in GTS models.

Yes, that tech includes the vaunted PDK automatic, which is objectivel­y faster: PDK’S automated launch control sends the all-wheel-drive Carrera 4 GTS to 60 mph in under three seconds, and to a 193mph apogee. But you’d have to pry the manual out of my cold, dead fingers.

BMW M2 CS: BMW has been browbeaten by enthusiast­s who insist it has fattened up on SUVS and leached the fun from its cars. The 2020 M2 CS might mollify the scariest BMW troll.

This track-storming version of the 2-Series coupe plays like a montage of great BMWS past. That includes its available sixspeed stick with automated rev-matching; the modern edge of a 444horsepo­wer, twinturboc­harged inline six; an adaptive suspension and featherwei­ght carbon-fiber roof; and some of the world’s stickiest street-legal tires, the Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2.

Like the CT5-V and 911 GTS, the M2 CS offers carbon-ceramic brakes (for $8,500) to shed prodigious speed, trim 55 pounds of mass and eliminate unsightly brake dust on its pretty, gold-finished alloy wheels.

The BMW’S stick shift feels a bit gummy, especially compared with the Porsche’s Platonic ideal. But it gets the job done, cracking 60 mph in four seconds. And in contrast with some larger, even more muscular BMWS — wildly capable, yet cool to the touch — the M2 CS’S hooligan spirit rubs off on

any driver with a pulse. It’s a bad influence. In a good way.

Cadillac CT4-V Blackwing and CT5-V Blackwing: Jekyll, meet Hyde: In polite society, the Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing can drive like a doctor’s luxury sedan. But find a dark alley, or a blazing circuit like Virginia Internatio­nal Raceway, and the killer comes out, with a six-gun of manual gears at its disposal. (Base price: $59,990 for CT4-V, $84,990 for CT5-V.)

With its supercharg­ed, 668-horsepower V-8, the Blackwing is a delirious good time on road or track, with a top speed above 200 mph. I managed about 152 mph on this road course’s longest straightaw­ay, lap after thrilling lap, before it was time to squeeze the optional carbon-ceramic brakes and ease into a curling right-hander.

I also tested the smaller, more affordable Blackwing, the CT4-V, which has a 474-horsepower V-6, also offering a choice of a manual or brisk 10-speed automatic. The old-school shifter gets new-tech stuff like an automated launch control; a virtual unicorn in a manual car.

In one example, Cadillac bills the Blackwings’ magnetic suspension as the world’s fastest-reacting: Accelerome­ters and sensors monitor the road and car behavior. Metal particles in shock-absorber fluid react to computeriz­ed changes in their magnetic field, adjusting firmness at any wheel within millisecon­ds. A sophistica­ted traction and stability system adjusts safety oversight for drivers of any skill level.

Those skills can improve with an onboard data recorder that logs video and audio of everyday drives or Gps-based track laps, with graphical overlays and software that lets drivers analyze their performanc­e in detail.

As for hands-on talent, each Blackwing engine is assembled by a single master technician, whose name is affixed to a plate on the motor. If General Motors does transform into a purely electric automaker, consider that internal-combustion autograph, and the car that comes with it, a future collectibl­e.

 ?? Jeremy M. Lange, © The New York Times Co. ?? The 2022 Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing sedan, pictured in Alton, Va., on July 28, puts out 668 horsepower.
Jeremy M. Lange, © The New York Times Co. The 2022 Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing sedan, pictured in Alton, Va., on July 28, puts out 668 horsepower.
 ?? Jeremy M. Lange, © The New York Times Co. ?? The interior of the 2022 Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing.
Jeremy M. Lange, © The New York Times Co. The interior of the 2022 Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing.

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