Look At That Cadillac, Look At That! Seven Bargain 400+ hp Cadillacs That Are NOT CTS-V’s.

2016 Cadillac CT6 Platinum – Home for 24 Hour Test Drive

My 2010 Mercedes S600 has about 97,000 miles and two years of warranty left, and so I’ve been preparing it for sale (hint, hint?) and hoping to replace it with another long distance highway cruiser. The BMW M760 V-12 I drove last fall was not as spacious as the Mercedes, and there haven’t been any Mercedes V-12 unicorns at CarMax in an awfully long time. I’m starting to think there may not be anymore, and so I started looking at possible placeholder cars – nice enough to drive for a year or longer but not so expensive I couldn’t impulsively sell on short notice if a Mercedes (or Audi) V-12 came on the market. I’ve looked at Cadillac CTS-V’s, but they don’t have adaptive cruise control or seat massagers, features I just have to have on the highway. I am willing to sacrifice the aromatherapy in the S-class.

Then I started filtering my searches for Auto Cruise Control, Apple Carplay, Heated Steering Wheel, and Seat Massagers. You’d think there would be more choices, but of the 61,000 cars in the CarMax inventory, less than 400 have seat massagers. Iinterestingly, the highest count are Fords – F150’s and Explorers. Who knew? Sorry but once you’ve had your back and butt rubbed at 75 mph on a thousand mile drive, you can’t not have seat massagers again. Ignoring the $70,000 and up cars, I zeroed in on these Cadillac XTS and CT6 sedans with 400 hp six cylinder motors, AWD, and most, if not all, of the features I need. And I even took the 2016 CT6 Platinum model above home for a 24 hour test drive, so we’ll start with that one.

The CT6 was the Cadillac flagship from 2016-2020, selling about 40,000 units total. The Platinum trim is the highest level. More interior pictures below, but let’s just say I was as comfortable in this Cadillac CT6 as I have been in the 2004 Mercedes S55 and 2010 Mercedes S600 I’ve owned. And neither had the audio system in the Cadillac – a 34 speaker (including in the head rest) Bose Panaray sound system. Loved it – especially coupled with Apple Carplay. Never heard of Panaray so had to Google it. First, Panaray is a “portmanteau” word, blending the sounds and combining the meanings of two others – panoramic and array. The sound system is a $3,700 option in lesser Cadillacs and standard in the Platinum models. I can see me turning the stereo down to share with passengers what both Panaray and portmanteau mean, once I learn to pronounce it.

Continue reading “Look At That Cadillac, Look At That! Seven Bargain 400+ hp Cadillacs That Are NOT CTS-V’s.”

The Final Fiat “Bring a Trailer” Post – It Is Done

Thought I’d wrap up the sale of my 1971 Fiat 124 Spider on Bring a Trailer before getting back to CarMax unicorns. This post about taken longer than I wanted to write, because the whole Bring a Trailer process has taken far longer than I had expected. It was an exhausting and exhilarating ride, and ironically one of my lingering memories will be just how much Bring a Trailer struggled to actually bring a trailer when the buyer requested shipment via the web site. More on that later. Fortunately, the buyer is a patient and kind man.

I initially submitted my Fiat in mid-October 2021 to begin the process. I elected to go for the $349 package that included Bring a Trailer (BaT) sending out a professional photographer and assigning an editor to write my listing. It took a few weeks to schedule and shoot the photos and make them available to me for review. Then it took a couple of weeks to assign a writer to complete my ad. If you’re wondering, BaT uses a template to input owner-provided info and allows for a little, but not much, color commentary. That’s why all the ads sound alike (powered by a 1.6 liter four-cylinder mated to a five-speed manual gearbox….) Fellow DC Fiat member Brewster Thackery is a BaT rep and was assigned as my writer. He did a good job and accepted edits that were important to me. By now we were into late November with no date set for going live and the holidays were looming. I began to fret.

To their credit, BaT noted there was a single digit discrepancy between my vehicle title and the VIN, and I would need to get that corrected before it could be listed. Do you have any idea how hard it is to get a new title issued in Virginia for a 50 year old Italian car? Turns out not hard at all – wonderful lady at the DMV got it done in about 20 minutes. Not a corrected or salvage or anything – an original title with the correct VIN. Whew!

Although I was frustrated we were two months into this process the BaT folks were accommodating in postponing going live until after Christmas. I didn’t think launching the auction right before Christmas was going to help sell the car. Who buys a vintage Fiat as a Christmas present? Instead I had a better plan – go live on New Year’s Eve and hope car enthusiasts with lots of time and lots of booze might go nuts bidding. And so we went live, for eight days instead of the normal seven, with the auction to close at 11 am Pacific time – 2 pm my time on January 7th. BaT has a provision to prevent last second snipers – if the high bid is placed at the deadline, the auction is extended another two minutes. Let’s go to the bidding.

I got a chuckle right off the bat with a compliment by solarfish and a clever $1,971 bid. Get it? BaT members can make comments whether or not they are bidding, and that makes for an interesting auction. Normally the negotiation of a car sale is between a buyer and a seller. Not here. Negotiations are more chaotic, and like normal auctions potential buyers are negotiating with each other with escalating bids – not negotiating with me. I made the sale “no reserve” and so highest bidder was getting my car. The interesting part is that the bidding is going on while bystanders, who may or may not know Fiats, and may or may not even be interested buying the car, can add comments. I was prepared for some sharp shooters who tune in only to point out defects and signal to all of us how much they know about these cars. Irritating, but can’t get irritated. Calmly answer their points because everyone is watching – but be aware that their comments can influence other real bidders. Tom Milton irked me by asking questions that seemed like that, at one point suggesting I might be hiding something and “maybe beauty is only skin deep?”. Imagine my surprise when he later bid on the car! That reinforced the need to stay calm. BaT advisors also told me I did not need to respond to each and every comment in real time, especially not from non-bidders.

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Which Do I Want – Jaguar XKR or Mercedes SL550? Which Do You Want?

Considering both of these unicorns, and both thrilled and disappointed by each. I had the Jaguar for a 24 hour test drive in early January, noted some mechanical and cosmetic issues, and almost a month later they offered it again (allegedly after fixes) for another 24 hour test drive. I did pay $99 to have it transferred from Newark so it was sort of reserved for me until I didn’t want it, although it wouldn’t be the first car CarMax “lost”. I have not driven this SL550 but a few months ago I drove a similar one and was quite surprised at how fast it was. Let’s get to the cars.

2012 Jaguar XKR. $36,998. 47,000 miles. Supercharged 5.0 liter V-8 with 510 hp.

2013 Mercedes SL550. $45,998 41,000 miles. Twin-turbo 4.6 liter V-8 with 429 hp.

The interior of the Jaguar seems spartan compared to the Mercedes. The seats aren’t uncomfortable for short rides, although the seat back seemed to have little to no cushioning. It wasn’t very adjustable and when the seat back bumps against the rear “seat” it automatically moves an inch forward. Wasn’t a fan. The infotainment system is painfully archaic. Jaguars of this era also have a problem with tacky steering wheel controls – actually sticky and gummy, not unfashionable. Googled it and a known problem with lots of home made attempts at fixing, none reliable. Liked the heated seats and heated steering wheel.

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Quick Hit – 1 of 417 2016 Mercedes SL550 Mille Miglia 417 Special Edition

The matte black finish on what is normally an elegant Mercedes SL550 caught my eye first. Then the 417 logo on the head rest puzzled me. Retreated to my extensive automotive library (aka Google) and immediately learned this car is a one of 417 special edition models commemorating Mercedes unexpected win in the 1955 Italian road race called the Mille Miglia. Sixty years ago a Mercedes 300SL was driven by a pair of Americans to a first place in class and fifth overall over the 1,000 mile road course. The race started at 4:17 am and the 300 SL’s race number was 417, hence the “417” moniker. Me thinks that’s a little odd but as the last year of the R231 platform before the 2017 refresh I guess Mercedes needed a marketing boost. This 2016 Mercedes SL550 Mille Miglia 417 Special Edition sold new for perhaps $120,000 and six years later is available at half that. A unicorn.

Car and Driver made note of the extensive use of red stitching and interior trim, writing “It’s not discreet, but it is well executed.” I’d second that. I don’t hate it although it’s an awful lot of race car aesthetics on what is still a JR Ewing car (and yet a model I am seriously considering – more on that tomorrow). It may be a low end niche collector car someday due only to the low numbers?

Not only does the head rest have the Mille Miglia 417 logo, it’s home to the wonderful Mercedes Airscarf heated blower to keep the neck and shoulders warm during top down fall runs to the winery. I really, really like this.

Even the rims get red lips. The color is officially Designo magnetite black metallic paint finish. I wonder how many times at cars and coffee I’d be asked if it was wrapped? I think I like it, although I wish something more had been done to the car’s performance. Borrow some bits from an SL63, perhaps?

The Mercedes SL550 is powered by a 4.7 liter twin turbo V-8 and a seven-speed automatic transmission, good for 60 mph runs in a windblown hair over four seconds. Not an SL63 but still very fast. The V-8 makes 449 hp and 516 lb-feet of torque at only 1,800 rpm. I drove a 2013 SL550 not long ago and mistakenly thought it was the older 380 hp SL550 – was stunned at the acceleration. Top speed is a governed 155 mph. This car is loaded and a data card search revealed it actually does have auto cruise control (Distronic Plus) even though not noted by CarMax. Might cost more if it did. Use the savings for MaxCare – this one will not be cheap to fix. Find this two owner, accident free Mercedes SL550 here in Rivergate, Tennessee.

Quick Hits – Back to the Basics V-8 Enthusiast Unicorns

After writing my Fiat story and the low mileage SUV piece I though I should get back to covering some fundamental cars that (mostly) met my original parameters for unicorns – less than $35,000, not more than 60,000 miles, and if possible be an enthusiast car. Unfortunately, the crazy used car market has boosted prices significantly, and I may have to up the cap to perhaps $45,000? Well, I picked the following naturally aspirated V-8’s for no other reason than I found them interesting, and I’m writing from Daytona after watching the Rolex 24 Hour race, where I had hoped the V-8 Corvettes would be more competitive. Let’s jump in.

First, how about a bright orange 2014 Dodge Challenger SRT-8 Core? A stripped down version of the SRT-8 392, it pumps 470 hp from a 6.4 liter motor linked to a six-speed manual transmission. (For all the muscle cars in this post I picked manual transmissions only – seems right and salutary.) The car is good for mid-four second 0-60 mph sprints and burnout after burnout fun. Brakes strong, surprisingly comfortable on the highway, but not terribly well equipped. But because it’s an American car, MaxCare is available for another full five years and up to 150,000 miles.

You can find this 2014 Dodge Challenger SRT-8 here in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Stock # 20804911  VIN # 2C3CDYDJ7EH284379

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