Last of the Olympic-Sized Cadillacs: The 1976 Cadillac Coupe Deville Was 20 Feet of Luxury!

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 21 лип 2024
  • Learn more about the last of the large Cadillacs, the 1976 Cadillac Coupe Deville with the 500ci (8.2L) V8 engine!
  • Авто та транспорт

КОМЕНТАРІ • 618

  • @joesinkovits6591
    @joesinkovits6591 Рік тому +9

    Now THAT was a Cadillac! What they’re selling today is a pale reflection of what Cadillac used to be.

  • @christopherkraft1327
    @christopherkraft1327 Рік тому +22

    Nothing could ever beat the smooth ride & comfort of these beautiful Cadillacs!!! 👍👍🙂

    • @captainamericaamerica8090
      @captainamericaamerica8090 Рік тому

      FALSE! READ MY MAIN POST. MY GRAMPS WAS A MASTER MECHANIC. AND AUTO DEALER. HE WORKED ON 1OOO'S OF THESE RATTLING RUST BUCKETS.

    • @craigc1879
      @craigc1879 Рік тому +6

      @@captainamericaamerica8090 Jesus why all caps!

    • @captainamericaamerica8090
      @captainamericaamerica8090 Рік тому

      @@craigc1879 I'm a vision handicapped Functioning AUTIST!👓👓🔭🔭🔭

    • @christopherkraft1327
      @christopherkraft1327 Рік тому +4

      @@captainamericaamerica8090 My goodness, Is everything okay with you???

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Рік тому +6

      @@captainamericaamerica8090 Are you in some sort of pain? Do you require medical assistance?

  • @RobertSmith-le8wp
    @RobertSmith-le8wp Рік тому +171

    The huge cars of that era never really ended it just transferred to SUV’s. My neighbor has a new Escalade and I can’t imagine it’s much smaller than the Cadillac shown here if not even bigger. I would take this Coupe De Ville over any of these fancy SUV’s as they actually have very beautiful lines

    • @BrainFuck10
      @BrainFuck10 Рік тому +24

      Yeah the Escalade is bigger in terms of sheer mass but this Coupe Deville is 3 inches longer than the Long Wheelbase Escalade ESV, which is crazy to wrap your head around! 🤯

    • @martinliehs2513
      @martinliehs2513 Рік тому +27

      Even though the old school coupes and sedans are rather bricklike in shape, I'll bet that they still beat the modern SUVs in terms of aerodynamic drag at highway speeds. With a modern powertrain, the old land yachts would be more economical to drive than the SUVs and crew cab pick-ups that many people use today as family vehicles.

    • @67marlins
      @67marlins Рік тому +12

      Robert Smith - That's a very good point & observation.
      I remember being horrified with the size & weight of the new 2000 Ford Excursion.....I just couldn't believe we were going backwards by creating a new ultra-large SUV market....

    • @lloydandbethbeiler8127
      @lloydandbethbeiler8127 Рік тому +7

      Thankfully the gas milage has increased greatly!

    • @kc0lif
      @kc0lif Рік тому +1

      yeah they ended

  • @UNCFIPP
    @UNCFIPP Рік тому +21

    I had one of these 76 coupes.. The de'Elegance version with the clear hood ornament.. That 500 is a BEAST.. Even choked down, it could leave tire marks. But that happened only ONCE.. The way my gas needle moved, i learned to coast from a stop light. Easily one of the best cars ive owned

    • @boballmendinger3799
      @boballmendinger3799 Рік тому +2

      I ran mine to near empty once, and put a few gallons of race has in it. Drove it a bit to get it to the carb. On a side street, I came to a dead stop, then floored it. After a few car lengths I had to let up on the throttle to get the peelout to stop!

  • @jeffgann6613
    @jeffgann6613 Рік тому +16

    I bought a 1975 Coupe Deville d'Elegance back in 77 that was a low mileage trade-in. Light blue metallic with dark blue velour seats. It was the first of many Cadillacs. So smooth and comfortable, it was a joy to be in. Wonderful stereo sound system that put the Lincolns of the day to shame. Still have fond memories of that behemoth and the way it wrapped you in luxury and me feel like a king.

  • @bendeleted9155
    @bendeleted9155 Рік тому +9

    When cars were as long as crew cab pickups are today.

  • @michaelkehm3663
    @michaelkehm3663 Рік тому +23

    Adam, again thank you for the memories of an era gone by. I worked at a Pontiac dealership when I started in the business in 1972. In late 1974 I went to the Buick Cadillac Oldsmobile store. Was always in service except from the summer of 1976 to late summer of 1977.
    For that one year I was in sales. In late September 1976 I sold my first new Cadillac to a recently retired career Army officer. He had just retired and moved from Alabama to Iowa. Drove up to the dealership in a 1973 Coupe Deville, walked into the showroom in bib overalls with his checkbook in the front pocket.
    Showed him the last 1976 Coupe Deville we had in stock. Silver with red leather. Was the retired owner's demo with barely a 1,000 miles on it.
    Within less than an hour the gentleman wrote a check for full window sticker less the wholesale allowance for his 1973 model . He drove off delighted, I was proud for selling my first new Cadillac. Then the aged Sales Manager called me into his office and chastised me for selling Mr. Allen's demo as the downsize 1977's were a few weeks away and there were not any new Cadillacs left in inventory. Mr. Allen called me into his office Monday and congratulated me for selling the last 1976 in inventory. Said he was just fine and would drive his Buick Regal coupe till some new models arrived.
    That sale has stuck in my memory as being my first Cadillac delivered and what a gorgeous car it was!

    • @gm12551
      @gm12551 Рік тому

      Sales manager was under pressure from himself and not the owner I bet.

    • @retroguy9494
      @retroguy9494 Рік тому

      'Bib overalls with his checkbook in the front pocket.' 😂🤣 From Alabama to Iowa........why am I not surprised? LOL
      So based on your story about the sale, I see middle management was pretty much the same even 45 years ago....ASSHOLES!

  • @kevlar7669
    @kevlar7669 Рік тому +4

    I bought a 76 Coupe DeVille in Somerset Ma. In 1991 for $1100.
    I drove it for a year and gave it to my mom. She drove it for 7 years.

  • @DavidHall-ge6nn
    @DavidHall-ge6nn Рік тому +38

    Adam, I seriously doubt there's a single item in the parts bin of any domestic auto manufacturer that you don't have cataloged in that mainframe brain of yours, and every one of them with a complete history of development and utilization. Amazing!

  • @Flies2FLL
    @Flies2FLL Рік тому +16

    When I see one of these I cannot help but think of the scene in Risky Business where Guido the Killer Pimp chases Joel in the 928....
    [Trivia: Three 928's were used in the movie. One was a fire damaged car that had no engine or interior; That's the one that went into the water. The second one was used for the interior scenes and is no longer in existence. The third one was the one in the exterior scenes and sold last year for $1.98 million. Tom Cruise learned to drive a manual transmission in this car and signed the dashboard. I had the opportunity to buy that car in 2005 for $50,000 and turned it down as being outrageously priced....]
    Great video!

    • @quad5186
      @quad5186 Рік тому

      That scene where he stalls backing out of the garage- music stalls too 😂😂
      So many funny scenes and lines from that movie.👍

    • @quad5186
      @quad5186 Рік тому

      “I’m really not enjoying this!”

    • @rafaelfiallo4123
      @rafaelfiallo4123 Рік тому

      @Eric RuudIt had tan leather not the op-art interior.

  • @Flies2FLL
    @Flies2FLL Рік тому +7

    Someone told me that Cadillac got away from the "casket handles" on the '77 DeVille simply because people started calling them that, and typical Cadillac buyers were old people for whom casket handles might have a somewhat more sinister connotation....

  • @Ozark_Bule
    @Ozark_Bule Рік тому +5

    My sister had a 75 coupe de ville, rosewood metallic with a body colored vinyl landau top. Seats had a courdoroy surface (it was actually breathable and very comfortable). I got to drive from Ft. Lauderdale to Disneyworld in 76 when I was 16. It was a magic carpet on a cloud.

  • @jeffrobodine8579
    @jeffrobodine8579 Рік тому +5

    I remember watching Harrison Fox Sr. played by Jack Warden flying down the hilly San Francisco streets in his 1976 Cadillac Coupe DeVille in the 1980's show Crazy Like A Fox.

  • @joshgreen2164
    @joshgreen2164 Рік тому +12

    Your knowledge is astounding Sir! I love these old oversized cars. Nothing since has compared to the ride of any fullsize American car prior to about 1990 at the end with the peak being from 62 to 76 across GM's offerings in my opinion. Thank you for sharing.

  • @OLDS98
    @OLDS98 Рік тому +8

    I recall this car. A woman I worked for when I was in college who is no longer with us owned a 1976 Cadillac Coupe Deville. You are right...the doors are heavy. I remember that more than anything else. The one she had had the same wheel covers and hers had a leather interior. It was not beat up either. I liked the interior casket door handles. She was a small woman. It amazed me how she drove this car. She did. It was fun. She also owned a downsized 1985 Cadillac Coupe Deville at 195 inches long. I rode in the back to back at times in the cars and you could tell and see and feel the difference in major ways. It took me back to see this video. The last Coupe Deville was 1993. GM/Cadillac felt that Eldorado could fill the coupe segment nicely because of its size and the market had changed. Thank you Adam.

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Рік тому +3

      I consider the 1980 the last true Coupe de Ville. I owned one. Those nasty front wheel drive warts that came out in 1985 were not true Cadillacs.

  • @IDGAF56852
    @IDGAF56852 Рік тому +1

    Beautiful old cars,like sitting in a lounge sofa,smooth as silk.

  • @DavidKarlsson-ti6sb
    @DavidKarlsson-ti6sb Рік тому +1

    My buddy drove one in high school around '88/'89. I drove an MGB, and he would crawl into his trunk to show it had more room than my cars cockpit. Great car.

  • @nerradnosnhoj5122
    @nerradnosnhoj5122 Рік тому +4

    Wicked cars these huge cruisers
    Thank you for the video Adam

  • @kennyclark284
    @kennyclark284 Рік тому +10

    1976 Cadillac, most comfortable seats, front or rear, I ever sat in. Also I could parallel park this car on one try…did it numerous times. It was a great handler with super quick steering. Such an absolute joy.

    • @captainamericaamerica8090
      @captainamericaamerica8090 Рік тому

      YOU'RE MR. CLUELESS=😳😳THAT'S WHY THERE'S NONE AROUND
      LONG TERM! THE FEW AROUND, TODAY WERE HARDLY DRIVEN! THEY WERE STORED AWAY SO AS NOT BE THAT CONSTANT MONEY PIT. MY GRANDFATHER LOVED THESE. THESE OLD RATTLE GAS HOGS😦😦🐷🐷FILLED UP HIS REPAIR SHOPS.💰💰💰💰💰💰

    • @2006gtobob
      @2006gtobob Рік тому +5

      I'm sure you're comparing it's handling to a yacht.

    • @67marlins
      @67marlins Рік тому +5

      @Robert D. Nobody ever bought cars like that for their handling. Apparently some people, Consumer Reports among them, still cannot comprehend that.

    • @js.2343
      @js.2343 Рік тому +3

      These do indeed handle quite well, i use my 76 Fleetwood Brougham as a daily driver in the summer and i find it to be surprisingly stable. I've also replaced all the shocks and bushings which might help, these tend to be worn out on most causing the bad handling.

  • @loveisall5520
    @loveisall5520 Рік тому +14

    I was in college in 1976 and my golf professor had an unusual white DeVille coupe w/o the vinyl roof with a beautiful blue interior. It rode and handled like the Queen Mary! I can remember well the shock when the beautiful '77 models came out. Great video!

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL Рік тому +1

      Dashboards looked about the same for 30-40 years... full size and Seville...

    • @captainamericaamerica8090
      @captainamericaamerica8090 Рік тому

      @@BuzzLOLOL Something always never worked on these old rust buckets gas hogs🐖🐷

    • @philojudaeusofalexandria9556
      @philojudaeusofalexandria9556 Рік тому +5

      You had a golf professor?!

    • @loveisall5520
      @loveisall5520 Рік тому +6

      @@philojudaeusofalexandria9556 A great one, Dr. John Corley. He was a railroad attorney until he retired at 65, then returned to college and worked his way into a Ph.D. in athletics, the oldest doctoral candidate the university ever awarded. He was in his early 80's when I studied under him. I'm left handed and he spent a semester training me to golf right handed with an equal handicap. He used to spend his summers touring the nation's golf courses. A fine man from several decades ago.

    • @klwthe3rd
      @klwthe3rd Рік тому +1

      Was it a good shock or bad?When the 77 came out?

  • @ddellwo
    @ddellwo Рік тому +4

    I’m 58 years old and oddly enough, have only gone for one short journey in a Cadillac - about a six-block to and back ride for Midnight Mass one snowy Christmas Eve back in the late-80’s! The car was owned by my brother-in-law’s father who was known around our small town for buying a new Brougham every three years - usually trading them in after that amount of time with about 3000 miles on the odometer…….😮

  • @charlesdalton985
    @charlesdalton985 Рік тому +60

    One note on cloth seats. My grandfather owned many Cadillacs through the 60s and 70s. He, and many people his age, equated leather seats with open top cars of the 30s. Open top cars, being more affordable in those days, had leather seating. Therefore, they felt the cloth seating was more luxurious.

    • @jefferyepstein9210
      @jefferyepstein9210 Рік тому +16

      Leather didn't hold up well in those days especially the stitching. Cloth was the better option and more comfortable.

    • @tonywestvirginia
      @tonywestvirginia Рік тому +2

      What a beauty they are!

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Рік тому

      1910s and 1920s were the heyday of open top cars. By the 1930s, the closed top was more prevalant. By the 1960s, closed tops were universal. Peferring cloth in the 1960s because 40 and 50 year old cars featured leather on cheaper offerings seems odd to me.

    • @charlesdalton985
      @charlesdalton985 Рік тому +5

      @@MarinCipollina Yeah, human nature can be interesting. It’s like taste in music, it tends to be formed when we’re young, and then stays with us.

    • @manitoba-op4jx
      @manitoba-op4jx Рік тому +7

      cloth is still nicer

  • @percival23
    @percival23 Рік тому

    There is just something special and important about these few soles out there who have decided to be the stewards of memory & knowledge in something that has long since been forgotten by everyone else. Well done.

  • @neilouellette3004
    @neilouellette3004 Рік тому +5

    This Caddy only has 3,700 miles. Sold for $35,000 on Bring A Trailer online auction May 8, 2022. Gorgeous car!

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Рік тому +2

      I'll never forget taking a 1972 silver Coupe de Ville on trade for a new 1981 Pontiac Bonneville with only 1200 actual miles. That was astonishing.

  • @dmandman9
    @dmandman9 Рік тому +8

    I remember back in 1976 the word had gotten around that the next year would be downsized. I remember a lot of people buying these full sized GM because it would be their last chance. This may partially explain why they sold so well.

    • @hurricane2649
      @hurricane2649 Рік тому

      In my first job at a car stereo shop, a feller came in with a brand new '85 Riviera and he said the same thing. This is the last year before they chop them up again. This was only 9 years since the first butcher job.

    • @thomasw4709
      @thomasw4709 Рік тому

      My Dad did exactly that. He wanted the last of the big ones and had a choice of 3 left in Toronto. He chose a brown sedan de ville D’Elegance. I learned to drive and parallel park in that car. Never seemed ridiculously big then, but when I see one now it’s a bit surprising.

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Рік тому

      @@hurricane2649 The 1979 downsizing was hardly a 'butcher' job.. It was perfect. The subsequent downsizing in '86 went too far and was unnecessary.

    • @ralphl7643
      @ralphl7643 Рік тому

      @@thomasw4709 The big Cadillacs could turn sharper than some cars with smaller wheelbases.

  • @JamesJohnson-ok1hn
    @JamesJohnson-ok1hn 4 місяці тому

    wow never ceases to amaze me these videos. my 76 was a touring edition with a few extra features but i had a radiator fail on the highway and the engine was toasted. i sold her too. she was bright yellow with lite brown interior and beautiful wire wheel covers.

  • @daleamcallister284
    @daleamcallister284 Рік тому +3

    Adam Thank You as you are always, so very informative. I bought 2 1976 Caddy's. A Coupe DeVille and Sedan DeVille d'Elegance. Both Kingswood Dark Green. The Coupe had White leather interior and Sedan had Pillow Cushion Seats of a Dark Green Corduroy! My 73' and 76' Cadillacs were the favorite of all the many brand new cars I've bought in my life. I Love, Love, Love automobiles as much as you do!

  • @brentrobinson6956
    @brentrobinson6956 Рік тому +1

    My dad and I was in the used car business all of our lives sold a ton of muscle cars ( back in the day ) and 4 Dr. ( Family cars ) we traded for a 76 couple that was a really nice car . My wife and I were going on vacation and went all out through the west .We drove the Coupe De Ville and was really comfortable road fantastic and got pretty decent gas mileage . . My wife only being 5' 4" would crawl in the back seat and take naps and said it was as comfortable as he bed at home . . I loved it . . I ended up keeping it for quite a while after we got back . She drove it every day for maybe a year but when I had in changing the oil a fella come in fell in love with it and I sold it . . I'm still living that one down . . If I could find a nice today I'd buy it in a heart beat . .

  • @Sevenfeet0
    @Sevenfeet0 Рік тому +30

    Of all of the cars that Adam has shown on this channel that I've wanted, this is the only one that I actually owned for a brief period of time. My grandfather was a small town country doctor in Alabama and when i was a kid, he purchased a 1974 Coupe DeVille (his last car before his death). Two years later he upgraded my grandmother's previous Cadillac with a new 1976 model. But he bought a more expensive Fleetwood Brougham for her, not the Deville. As the story goes, while she was driving the delivered car off the lot, the rear axle cracked. My grandmother wanted nothing to do with a Fleetwood at this point so the deal was modified for a '76 Sedan DeVille that happened to be already on the dealer lot. It's this car that i spent a fair amount of my later childhood in, from age 11 up until college whenever I would spend summers with them or when she visited our home city in Tennessee. After my grandfather passed away in 1977, his car was sold and my grandmother never traded the Deville for the rest of her life. In fact she drove the car until 1991 and it was this car that made us determine that she had passed the point she could safely drive the land yacht when she lightly damaged the front fender pulling into her carport, which she'd done hundreds of times over the years. At that point we moved her to our city, sold her house and parked the Deville under a carport behind her sister's house in the same small town. The problem is that the carport was not completely shielded from weather and although i did want the vehicle, I had no place to store it and time began to erode the car. I would return to the car every so often and turn over the engine and drive it for a little bit. The 8.2L V8 always sprang to life and drove just fine as well as the transmission. But the fender scrape was beginning to rust as was the points at the rear window where the vinyl roof met the trunk. It probably had about 92,000 miles on it toward the end. After my grandmother's death in 1999, we made a family decision to part with the car, a decision i still regret because of the sentimental attachment I had to it. Unlike the Fleetwood, the Deville wasn't that well equipped. It was gun metal gray with the gray interior. It did have leather seats (bench) although the leather quality made you wonder if they were really vinyl. It had a stereo 8-track player, automatic headlamps (but not the guidematic option). The rear seat was ridiculously cavernous.....4 adults could seat back there in a pinch. There was no hood ornament. Otherwise, it wasn't a remarkable equipped vehicle. But it still brings me smiles when i think about it.

    • @marka1422
      @marka1422 Рік тому +1

      Great story! Thank you for sharing it. 🙂

    • @retroguy9494
      @retroguy9494 Рік тому +1

      Fascinating story dude! I had an uncle who bought a brand new 1980 Fleetwood Brougham which today is a highly sought after car. Awesome color combo too! Black with gray cloth interior. I think it was the D'Elegance model too. He picked it up new at the dealer, drove it literally 3 miles and the entire transmission fell out of it! 😂 He walked to a pay phone, called the dealer and told them 'come and pick up your junk!' As he was a good customer, the dealer ordered the service department to take a transmission out of another new one that was on the lot and put it in my uncle's car. I LOVED that car. He only kept it a year and traded it in on a 1981 Sedan DeVille with the 4-6-8 engine. That was the very first Cadillac I ever drove when I turned 17 and he let me drive it on Thanksgiving day. Having always loved Cadillacs since he bought his 1973 Eldorado, I thought I was in Heaven! I would go on to own 11 Cadillacs and I still drive one (an Escalade).
      I can't believe your family did that to your grandmother over one little ding in the carport. Even a 25 year old can misjudge ONCE. I know I sure as hell did! LOL And I'm an excellent driver, having learned from my father who was probably the best driver I ever knew.
      You shouldn't have gotten rid of the car. That little bit of rust where the rear window vinyl meets the trunk was VERY common in the '74 to '76 Cadillacs. It's actually a relatively easy and somewhat cheap fix as long as you do it while its superficial and before it eats in and forms an actual hole. I have a 1976 Fleetwood myself (the D'Elegance model) with only 38K original miles. I have that rust too. It's to big to fit in my garage so I had it under a custom made cover. Well, due to a flaw, the cover ripped. Before they would send me a new one free, I had to send the old one back for them to do 'tests.' It took them a couple months over the winter. Sadly, because it was exposed to the snow and ice, that rust spot formed as well as one other where the passenger door meets the fender.
      You are right about the quality of the leather. About 20 years ago, I also had a 1976 Sedan DeVille with leather interior. It was HORRIBLE especially in the winter. It didn't feel like leather at all but more like my grandmothers 1973 Buick which had vinyl interior.
      Strange that your grandmother's car was gray on gray. When I was a kid, my neighbor up the street had a '76 Sedan DeVille in that exact same color scheme. I don't like gray in cars. Too neutral and reminds me of a Navy ship! LOL

    • @jay241971
      @jay241971 Рік тому +1

      Great story about your grandparents and their cars. If we could only get the cars back that we regret letting go! 😄

    • @retroguy9494
      @retroguy9494 Рік тому

      @@jay241971 Tell me about it! If I could only have my late uncle's '73 Eldorado and '80 Fleetwood Brougham today!
      Funny thing is, I used to beg him to put that Eldorado away until I turned 17 and could buy it from him.

  • @robertortiz8540
    @robertortiz8540 Рік тому

    I was 16 years old in 1976 and I remember this Cadillac Coupe Deville very well.

  • @wmennisny
    @wmennisny Рік тому +3

    For me, this is THE quintessential Cadillac of all time.

  • @HypocriticYT
    @HypocriticYT Рік тому +3

    Beautiful cars with a great ride. The bumpers really could take substantial hits

  • @Leawoody
    @Leawoody Рік тому +7

    Great video. My grandparents had a 1975 Sedan deVille, white vinyl roof over white with a red interior and white leather seats. It felt so modern and opulent at the time. Although he heavily criticized the 1977 downsizing he eventually replaced the ‘75 with an ‘84 before the second downsizing to front wheel drive. I had the opportunity to drive it a couple of times and it was quite an experience.

  • @ChristiesThisnThat
    @ChristiesThisnThat Рік тому

    She is such a beauty! I drove my Grannie's 1976 Calumet Cream Coupe de Ville in high school and college and I love her!

  • @ggreg2258
    @ggreg2258 Рік тому +1

    My mother owned a 1976 DeVille in the color shown but with all leather upholstering. I LOVED it. Like driving a tank! Wish I had it today. Wonderful, totally quiet ride. Thanks.

  • @desertmodern7638
    @desertmodern7638 Рік тому +5

    Excellent piece. Wonderfully accurate and comprehensive.
    I've had several 1973-76 Cadillacs, and somehow escaped the sagging door issue, perhaps because they were all sedans, but I know it exists from what friends went through. While the sheer weight of the doors was obviously part of it, I think another factor was the new-for-1971 method used to ensure better sealing of the side glass. The glass leaned in farther with the door open, and closing the door shoved it up into the weather stripping as it straightened a bit, putting added downward force on the door. On high-cycle cars, particularly coupes, the hinges don't stand a chance.

  • @brenthill3241
    @brenthill3241 Рік тому +2

    Beautiful car.
    I remember them well.
    I always refer to the 76 Cads as the last of the real Caddies.
    I will say as someone working in a tire shop in those days that changing and mounting the wheel assemblies of those monstrous L-78 × 15s in those days on the larger GM cars during a heat wave was a real workout.

  • @tombrown1898
    @tombrown1898 Рік тому +25

    An uncle of mine bought a new Cadillac every four years, starting in 1957. When he went to trade his 1973 Fleetwood, and saw the downsized 1977 models, he went straight to the Lincoln dealer and never looked back. He was not alone in that reaction.

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Рік тому +8

      That was unfortunate for him. My father bought one of the 1977 Fleetwoods in triple black. It was gorgeous. Solidly built and reliable, much higher build quality than earlier 1970s versions.

    • @RareClassicCars
      @RareClassicCars  Рік тому +10

      No. But Cadillac had far more sales in 1977 vs 1976. 380k Vs 320kish

    • @tombrown1898
      @tombrown1898 Рік тому +4

      @@RareClassicCars No doubt. But in 1976, that same uncle had bought 2 of the Bicentennial Edition Eldorado convertibles. So, he drove a Cadillac for the rest of his life. His daughter is still driving the one he put away to save.

    • @jonmoore8995
      @jonmoore8995 Рік тому +1

      I'm with your other viewer on the cloth seats. More comfortable and luxurious than leather. The only thing I dont like is that steering wheel. It doesnt flow with the design. The 1977 model steering wheel looks like it belongs.

    • @petestaint8312
      @petestaint8312 Рік тому

      I agree with your uncle. 👍

  • @fp5495
    @fp5495 Рік тому +1

    in '81, when I was six, my parents flew down to Fort Lauderdale, borrowed my grandparent '76 Coupe deVille, shoved me and my siblings in the back seat, and drove north to Orlando for Disney. Memories ingrained in my conscience forever.

  • @TonyBarr99
    @TonyBarr99 Рік тому +2

    Thank you Adam. My father had a 1973 and a 1975 Sedan Deville. I loved these cars. Our vacation drives from Philadelphia to Florida were so comfortable, even for a family of 6! I am much more of an import car enthusiast, but I have a special place in my heart for these cars. I am so happy that you have the knowledge and the passion to document and share them on youtube!

  • @randyfitz8310
    @randyfitz8310 Рік тому +4

    My daily driver was three years earlier. Still regret selling it.

  • @cellpat2686
    @cellpat2686 Рік тому +1

    Very 1970s and the square headlights enhanced the elegance of the vehicle. It was a nice way to end a design started back in 1965. They have become collectibles and the nice ones are not cheap, some worth more today than when they were new.

  • @MarkWG
    @MarkWG 2 місяці тому

    I sorely miss my Cotillion White, 1976 Cadillac Sedan de Ville. I bought it in 1979 with 28,000 miles on it. I had to sell it in 2008 due to loss of and lack of storage facilities. Almost 30 years of ownership. Best driving automobile I have ever owned. Great highway cruiser. Loved the big, silent 500cid V8 with plenty of reserve power. She had 90,000 miles when I sold her.
    I miss it terribly.

  • @nycstarport8542
    @nycstarport8542 Рік тому +1

    I like the exterior color 😎

  • @Jason-xb3jh
    @Jason-xb3jh Рік тому +1

    👍✨ Thanks for another great video Adam.

  • @timferguson1593
    @timferguson1593 Рік тому

    This Caddy is absolutely beautiful!!! Outstanding!

  • @c_firebirdgo8639
    @c_firebirdgo8639 Рік тому

    Been enjoying watching your videos. I learned how to drive in my mom's 75 Sedan deVille that she bought in the mid 80s and had till the mid 90s. Before that she had a 2 door 73 Mercury Marquis Brougham. So I got my appreciation from them

  • @adamsneidelmann8976
    @adamsneidelmann8976 Рік тому +1

    Always wanted one of those.

  • @RichardOzOuzounian
    @RichardOzOuzounian Рік тому +1

    Great video! I learned to drive on a '76 with the 500 FI engine (when it was new). My old man had me back-up around our driveway and not hit anything, at the time a nightmare, now I can drive anything! It was a great car.

  • @chuckpeterson3262
    @chuckpeterson3262 Рік тому

    I distinctly remember seeing the cockeyed headlamps when these cars were brand new!

  • @christianbugatticg
    @christianbugatticg Рік тому +1

    Hey that was my car!!! NICE!! I have several walk around videos and driving videos on my youtube channel!! Thanks for sharing this one!!

    • @RareClassicCars
      @RareClassicCars  Рік тому +2

      Yes indeed. You and I have competed for some of the cars!

  • @walterwright8454
    @walterwright8454 Рік тому +2

    Competition Cars!!! I recognize the showroom from Bill's videos!!

    • @bdpopeye
      @bdpopeye Рік тому +2

      Yea! Bill has some awesome autos. I watch all of his videos.

  • @wil7228
    @wil7228 Рік тому

    Beautiful! I was 16 when these came out , they look real nice in Sky Blue paint.

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Рік тому

      1976 was virtually identical to the 1975, and only minor styling differences separate it from the 1971 - 1974..

  • @Bossrich6287
    @Bossrich6287 Рік тому

    My uncle had a 1976 Cadillac,it was a beautiful car and a 2-door.

  • @mewregaurdhissyfit7733
    @mewregaurdhissyfit7733 Рік тому

    Aside from the 1980 Seville........THIS is my favorite Caddy! A friend bought a banana yellow one, and he let me drive it one summer. I fell in love with this car so badly!!!

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Рік тому

      You find the 1980 Seville redesign appealing?

  • @stephengreen3566
    @stephengreen3566 Рік тому

    Thank you for your history lessons. My first car was a '64 Plymouth Fury four door with the 318. I still miss that car.

  • @carltwidle9046
    @carltwidle9046 Рік тому

    What a large car. And 2 door as well. I was 16 years young when it rolled off the assembly line.

  • @jeffreydavis9783
    @jeffreydavis9783 Рік тому +2

    This has always been one of my favorite cars & I was thrilled when I saw that it was one of YOUR videos, Adam. I love watching/listening to your presentations because your info’s always on-point, you know things about these vehicles nobody else seems to know & I almost always concur with your opinions - whatever they may be. I particularly enjoy when you discuss a specific feature (front end styling, for instance) & provide a pic of the vehicle you’re comparing (the 74/75 DeVille). It really serves to clarify your point & educate the viewer. Thanks for putting in the time & effort…and keep up the excellent work!

    • @RareClassicCars
      @RareClassicCars  Рік тому

      Thx!

    • @ralphl7643
      @ralphl7643 Рік тому

      He forgot to mention the '76 has two horizontal chrome ribs in the front turn signals that aren't on the '75.

  • @donaldperrotta8514
    @donaldperrotta8514 Рік тому

    My dad had a 76 Coupe De Ville !!! what a fabulous car !!!! I loved cruising in it !!!! And it was very reliable !

  • @Louis-dl3js
    @Louis-dl3js Рік тому

    Back in the day when I was a kid in Puerto Rico my grandpa had a caddy of this same year and my dad had a '74 chevy caprice in this burgundy color, they were both proud of their big boats. This was 1977 when I was in kindergarten.

  • @theconciergerecommends3981
    @theconciergerecommends3981 Рік тому

    My Great Aunt Alice had one... She had a tennis ball hanging down for the hood ornament to touch when parking and the garage door would still not close all the way! She still drove it at 90 with a lead foot!!!

  • @nathanclark2131
    @nathanclark2131 Рік тому

    This is what you call True Luxury,...beautiful.

  • @dominickserignese8837
    @dominickserignese8837 Рік тому

    My older sister's father in law owned a Chevron station in the 60s and 70s.He would buy a new caddy every couple years.the last caddy he bought was a green on green 76 coup de Ville.what beautiful car that was.

  • @armandodimarzio1136
    @armandodimarzio1136 Рік тому +3

    I am 52 years old , I had one of these monsters, it was the el Cheapo edition.
    I think it was the "Calais" I was getting blocks to the gallon. Not miles.
    It ate me out of house and home

  • @MillerMeteor74
    @MillerMeteor74 Рік тому +1

    I had one of these, but it was a 1975 Sedan DeVille. I picked up at our local junkyard for $500, back around 1986 or so. It ran beautifully and floated down the road. The ride was incredible. But we moved to Florida and I wore it out down there. I even delivered pizza with it for a while. I was putting 25 gallons of gas in it, every 125 miles, which equals 5 MPG. Otherwise I was getting 9. After while everything started going bad on it and I had to get rid of it. It was just a money pit. But by then it had a lot of miles on it. But I've had several Cadillacs over the years, and always loved them.

  • @stephenlacher587
    @stephenlacher587 Рік тому

    Once again, a fun watch, thanks.

  • @marcellocolona4980
    @marcellocolona4980 Рік тому

    My father had one of these as the Fleetwood Brougham-a living room on wheels!

  • @vitodesimone8120
    @vitodesimone8120 Рік тому

    A gorgeous Caddy and a very informative video.

  • @jimhailey5481
    @jimhailey5481 Рік тому +1

    Egg crate grills harken back to the classic era where radiators themselves were the grill.

  • @robfmas
    @robfmas Рік тому

    Growing up our neighbor had a 76 Coupe in Dun barton Green with a green cloth interior. Actually the interior looked rich and I thought very tasteful.

  • @29madmangaud29
    @29madmangaud29 Рік тому

    Oh, but the Sheer BEAUTY!!!!!!!!!!! Oh my gosh!

  • @bunsonhoneydew9099
    @bunsonhoneydew9099 Рік тому

    My dad had one of those. In Buffalo New York, you could sit on your front porch and listen to them rust. The rear bumper of ours rusted from the middle out.

  • @daviddigital6887
    @daviddigital6887 Рік тому

    My parents always had Cadillacs in the 70s and 80s. They shrunk down slightly in the late 70s but were still pretty big. If I remember right it had like a 426 ci or something like that. They would do awesome brake stands and they floated down the highway at 120.

  • @Alan-lv9rw
    @Alan-lv9rw Рік тому

    Us car nerds love, love, love your videos.

  • @drippinglass
    @drippinglass Рік тому +2

    Kool! I remember an article in Hot Rod about putting one of those 500 ci engines in an early Chevelle. Even the low compression versions with some tuning and duals would put you in the low 13’s. And they were cheap in the boneyards. This was back in the early 90’s.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Рік тому +1

      They are no longer cheap and are hard to get. They can be built to over 1000 HP.

    • @drippinglass
      @drippinglass Рік тому

      @@rogersmith7396 That’s why I said “were”… 😂👍

    • @drippinglass
      @drippinglass Рік тому

      @@rogersmith7396 I used to get running 440’s for under $100. You had to take the car with it though. 😎

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Рік тому +1

      @@drippinglass They are pulling them out of motorhomes now. I have seen 440s and 428s in boats. Common in the 70s. Now its all 454s. And diesels.

  • @HAL-dm1eh
    @HAL-dm1eh Рік тому +1

    75-76 and 77 Devilles are my all time favorite Cadillacs

  • @adrianotero7963
    @adrianotero7963 Рік тому

    My dad was partial to the 4 door version.....was one hell of a car, in its day....

  • @kevindunlap5525
    @kevindunlap5525 Рік тому +1

    Nothing can compare to these. People have no idea what they missed and will never choose to experience with the few that are left. I think my favorite car of all time, at least of those I actually rode in, would be the 1973 Convertible El Dorado. Just massive and welcoming. Any combination of the red and white, but I do like the white leather on this one. The 500 ci behemoth was in that one. I remember the incredibly smooth torque on it and I do NOT remember that it wasn't as strong as anything else. Just a stunning car. I personally had an '84 Oldsmobile Toronado that was essentially an El Dorado. Repairs kicked in, but it was a very cool car. I had blue velour!

  • @jeffreyalman
    @jeffreyalman Рік тому

    I like how you called the fan running on low speed while OFF a GM feature. LOL. I had both a fan cutoff switch as well as a compressor cut off switch installed on my 76 Seville. Worked great. Also, 76 had best steering wheel as well as telescopic column ever.

  • @grantman64
    @grantman64 Рік тому +1

    This baby deserves its own ZIP code!

  • @Caddyboy56
    @Caddyboy56 Рік тому

    Enjoyed the video, a very nice Coupe indeed. I will show my age in saying these full size Cadillacs back in the day meant you had arrived. Maybe why I have never now or back then been put off by the size of these motorcars. Today's Cadillac driving experience is seen through the lens of an SUV crafted from a brick. That is why I am so very fortunate talented person's such as yourself have a show that keeps people like me informed and entertained when it comes to full size luxury cars from yesteryear .

  • @bertram46
    @bertram46 Рік тому +2

    My dad's first Cadillac in 1976 was a Coupe DeVille like that. And back then I was 16 years old and had my own business washing and waxing Cadillacs like that in a suburb of Pittsburgh. Nothing Rode like a big Cadillac or Lincoln.
    In my later years as an adult I've had 2 78 triple white Eldorado Biarritzs'
    and I had which I really regret selling a 76 Fleetwood Talisman with 36,000 miles on it owned by one of the Harlem Globetrotters it ended up going to somebody in California I sold it for $8,000 and thought I did well

  • @patrickjames1159
    @patrickjames1159 8 місяців тому

    Looks like a great ride . And if your an adrenaline junkie a drive through ice covered mountain roads could be a real treat.

  • @kencooper2059
    @kencooper2059 Рік тому +1

    My dad had one of those that he drove until we made him stop driving due to his health. It was a boat, but was as smooth and quiet as they came.

  • @ricksand6477
    @ricksand6477 Рік тому

    Thanks for the look at this great old Caddy, Adam. Dad had '75 & '76 Coupe Devilles like this beauty. They had a ride that put everything else away. Just a sense of mass, quiet and smoothness that was unmatched. One other feature they had was a 30 gallon fuel tank(!) to feed that 500 c.i. V8. This was the only C body with that size fuel tank, as the Buick and Olds were "lesser" cars with only a 25 gallon tank to feed their "smaller" 455's. I think he averaged about 12 mpg, but the car would do 16 on the highway 😆.

  • @petertornabeni602
    @petertornabeni602 Рік тому

    Always loved the 1968, thank you Adam

    • @jakereal3604
      @jakereal3604 Рік тому +2

      My mom had a 1968 Sedan DeVille back in the early 80s. I loved the front end on it with the stacked headlights and front end that came to a V. The billet aluminum grille was a work of art IMO. I remember detailing the car for her when I was like 14-15. Many of the grille bar slots were bent. I carefully used a needle nose pliers with cardboard wrapped around each grille bar slot to straighten them out. When I was done I used an SOS Pad to clean all the years of dirt and dead bugs off the aluminum. It looked brand new when I was done! Mom bragged about how nice a job I did on that for awhile !!!

  • @ralphdeep9029
    @ralphdeep9029 Рік тому

    had 11 of them.......very favorite car......the coupe

  • @hilgerjhertell1795
    @hilgerjhertell1795 Рік тому

    I got a slightly used '75 and loved it. It had a three speed transmission and a four barrel carb, a quadrajet, I think it was called, that normally ran on just two barrels. If you floored it at, say 75 or 80, all four barrels opened up, and it felt like a downshift kick, but you knew it wasn't dropping down a gear, and it took off like a rocket! When you opened up the hood, the engine had a big white '500 ci' label on it. Awesome, out of this world ride! Gorgeous car! Silver outside with the vinyl half top and interiors in blood red.

  • @howardfletcher7206
    @howardfletcher7206 Рік тому

    Adam a wonderful review! I’ve had plenty of experience on these my first car was a rusty 73 coupe back in 85! Dad wanted me to learn by doing so it was a rolling restoration project. Had loads of fun running it down back roads for tractors and field hopping in it when we lived in rural Michigan.
    Anyways when we moved to Pennsylvania my neighbor was a Cadillac specialist particularly BY older models needing TLC and he and I bought fixed and resold many over the late 80s early 90s.
    My 70 Fleetwood easily favorite of all formal roof dark blue rear reading lamps and foot rests. 472 high compression kicked butt. Had a 75 coupe and 76 sedan much more sedate those cars even had a fuel economy gauge that went red on heavy throttle then yellow when you back off. Keeping it in the green meant ultra slow driving.
    My first downsized one a 78 coupe I remember was every bit as smooth quieter and better performance from its 425 motor. How those cars got so big in mid 70s seems almost cartoonish. Those headlight aiming bolts annoying control arm bushings and strut rod bushings common issues when they shed. Often times exhaust manifold bolts break driver side I’ve heard many of those give a little exhaust noise. Can be a difficult job to resolve. Thanks for another thorough review and smooth ride down memory lane.

  • @kc0lif
    @kc0lif Рік тому +1

    i like the sedan deville. i like big cars. my 1976 Eldorado convertible i had a switch installed to turn off/on ac compressor.

  • @LoneWolf-dv7ul
    @LoneWolf-dv7ul Рік тому

    I used to cut grass, and deliver news papers to a surgeon in 1976. He owned one of these cars, and I was in the car with him once. It was like riding on a loud. My father bought AMC,as he did their accounting work. Good old AMC wagon with 5 kids. Not exactly a Cadillac. However, the AMC did have an am radio in it.

  • @Oldman808
    @Oldman808 Рік тому

    I was a teenager in the 1970s. The backseat of my parents’ Buick Limited had bedsprings! 😊

  • @greekpapi
    @greekpapi Рік тому

    My pop had a 67 Sedan Deville.....car was an absolute tank.....

  • @WARVANE
    @WARVANE Рік тому

    this is one favorite Cadillac's

  • @Ascotman
    @Ascotman Рік тому

    Carl Johnson Cadillac, Norwood, Massachusetts at the Rotary in Norwood, Massachusetts. I remember these 1975-1976 Cadillacs!

  • @CadillacCentral
    @CadillacCentral Рік тому

    Had 2 of the 76 years in my lifetime, but sedans. Smoothest ride ever. The 2nd one I had was same color but with red leather interior. Exterior color is quintessential 70s. Have an EFI 76 walk-around on my channel as well as 1 or 2 others of this gen. Great video!

  • @robertlombardi2228
    @robertlombardi2228 Рік тому +1

    Adam - thanks for clarifying tire options offered on GM cars; specifically the Cadillac Coupe De Ville.
    Often wondered why we could not find the identical replacement tires for our Cadillac back in the day. 😊

    • @ralphl7643
      @ralphl7643 Рік тому

      The '75s were the first Cadillacs to have standard radial tires, and they have special wider whitewalls in '75 & 6.

  • @kingsleykronk3141
    @kingsleykronk3141 Рік тому

    I made the Fender Extenders.
    I first removed those brittle plastic fender extenders and then I made one cardboard mock up by cutting and lay and taped together stiff 1.5mm large cardboard templates flat over the fenders to accurately follow all body lines.
    After the mock up taped in place looked perfect I then used it to mark out, cut and fold the 1.5 mm aluminium sheet and it was then reasonably easy to work with to get it right.
    The total shape is slightly tricky with a mild dog leg shape and a very mild curve where it attaches the vertical rear outside edge of the fender.
    It has 3 folds on the top.
    Best part it was all made in one single folded piece and no welding and very cheap to make and rather logical once you have made it.
    Probably could be metal but I chose aluminium.
    I first made separate 5/8" folds on the front leading edge sections because it needs to attach to the fender with screws inside off memory, so then I cut many many small 5/8 long cuts about half inch apart so the flat long sides can easily bend and match the fender curve shape.
    If you get it all right it will hold it's own shape and looks good as original.
    On the 74 year it needs some body filler and shaping that weird small inside concave where I round folded it in at the lower inside.
    ----------
    232 inches (19'4") is the inside length of 20ft containers, it might have been one influencing limitation to their maddening lengths.
    I had a 20 x 20ft tin shed with a weight hung off the roof by a string to touch my 74 caddy hood emblem so to park it within several inches each end.

  • @jamesmisener3006
    @jamesmisener3006 Рік тому +2

    That was a good in depth review with excellent photos. Nice boat also!
    Be nice to know what Compition Motors is asking for this vessel. You would never lose it in a parking lot today. Cheers 🇨🇦

  • @andrewinaustintx
    @andrewinaustintx Рік тому +2

    A bit of trivia - 1953 Cadillac Coupe Deville was the last to be built on what would later be considered a short 126" wheelbase until the 1977 downsizing.