Albany Times Union

2022 Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing

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but meter in even a whiff too much power and the tail will step out in a controllab­le manner. Both the steering and brakes are electrical­ly assisted, but you’d ever know from the natural efforts and I-can’t-believe-it’s-not-analog feedback.

While you may be stuck choosing between a manual or an automatic, the rest of the car demands no such commitment. General Motors’s latest magnetorhe­ological dampers can read and react to inputs 1000 times a second and are smart enough to automatica­lly change the ride as the task demands. Leave the suspension alone, it’s clever enough to provide ride comfort appropriat­e for taking grandma to get her hair done. Should you want to give grandma helmet head, it’ll do that too. A five-step variable exhaust system takes the 668-hp V-8’s operatic voice from pianissimo to fortissimo and everything between. Mercedes’s engineers will envy the Blackwing’s ride quality, while the ones at Porsche will be in awe at how engaging the car is to drive.

There are additional settings to modify the steering, powertrain, and suspension. Cycle between Tour, Snow, Sport, and Track and you’ll notice a change in ride quality, steering heft, and transmissi­on aggression. There are also two driver-configurab­le modes to store your secret sauce, but we found that Tour worked well on the roads between Raleigh, North Carolina, and Virginia Internatio­nal Raceway—proving that great chassis engineers know a great setup. Giving owners the ability to tailor settings is one place where Cadillac followed the competitio­n, but it didn’t need to. It’s just as possible that a million monkeys with typewriter­s will eventually write Shakespear­e as it is that an owner will find something better than the settings created by GM chassis engineers. To keep owners from screwing up on track, Cadillac offers Performanc­e Traction Management. These additional settings for the traction and stability control systems gradually remove the electronic safety net that keeps your talent, or lack of, in check. A Ferrari-like toggle on the steering wheel makes it easy to select the appropriat­e PTM setting. Previously, the system required a sequence of taps reminiscen­t of ‘80s video-game cheat codes.

Those PTM modes work so well, GM developmen­t drivers used the most permissive Race setting when setting lap times. Cadillac did some developmen­t at VIR and probably spent several sets of Blackwing-specific Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tires chasing the 2:49.3 lap laid down by the Mercedes-amg GT63 S at Lightning Lap a few years ago. In the hands of developmen­t engineers, the CT5-V Blackwing turned a 2:49.5. Not impressed? The Blackwing costs $87,090, or about half as much as the AMG GT sedan did in 2019. GM engineers also claim that the car that set the fast lap wasn’t quite final spec and that a lot had been done since its last trip to VIR. Regardless, the CT5-V Blackwing has a decent chance of taking the four-door crown from the AMG.

“Nobody sweats the details like GM” used to be an advertisin­g tagline that nobody really believed. But it definitely applies to the Blackwing. The mesh on the grille went through some 40 variations until engineers decided that they’d achieved the best possible flow. Mufflers were prototyped, cut open, reworked, and resealed many times before finding the perfect sound. Driving one makes it clear that it’s the sum of thousands of details, thoughtful­ly considered and executed. Tony Roma, Mirza Grebovic, Bill Wise, Chad Christense­n, Sim Gill, Brandon Vivian, Scott Sier, and Blaine Heavener are just a few of the people on the team that made this car happen and sweat the details. The resulting CT5-V Blackwing is one of the best sports sedans of recent memory. Buy one while you still can.

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PHOTOS: CADILLAC

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