The
Eldorado model was part of the
Cadillac line from 1953 to 2002. The Cadillac
Eldorado was the longest running American
personal luxury car as it was the only
one sold after the 1999 model year. Its main competitors included
the
Lincoln Mark Series and the
lower-priced
Buick Riviera.
Although cars bearing the name varied considerably in bodystyle and
mechanical layout during this long period, the Eldorado models were
always near the top of the Cadillac line. Nevertheless, and except
for the Eldorado Brougham models of 1957–1960, the most expensive
models were always the opulent, long wheel-based
Series 75 sedans and limousines, not the
Eldorado.
The name "Eldorado"
The name was proposed for a special show car built in 1952 to mark
Cadillac's
Golden Anniversary; it was the result of
an in-house competition won by Mary-Ann Marini (née Zukosky ), a
secretary in the company's merchandising department. Another
source,
Palm Springs Life magazine, attributes the name to
a resort destination in California's
Coachella Valley that was a favorite of
General Motors executives. However,
the Eldorado Country Club in Indian Wells, California was not
founded until 1957 - five years after Cadillac's naming
competition. In any case, the name was adopted by the company for a
new, limited-edition convertible that was added to the line in
1953.
The name Eldorado was derived from the
Spanish words "el dorado", "the gilded one"
or "the golden one"; the name was given originally to the legendary
chief or "cacique" of a South American Indian tribe. Legend has it
that his followers would sprinkle his body with gold dust on
ceremonial occasions and he would wash it off again by diving into
a lake.
The name more frequently refers to a
legendary city of fabulous riches, somewhere in South America, that
inspired many European expeditions, including one to the Orinoco by
England
's Sir Walter
Raleigh.
1953-54
The 1953 Eldorado was a special-bodied, low-production convertible
(532 units in total). It was the production version of the 1952 El
Dorado "Golden Anniversary"
concept car.
Available in four unique colors (Aztec Red, Alpine White, Azure
Blue and Artisan Ochre — the latter is a yellow hue, although it
was shown erroneously as black in the color folder issued on this
rare model). Convertible tops were available in either black or
white Orlon. There was no special badging on the car, other than
the "Eldorado" nameplate, in "gold", in the center of the dash. A
hard tonneau cover, flush with the rear deck, hid the top in the
open car version. Although it was based on the regular
Series 62 convertible and shared its
engine, it was nearly twice as expensive at
US$7,750. This car was long and wide.
This first Eldorado had a wraparound windshield and a cut-down
beltline, the latter signifying a dip in the sheetmetal at the
bottom of the side windows. These two touches were especially
beloved by
General Motors Styling
Chief
Harley Earl and subsequently were
widely copied by other marques. In fact, throughout 1950s, Eldorado
was General Motors' styling leader, and since GM led the industry,
where the Eldorado went, everyone else would tend to follow.
In 1954, Eldorado lost its unique sheet metal, sharing its basic
body shell with standard Cadillacs. Distinguished now mainly by
trim pieces, this allowed GM to lower the price and see a
substantial increase in sales.
1955-1958
For 1955, the Eldorado's body gained its own rear end styling with
high, slender, pointed
tailfins. These
contrasted with the rather thick, bulbous fins which were common at
the time and were an example of Eldorado once again pointing the
way forward.
For 1956, a two-door hardtop
coupe version
appeared, called the
Eldorado Seville.
1957

1958 Cadillac Eldorado Seville
1957 saw the Eldorado (in both Biarritz convertible and Seville
hardtop bodystyles) with a revised rear-end design featuring a low,
downswept fenderline capped by a pointed, in-board fin. The rear
fenders were commonly referred to as "chipmunk cheeks". This
concept was used for two years, but did not spawn any
imitators.
1957 was chiefly notable for the introduction of one of GM's most
memorable designs, the
Eldorado Brougham. This
four-door hardtop with rear-hinged rear doors was an ultra-luxury
car that cost an astonishing $13,074 — more than the
Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud of the
same year. It featured a stainless steel roof,
air suspension, the first memory
power seats, and every other comfort and
convenience feature available at GM at the time.
1959-1966
A different Eldorado Brougham was sold for 1959 and 1960. These
cars were not quite so extravagantly styled but were very unusual
pieces in themselves. Priced at $13,075, they cost $1 more, each,
than their older siblings. The design was 100% Cadillac but the
company contracted out the assembly to
Pininfarina of Italy, with whom the division has
had a long-running relationship, and these Eldorados were
essentially hand-built in Italy. Discreet, narrow taillights - were
integrated into modest tailfins, and a squared-off rear roof line
allowed the Brougham to contrast sharply to the "rocketship"
taillights, flamboyant fins, and rounded roof lines of the standard
1959 Cadillacs. However, the Brougham's styling cues would prove to
indicate where Cadillac styling would head in the early-mid 1960s.
Build quality was not nearly to the standard of the Detroit
hand-built 1957–1958 models, and the 1959–1960 Broughams did not
sell as well as their forebears. However, collector interest and
values remain high.
The last
Eldorado Seville was built in 1960. After
that, the Eldorado convertible became essentially a more
luxuriously trimmed version of the Cadillac Series 62 convertible
(using trim pieces reserved only for the Fleetwood Sixty
Special).
An Eldorado convertible would remain in the Cadillac line through
1966, but its differences from the rest of the line were generally
modest. In 1964, probably the most distinctive year during this
period, the main visual cue indicating an Eldorado was simply the
lack of
fender skirts.
1967-1970

Cadillac Eldorado
The Eldorado was radically redesigned for 1967. Intended for the
burgeoning
personal luxury car
market, it was a "personal" Cadillac sharing the
E-body with the
Oldsmobile Toronado, which had been
introduced the previous year. Cadillac adopted the Toronado's
Unified Powerplant Package and
front-wheel drive. The Eldorado used a
standard
Cadillac 429 V8 with a
modified
Turbo-Hydramatic automatic transmission (THM425, based
on the
Turbo-Hydramatic 400) with
the
torque converter mounted next
to the
planetary gearbox, driving
it through a metal chain.
Despite sharing underpinnings with the Toronado, the Eldorado's
crisp styling, initiated by GM styling chief
Bill Mitchell, was distinctive and unique,
appearing more angluar than the rounded Toronado. Performance was
0–60 mph (0–96 km/h) in less than nine seconds and a top speed
of 120 mph (192 km/h). Roadability and handling were highly
praised by contemporary reviews.
Disc
brakes were optional in 1967 and became standard in 1968. The
new Eldorado was a great departure from the previous generation,
which has become little more than a dressed-up version of
Cadillac's Series 62. Sales were excellent despite high list
prices.
For 1968 the Eldorado gained slight exterior changes to comply with
new federal safety and emissions legislation, and as with the rest
of the Cadillac lineup, a new 472 cu in (7.7 L) V8 engine rated at
375 hp (280 kW) (SAE gross). In 1969 it lost its hidden
headlamps and picked up as options a halo
vinyl roof and later in the model year a power
sunroof option. For the 1970 model year,
this body style Eldorado introduced the new 500 in³ (8.2 L) V8
engine, the largest-ever production V8 [rated SAE gross 400 hp
(298 kW) /
550 ft
· lbf
(746
N · m) in
1970] that would be an Eldorado exclusive until it became standard
on all full size Caddies for model year 1975.
1971-1978
When GM's full-size cars were redesigned for 1971, the Eldorado
regained both a convertible model and its
fender skirts. The wheelbase version of the
Eldorado would run through 1978, receiving facelifts in 1973 and
1975.
The Cadillac Eldorado was chosen as the pace car for the
Indianapolis 500 Mile Race in 1973. All in all, Cadillac produced
566 of these special pace car convertibles. 33 were used at the
track during the race week and the remaining 513 cars were
distributed to the U.S. Cadillac dealers (one for each dealership),
which were then sold to the general public.
A redesigned instrument cluster was phased in during the 1974 model
year (known as the 'space age' instrument panel from Cadillac
literature), also shared with Calais, DeVilles and
Fleetwoods.
For 1977, the Eldorado received a new grille with a finer
crosshatch pattern. The convertible was canceled (although Custom
Coach of Lima, Ohio took a few brand-new 1977 and 1978 Eldorados
into their coachbuilder facilities and converted into convertibles
using salvaged parts from 1971-76 Eldorados; Cadillac did not
produce convertibles after 1976). The 8.2L V8 of 1970-76 gave way
to a new 7L V8 with . Minor changes followed in 1978.
This generation of Eldorados produced between 1971 and 1978 were
sometimes customized (as stereotyped "
pimpmobiles") (bro cars) and seen in
blaxploitation films like
Dolemite,
Superfly,
The Mack,
Willie Dynamite, (the pimped-out
Eldorado seen in Willie Dynamite is similar to the one seen in
Magnum Force) and even the
James Bond film
Live and Let Die. An Eldorado was
also used in Rob Zombie's second film,
The Devil's Rejects as the car that the
character Charlie, also a pimp, drove. Customizers such as Les
Dunham Coachworks have modified brand-new Eldorados with headlight
covers (commonly known as Superfly headlights), grille caps, a 1941
goddess hood ornament, lake pipes, and thick-padded vinyl tops,
usually with circular porthole windows.
Eldorado convertible for 1976
In 1976, when all other domestic convertibles had vanished, GM
heavily promoted the American industry's only remaining convertible
as "the last American convertible". 14,000 would be sold, many
purchased as investments. The final 200 convertibles produced were
designated as "Bicentennial Edition" commemorating America's 200th
birthday. These cars were white with a dual-color red/blue
pinstripe along the upper bodyside. In 1983, when GM reintroduced
convertibles, 1976 Eldorado owners, who felt they had been
deceived, launched an unsuccessful class action lawsuit.
Eldorado Biarritz
Unlike the Fleetwood and de Ville models, Eldorado didn't have a
unique luxury package to provide it with a title change (such as
the "d'Elegance" package). This was rectified in mid-year 1976 with
the
Biarritz package. The most unique feature of
"Biarritz", a name that hadn't been used since 1960, was a brushed
aluminum roof covering the front passenger compartment for model
years 1979-1985. This was a styling cue reminiscent of the 1957/58
Eldorado Brougham. The rear half of the roof was covered with a
heavily padded landau vinyl top accented with large "opera" lights.
The interior featured "pillowed"-style [traditionally known as
"tufted"] velour or leather seating, with contrasting piping, along
with an array of other options available.
The Biarritz option stayed with the Eldorado through the 1991 model
year. Some of the original styling cues vanished after the 1985
model year, such as the brushed aluminum roofing and the interior
seating designs, but "Biarritz" remained unique just the
same.
Image:1971eldofront.jpg|1971 Eldorado
ConvertibleImage:73_eldorado.jpg|1973 Eldorado ConvertibleImage:74
Eldo Convert.jpg|1974 Eldorado
ConvertibleImage:1976_Cadillac_Eldorado_Biarritz.jpg|1976 Eldorado
BiarritzFile:1976 Cadillac Eldorado convertible 1 --
10-23-2009.jpg|1976 Eldorado convertible
Power T-tops
The 1978 Eldorado was the only American luxury car in its class (or
any car class) to be offered with power T-Tops. In this regard,
only 7 Eldorados were known to have been produced with Power T-Tops
customized by American Sunroof Company under the direction of the
Cadillac Motor Division. There currently exists 1 Carmine Red
Eldorado Cabriolet; 1 Colonial Yellow "Eldorado Custom
Biarritz"; 1 Black Eldorado Cabriolet; 1 Two-Tone Arizona
Beige and Demitasse Brown Eldorado Custom
Biarritz
Classic; and 3 Cotillion White "Eldorado Custom
Biarritz"
examples remaining 30 years later.
1979-1985

1983 Cadillac Eldorado.
For 1979, a new, trimmer Eldorado was introduced, and for the first
time the car shared its chassis with the
Buick Riviera as well as the Toronado. Smaller
350 and 368 in³ (5.7 and 6.0 L) V8's replaced the 500 and 425 in³
(8.2 and 7.0 L) of the preceding model, giving better fuel
efficiency. For 1979, it was offered only with the Oldsmobile 350
as standard, with the diesel 350 available as an option. In 1980,
the gas 350 was replaced with the Cadillac 368 except in
California, where the Olds 350 was retained for that year. In both
the 1980 Seville and Eldorado (which shared their frames), the 368s
in 1980 came with DEFI, whereas for the larger RWD Cadillacs, the
368 only came with a 4-barrel Quadrjet carburetor.
Independent rear suspension was
adopted, helping retain rear-seat and trunk room in the smaller
body. The most notable styling touch was an extreme notchback
roofline, making the rear window almost vertical. The Eldorado
Biarritz model resurrected the stainless-steel roof
concept from the first Brougham. Although downsized, these
Eldorados were still substantial-sized cars with good room and
power.
For 1981, Cadillac began offering the
V8-6-4 variable displacement variant of the
368 engine, which was designed to deactivate some cylinders when
full power was not needed, helping meet GM's obligations under the
government fuel economy
standards. Unfortunately, it did not work as planned, and
sometimes did not work at all. It was a reduced bore version of the
1968 model-year 472, sharing that engine's stroke and also that of
the model-year 1977–1979 425. The engine itself was extremely
rugged and durable, but its complex electronics were the source of
customer complaints.
Another problem with the 1981 model year was an unexplained
balancing problem that affected the vehicle's overall handling. GM
corrected this issue by installing a large, heavy steel plate under
the driver's seat, a fact made popular by 1995's film
Casino. The film's leading man
Robert Deniro survives a bomb explosion, where
the explosive had been attached to his 1981 Eldorado's
undercarriage, on the driver's side, with that steel plate
effectively shielding his driver seat from the blast beneath; the
steel plate is credited with saving his life. The film, including
the Eldorado explosion incident, is based upon
Frank Rosenthal's life story.
Another problematic engine was introduced for 1982. The 4.1 L
HT-4100 was an in-house
design that mated cast-iron heads to an aluminum block. HT-4100s
failed in large numbers and many were replaced under
warranty.
Nevertheless, the Eldorado's reputation was not permanently hurt,
and sales rose to unprecedented heights, nearly 100,000 units by
1984, an astonishing volume for one of the most expensive models
available.
In 1984, Cadillac also introduced a convertible version of Eldorado
Biarritz. It was 200 pounds (91 kg) heavier, but featured the
same interior as other Biarritz versions. The model year of 1985
was the last year for the AMC, Inc., aftermarket conversion
Eldorado convertible. Because of its limited edition (around 3000
total), the convertible models are now highly sought after by
numerous collectors.
Prior to the 'official' 1984 and 1985 Eldorado convertibles
marketed by Cadillac, some 1979-83 Eldorados were made into
convertibles by independent coachbuilders e.g. American Sunroof
Corporation, Custom Coach (Lima, Ohio), Hess & Eisenhardt. The
same coachbuilders also converted the Oldsmobile Toronado into a
ragtop.
1986-1991
For 1986, yet another downsizing occurred, and it was fairly
extreme. In fact, the costly Eldorado was now the same size that
GM's own compact cars had been only a few years earlier, and much
smaller than Lincoln's competing
Mark
VII. Its styling seemed stubby, and in a final unfortunate
flourish, for the first time the Eldorado abandoned its hardtop
heritage and had sedan frames around its windows. News reports
later indicated that GM had been led astray by a consultant's
prediction that gasoline would be at $3 per US gallon in the U.S.
by 1986 and that very small luxury cars would be in demand. In
fact, gasoline prices were less than half that. Seldom has any
model experienced a more precipitous fall. Sales were only about a
fifth of what they had been two years earlier. The model received a
slight facelift in 1988 and saw a slight sales recovery through
1991.
1990-1991 Eldorado Touring Coupe
Although a touring suspension option had been available since 1988,
in 1990, the
Eldorado Touring Coupe (ETC), the 2-door
version of the Seville Touring Sedan (STS), debuted. The car had a
special handling and suspension package, quicker steering than the
standard Eldorado, and a higher final drive ratio of 3.33:1 in
contrast to the base model's 2.97:1. Badging was restricted to ETC
badges on both C pillars, a Cadillac crest on the grille along with
the Cadillac script logo and a special "Cadillac Motor Car Company"
badge on the trunk, which it shared with the STS. By 1991 it was
available in black, navy, white, polo green, silver and bright red,
all with a special beechwood interior and some exterior reveal trim
done in black. The model also featured body-colored door handles,
wider side rocker panels and dual rectangular exhausts. The split
rear taillights were amber above red.
Total Eldorado production in 1991 was 16,212 including 2,249
touring coupes.
1992-2002
For 1992, a new Eldorado appeared. It was in fact only slightly
bigger than its predecessor, but it was so much more adroitly
styled that it seemed greatly so. Window glass was once again
frameless, and shortly after introduction Cadillac's new
Northstar V8
became available in both 270 and 295 hp variants, replacing
the 200 hp
4.9 L. The combination of
sleek styling and increased power seemed more like the great
Eldorados of the past, and reviews were generally good. Sales were
up, though never again at record heights. Buyers were seemingly
turning against two-door bodies, as illustrated by the fact that
the Eldorado's very similar four-door relative, the
Cadillac Seville, consistently outsold it.
In 1996, the optional biarritz package was made available. It
consisted of the quarter roof, it gave the eldorado a more valuable
and desirable. The going price started at $55,000.00 USD. The
optional biarritz package only lasted until 1999.
The Eldorado continued for the rest of the decade with incremental
changes and gradually tapering sales. In the wake of declining
sales, circulating reports that the Eldorado would get a redesign
for 1999 — similar to that which its Seville platform mate
underwent for 1998 — would prove false as the car soldiered on
largely unchanged into the new millennium.
The car was also sold under the badge Cadillac ETC (Eldorado
Touring Coupe) and ESC (Eldorado Sport Coupe).

2002 Cadillac Eldorado ETC
Having lost its only remaining 2-door platform mate, the
Buick Riviera, after the 1999 model year,
rumors of the Eldorado's imminent demise began to circulate. GM
showed a lowered, customized Eldorado-based concept at the 2000
North American
International Auto Show, which was called
EldoRODo, to little media or public
interest.
Not long after, GM announced that the Eldorado's 50th model year,
2002, would be its last.To mark the end of the historic name, a
limited production run 1,596 of cars in red or white - the colors
available on the original 1953 convertible - were produced in three
batches of 532, signifying the Eldorado's first year of production.
The last cars had exhausts that were specially tuned to imitate the
note of their illustrious forerunners from a half-century earlier
and dash-mounted plaques indicating each car's sequence in
production.
Production ended on April
22, 2002, with the Lansing Craft
Centre
retooled to build the Chevrolet SSR.
References
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