Top-of-the-line in 1969 - The 1969 Cadillac Eldorado Was GM Design At Its Best

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  • Опубликовано: 29 окт 2022
  • Learn more about this Rampur Green 1969 Cadillac Eldorado!
  • Авто/МотоАвто/Мото

Комментарии • 357

  • @donswier
    @donswier Год назад +30

    Such a clean & simple shape. A pinnacle year for GM. 😊 🇺🇸

    • @dave1956
      @dave1956 Год назад +2

      I think that it THE pinnacle year for the American auto industry.

    • @AB-pl1ko
      @AB-pl1ko Год назад

      - the understated 'elegance' of simplicity. 👍

    • @nickzobel9922
      @nickzobel9922 Год назад +2

      I wouldn't personally call it simple, I'd honesty say it's complex and awe striking. The hood has a big impression.

  • @motomuso
    @motomuso Год назад +5

    Those rear blade style lights are so nice.

    • @kc9scott
      @kc9scott Год назад

      I definitely like them better than the 1970 version.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад

      @@kc9scott I tend to view the earlier embellishments as pimp mobile.

  • @jongoffinet8511
    @jongoffinet8511 Год назад +18

    Adam, I just have to say, you have quite a collection of classic cars, and this one is another beauty!! Love the channel!

  • @GaryBoyd02
    @GaryBoyd02 Год назад +5

    The rust coloured trees as a backdrop against that green Cadillac were like a painted picture when it was parked in the driveway.

  • @davidstranz438
    @davidstranz438 Год назад +5

    Had a ‘70 Eldorado years ago, that 400hp 500 would annihilate the front tires. Reverse donuts in snow covered parking lots were a treat as well.

  • @markbehr88
    @markbehr88 Год назад +2

    Thanks for taking us along for the ride Adam.

  • @oliverlondon5246
    @oliverlondon5246 Год назад +1

    What a handsome car. Dark green exterior and black leather interior is my favourite colour combination for cars

  • @twenty4dupont
    @twenty4dupont Год назад +1

    I really enjoy your channel. My dad owned a body shop from the 50’s to to mid 80’s. I was born in 70 so many of the cars you have reviewed sure bring back the memories as he has either owned, repaired or bought and sold many of them. I can smell the interiors, feel the cushy ride and gaze out over those long hoods. Great memories. Thanks for the content. Keep up the great work! 👍

  • @FrankPalmer
    @FrankPalmer Год назад +2

    Another informative video. These cars bring back such memories. You’re a wealth of info. Thanks and looking forward to more.

  • @dannyg6592
    @dannyg6592 Год назад +1

    You have an amazing collection of some of the finest automobiles from the finest period of GM design. Love your channel!

  • @christopherkraft1327
    @christopherkraft1327 Год назад +7

    Hey Adam, it looks like autumn is in full swing there in Michigan & is really beautiful. Here in Southern California the trees have yet to start changing!!! Your Eldorado is a gorgeous car & the 67 to 70 model years are my favorites for the Eldorado!!! Thanks for sharing this review!!! Happy Halloween!!! 🎃

  • @roccosophie6498
    @roccosophie6498 Год назад +2

    The land behind your home is magnificent. I'm as jealous of you as I can be of anyone. Your cars, the view from your home, just doesn't get any better than that. I hope you and your wife appreciate it all, every single day.

  • @gbaber63
    @gbaber63 Год назад +1

    Sure can't beat the styling of this generation Eldorado, personal luxury at its best.

  • @kurtb3606
    @kurtb3606 Год назад

    I am always at awe at the vehicles you present, thank you for sharing.

  • @ricksand6477
    @ricksand6477 Год назад +3

    Thanks for sharing your beautiful Eldorado with us! Yes, it was GM design at it's best. When one of these came down the street you could see a lot of people turning to give it a long look. This was the car that design staff emulated when they designed the 1979 - 1985 downsized generation of Eldorado - and again very successfully. I have read that Cadillac was planning a V12 engine for these to debut in 1967 - and engineering prototypes were built and bench tested. Whether due to cost, meeting emission standards or the fact that the massive V8 Cadillac built was more than adequate for the job: the V12 never saw production. There certainly was room under the hood for one! Thanks again, Adam.

  • @howebrad4601
    @howebrad4601 Год назад +4

    Rear end styling is a knockout!! Sharp car all around

  • @LburgVAGuy
    @LburgVAGuy Год назад

    Thanks for posting! Im about to start restoring my grandfathers 69 Eldorado. He passed away in 2017 and made me promise to get her back on the road. I cant get over how long these cars are!

  • @secondcreekworkshop3908
    @secondcreekworkshop3908 Год назад +3

    I like how the vinyl top stops before the drip rail and has a green strip along the drip rail, great looking car.

  • @OLDS98
    @OLDS98 Год назад +1

    Eldorado... The driving spirit of Cadillac. Indeed Indeed....Thank you for sharing the details and the features of this car. They paid attention to detail and image back then other than the cost cutting.

  • @jaycarlson927
    @jaycarlson927 Год назад +1

    So nice to hear a car guy doing these reviews. Other channels i think they just want have a channel and they don't know what they are talking about. Lots of great background info and comparisons. Keep buying cars and showing them off

  • @mcy1122
    @mcy1122 Год назад

    Beautiful design. Among the best looking of 60’s GM. Thanks for sharing this Adam.

  • @jeffstonecipher1594
    @jeffstonecipher1594 Год назад +3

    Cadillac really didn't change much in the following generation with regard to steering and suspension feel. In the early 90s I had a black 80' with the 368ci -your test drives of your 69 and the 67 really make me miss that car!! Acceleration was quite good, I remember people commenting to me though that the Olds 350 in 79' (first year of that generation) was supposedly the quickest Eldo' since the 70's 500ci. Never did get to test that theory as 79's that haven't been abused were always sort of hard to come by -even more so now Great video Adam, thanks for sharing🙂

  • @rogersmith7396
    @rogersmith7396 Год назад +3

    The trunk latch has a lever arm and a spring which connects to a PTO cable to the pull down. When you pull down the lid it cocks the spring which operates the pull down. I've torn these babys apart. I know how they work in the main.

    • @RareClassicCars
      @RareClassicCars  Год назад +2

      Interesting!

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад +1

      @@RareClassicCars Pull up the carpet and you will see the cable. Now you can tell me how to get the level ride working. Just ran my 70 the other day. Gave up on disconnecting the carb and just dumped fuel in the gas tank. Possible dead spot in the starter, maybe just clean and oil. Ran like a champ Impossible to direct feed the carb. The fuel pump you told me where to find has 3 bolt on lines. I have to assume one is a return line, highly unusual for 1970. Way too much work for my time frame. Now the up front oil filter is wonderful.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад +1

      @@RareClassicCars By the way the old flat tappet engines need zinc and phosphorous not present in modern oil. It is in diesel oil. I am using Rotella. I guess lead would be nice too.

  • @kevinkeswick1243
    @kevinkeswick1243 Год назад +4

    What a stunning car! My favorite Cadillac of all time. I can't help but think that car design has been regressing from this period. You don't see the complex fender stampings on today's car with those crisp knife edges that you so aptly described as looking like a freshly pressed men's suite. I love the forest green color. Looks so beautiful against the fall foliage (you live in a beautiful area Adam). Nice to see that this example is fully optioned out on the inside. I like how the rear power windows retract into the B pillar instead of dropping below the beltline. What an incredible find! It looks just like it must have when it came out of the showroom.

    • @paulm6481
      @paulm6481 Год назад +1

      A lot has to do with safety standards. Back then, there were none, so design ruled

    • @oldscoolcooldiecast1879
      @oldscoolcooldiecast1879 Год назад +3

      As a owner of a 2005 Cadillac thou low mileage these earlier Cadillacs are made so much better my dad had a 69 Coupeville and ten of mine wouldn't add up to his and that's a fact

    • @70sleftover
      @70sleftover Год назад +2

      @@paulm6481 I noticed several safety standards that were being implemented by the late '60s - the steering column ignition interlock (no longer on the dash somewhere), the side marker lights, soft (padded) dash.

    • @illbebad
      @illbebad Год назад

      @@70sleftover and collapsible steering column which I believe started in 1968

  • @georgeszaslavsky
    @georgeszaslavsky Год назад +1

    Outstanding eldorado, congrats on the purchase👍

  • @errorsofmodernism7331
    @errorsofmodernism7331 Год назад +2

    A masterpiece of what a luxury car should look like. It really projects understated presence. That car does not have one bad angle.

  • @cardo1111
    @cardo1111 Год назад +2

    Gorgeous car, thanks for sharing it along with its pros and cons.

  • @TalismanPHX
    @TalismanPHX Год назад +1

    Absolutely beautiful Eldorado.

  • @robertkirkpatrick4935
    @robertkirkpatrick4935 Год назад

    We have a 1970 we bought in june of this year. Absolutely love it. She needed a new good home and got it. She joined our three other caddys. Definitely dont see these ole gals anymore. We cant wait to take her out to the shows next year.

  • @peterterry398
    @peterterry398 9 месяцев назад

    I had one of these when I got out of the Air Force in 1974, I was 21 years old and I paid 2100 dollars for it. It too was green ( light green) with white vinyl top.....it was a beauty !!!!!

  • @Jason-xb3jh
    @Jason-xb3jh Год назад

    What a sharp car!
    And I agree with you…. Fall is such a great time of the year to drive classic cars. 👍✨

  • @gerardmills1389
    @gerardmills1389 9 месяцев назад

    Awesome video. My buddies mom had a nice 69. The whole family drove Caddys...I rode I'm a few and would own a few as the years passed. Another buddy had a 67 Ekdorado....with 1975 hubcaps! It actually looked good!

  • @markdc1145
    @markdc1145 Год назад +4

    A good friend of my mother's bought a new Eldo in 1968, metallic brown with beige leather interior. Really beautiful car and I know she kept it well into the 1990s. The floating vinyl roof was always a neat look that set GM apart from the others.

    • @terrymertz1923
      @terrymertz1923 Год назад +3

      I always heard reference to the roof as being a halo roof...

    • @UberLummox
      @UberLummox Год назад

      Neet feature for sure!

  • @jakubkrawczyk6418
    @jakubkrawczyk6418 Год назад +2

    As the owner of 2006 STS I wanted also to mention connections to Art and Science design themes in this classic. Very underrated car - I will look for it during next RetroClassics show in Stuttgart ;) Greetings from Poland

  • @BobsOutdoorActivities
    @BobsOutdoorActivities Год назад

    Good review. Great car. Totally from a different time period. I can remember riding in these cars as a kid.

  • @OldDood
    @OldDood Год назад

    That Mercury you spotted looked like a 1964 Mercury Monterey.
    The one with the Power Rear Window.
    My Aunt & Uncle had one of those back then.
    I was 8 years old and thought that was the coolest thing. It was like a Station Wagon.

  • @brianhdueck3372
    @brianhdueck3372 Год назад +1

    I love the lines of the car. The hidden headlamps of the previous models was a feature I missed on the 69’s. The thing that always stole a bit of the glitz was the dash and IP. It just doesn’t flow in my opinion and looks rather BelAir. Still I would be real proud to own this classic.

  • @danharasty6686
    @danharasty6686 Год назад +1

    I love the length. You are aside backseat of any other car stop light, or looking at their rear window

  • @everydaychris5597
    @everydaychris5597 Год назад +1

    Absolutely positively beautiful.

  • @desertmodern7638
    @desertmodern7638 Год назад +4

    I've never heard this early trunk pulldown system explained, but it looks as if it's cable operated, with the cable tension being increased with the closing of the lid, and that tension being used for the pulldown action - so purely mechanical, not vacuum. But that's just my theory after looking at a friend's car many years ago. (My own Cadillacs were 1973-76, by which time the function was electric.) It would be interesting to hear from someone entirely familiar with it, as my theory may be utterly incorrect.

    • @johnz8210
      @johnz8210 Год назад +2

      In the comments here Roger Smith explains that thing pretty well.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад +1

      You are correct sir.

  • @don1863
    @don1863 Год назад

    Another beautiful Cadillac Adam! After seeing this generation Eldorado too often finished in black, it looks absolutely stunning in Rampur Green with the black vinyl top. In reference to the “skylight” on the dash above the speedometer, Ford could have used something like that on the early 70’s cars, specifically the 72 Tbird. The speedo bezel was so deep that even daytime was difficult to read.

  • @arevee9429
    @arevee9429 Год назад

    Thanks for the little moment of "punching it" at the end. When I watch these ride-alongs, I always think "wish Adam would give us a bit of WOT".

  • @rogersmith7396
    @rogersmith7396 Год назад +4

    The Cads were torque monsters with max around 3300 RPM. Produce torque to rival a bus. My moms 70 had very sharp throttle response but would bog on WOT. You could always chirp the tires with its response. I learned to let the trans shift itself 1st to second under WOT as there was no point in rapping beyond that. Always had to manual 2nd to 3rd. Think how much better with a 5 or 6 speed. See Lenos Toronado conversion. The early THD 425 had a veriable speed torque converter said to be much better.

    • @TheMormonPower
      @TheMormonPower Год назад +1

      Yeah, I remember that bog at WOT too...kinda like a cough 😨

    • @DanEBoyd
      @DanEBoyd Год назад

      Wish Jay Leno would've gone for an Oldsmobile engine instead of the Chevy engine I believe his Toro has.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад

      @@TheMormonPower The Q Jet bog.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад

      @@DanEBoyd If you want cheap parts, a 454 is the way to go.

  • @whitsundaydreaming
    @whitsundaydreaming Год назад

    I remember getting dad to take me to the Cad dealer as a 12 year old to see the 69 lineup. I was lost in the beauty of this vehicle. I still love the 69 deVille and Eldo.

  • @victorkaminski4420
    @victorkaminski4420 Год назад +1

    Wow ! So cool!! Some years back I bought a 1972 brown Coupe De Ville with 70, 000 miles on it from the proverbial Little Old Lady. Being a stupid kid, not leaving well enough alone, I got a 1972 Eldorado 500 CID engine, a rear wheel drive oil pan, a set of used 1970 10:1 compression pistons, a 1975 electronic ignition distributor and a hotter cam from Cadillac Motorsports Development. 5200 pound car had no problem just smoking the tires. ... 8mpg...

  • @MrFrankrizzo5150
    @MrFrankrizzo5150 Год назад +2

    My dad had the exact same car and same color in late 1969. He could not stand the ride and ended up trading it in for an early MKIII about a year later.

  • @Slonge92
    @Slonge92 Год назад

    This series has such a sinister side profile, especially in black. I was never a huge fan of the pinched ass, but still love the overall imposing look of these Eldo’s. Thanks for the great videos!

  • @josephpiskac2781
    @josephpiskac2781 Год назад

    I enjoy seeing the drive environment. I assume New York or Connecticut. You must be an extremely powerful individual it is great you are so relaxed and down to earth.

  • @Gary7even
    @Gary7even Год назад +4

    Adam, it would be interesting to hear you talk about what oil you use in these older cars and how often you change it. Also, what do you do to mitigate the potential problems of using modern gas in the older cars (especially the ones like this 69, which were not designed to run on unleaded gasoline).

  • @danielleclare2938
    @danielleclare2938 Год назад +2

    Has the lines of the 63 Riviera IMO. Good looking and distinctive it was obviously a Caddy but mostly recognized as an Eldorado

    • @sergioleone3583
      @sergioleone3583 Год назад

      Two of my favorite American cars of all time, that 63 Riviera and the 67 Eldorado!

  • @michaelbradford4116
    @michaelbradford4116 Год назад

    Stunning vehicle. Back in the day, one of the major car magazines referred to GM’s power door locks as sounding like the crack of a 22 rifle shot.

  • @lasuvidaboy
    @lasuvidaboy Год назад +1

    Gorgeous Eldorado. I also agree that the 1967 and slightly revised ‘68 dashboard being more attractive. Those also appeared to be of a higher quality than the 1969-70 model. One of my favorite cars ever!

  • @karll3119
    @karll3119 Год назад +1

    So beautiful

  • @MrNougat
    @MrNougat Год назад

    My first car was a 1970 Oldsmobile Delta 88, and the general shape is so similar to this in so many ways.

  • @davebarron5939
    @davebarron5939 Год назад

    You just cant beat these late 60's Eldo's, magnificent, for me, the pinnacle of "personal luxury car". All I hear is the song - "There she is, Miss America"

  • @timlewis1608
    @timlewis1608 Год назад

    Another great content. Thanks,A

  • @tonyfortner9948
    @tonyfortner9948 Год назад

    Hi, Adam! Another beauty! I'm more on the Mopar side as far as preference and I know you have a few. I have and love the fuselage Chryslers! I know you have quite the collection of cars. I just would like some advice as to storage of these cars. Any suggestions? I'm out of space and I only have 6 cars. I can't buy more until I find an economical way of providing indoor storage...

  • @gerardmills1389
    @gerardmills1389 9 месяцев назад

    Loved those big blocks. Had a 390....2 429s. One 472. Loved my Caddys.Beleive it or not.....my 4500 in my 88 Eldorado. ....at 272.5 Cu. In. Has a familiar engine note very much like the 472s.....nice sound

  • @20alphabet
    @20alphabet Год назад

    Love this car! Thanks for the education.

  • @TreeFish707
    @TreeFish707 Год назад +2

    The paint did play tricks on me for about five minutes. I thought it was black then green zoomed in to get a closer look and still went back and forth between black and green. Amazing color.

    • @777jones
      @777jones Год назад

      I thought he has two of them (he probably does)

    • @kc9scott
      @kc9scott Год назад

      5:38 The camera work exactly matches what he’s saying, where at one angle it looks nearly black, and then by 6:03 it’s turned fully green.

    • @UberLummox
      @UberLummox Год назад

      @@777jones He has a black '67 Eldo.

  • @WhittyPics
    @WhittyPics Год назад

    I love the color of that Eldorado. Back in the days when GM on the top of the game. Jefferson County KY is where I am from. That is Louisville. Amazing a 50 year old car can still be in this condition.

  • @jmchc68000
    @jmchc68000 Год назад

    Just a beauty !!!!🤩🤩🤩 A french admirer !

  • @bear4pozcle
    @bear4pozcle Год назад

    Such a nice car! I had a '76 Riviera with factory airbags! Last of the biggies! That was a nice car!

  • @anthonybianchini5144
    @anthonybianchini5144 Год назад

    That "vent" hole through the dash is one of the locations for the interior temp sensors; which you can clearly see, when you placed your camera below it and looked up through it...

  • @user-ev5og3uj3u
    @user-ev5og3uj3u 10 месяцев назад

    Good show and information

  • @DerrickOil
    @DerrickOil Год назад

    Love the color too!

  • @mark_osborne
    @mark_osborne Год назад

    Absolutely gorgeous car

  • @mcdlt8414
    @mcdlt8414 Год назад

    Wonderful video as always Adam! Thanks for taking us along, can't wait to see what you have in store next.

  • @MichaelG1986
    @MichaelG1986 Год назад

    I had an uncle who owned one of these. Riding in it as a little kid was amazing. I thought it was the best car in the world.

  • @DandQchannel3536
    @DandQchannel3536 Год назад

    Beautiful car and your narration through the nuances of all the cars you feature is brilliant and eloquent.
    I saw the Mercury!! Did you see the (I’m guessing) 60’s Chevy that passed you at around 21:27 time in?
    Forgive me if someone else has already pointed it out…and also forgive my ignorance with classic vehicles of that era. Again I’m guessing a Chevy.

    • @70sleftover
      @70sleftover Год назад +1

      Thank you for pointing out that one - I would say it was a '62 Chevy.

  • @ForeverDownByLaw
    @ForeverDownByLaw Год назад

    Such a beautiful car. Even taking into consideration your comments re: the ride, I'm sure it rides like a cloud compared to some of the oxcarts made today.

  • @saltycreole2673
    @saltycreole2673 Год назад

    I grew up in the era of "land yachts". Yes, they were procured, not just bought. And I was born in the best year of all, 1957.

  • @MICHGO1
    @MICHGO1 Месяц назад

    STUNNING CAR.

  • @sargepent9815
    @sargepent9815 6 месяцев назад

    Love to have one. The styling, the comfort, and 500CI big block.....back when America built real cars

  • @timlewis1608
    @timlewis1608 Год назад

    Great day,. Dang I would love that ride. I like the laid back style. Dang if I hit the lotto we need to talk., LoL

  • @madmanmapper
    @madmanmapper Год назад +1

    11:50 Dude. You can literally SEE the temperature sensor in there. It needs air flow to be accurate, and GM hadn't yet figured out they could use the blower fan (which is always running) to move air across it. Newer cars would use a tiny aspirator fan for this purpose.

  • @philreynolds6018
    @philreynolds6018 Год назад

    Great Car , Had 3 , 2 69's 1 70 in the early 80's

  • @jakereal3604
    @jakereal3604 Год назад +3

    Adam at 11:53 stop the video and zoom in. You will see what I mentioned it’s a small flat round thing with two thin leads attached to it. That tiny thing that you can hardly see is the Thermistor. A variable resistor that changes with temp changes. The mark three has one just above and to the left of the glove box door on the dash pad. It’s a series of perforated holes about 1.4”x1.4”. Behind it is the same type thermistor. Just an FYI

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад

      Modern cars have multiple climate sensors.

    • @jakereal3604
      @jakereal3604 Год назад +1

      This has 2-3. Inside temp , ambient sensor and I think one more hidden somewhere

  • @asintonic
    @asintonic Год назад

    Awesome car and video. Thanks for sharing.
    Is that a blue members only jacket? 😉

  • @1aikane
    @1aikane Год назад +1

    Very nice car!

  • @DanEBoyd
    @DanEBoyd Год назад

    When I first saw this car in a previous video, I first though it was your black Eldo, and the green was just from the reflection of the grass as you drove down the street! Another very nice car!!! A 'skylighted' speedometer? Never seen such a thing, but I like it.
    I watched my friend condemn his fourteen year old '73 Sedan Deville, white with black vinyl top and red vinyl or leather interior, because the smog pump had seized, and was incapable of relaying any rotational forces to the other accessories... That Mercury is a Turnpike Cruiser! Next was a '62 Chevy @21:29!

    • @70sleftover
      @70sleftover Год назад +1

      I said to myself "Turnpike Cruiser," too! Wasn't that more like 1958?

    • @DanEBoyd
      @DanEBoyd Год назад

      @@70sleftover Think they made them, or at least that Breezeway backlite, until 1965, or maybe even '67?

  • @jamesengland7461
    @jamesengland7461 Год назад +1

    Adam, if you're inclined to, I'd like to see you review a contemporary Mercedes S Class, Rolls or Bentley.

  • @davepax982
    @davepax982 Год назад +1

    It baffles me that the most expensive variant would have the less refined rear suspension when they had the architecture there to run coils and a beam axle. The gain in refinement would have been well worth it.

  • @macphail1964
    @macphail1964 Год назад

    My favorite cars of ALL TIME😃

  • @paulm6481
    @paulm6481 Год назад +3

    It is a great looking car. I wish it had a mirror on passenger side.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад +1

      Mine does. You can buy NOS for about $2000.00. No problem for Adam. They had cable controls not electric. Not heated. They are made of zinc not chrome or SS and they pit with time.

    • @patrickflohe7427
      @patrickflohe7427 9 месяцев назад

      Something they all should’ve had, but so few did in the ‘60s and early to mid ‘70s.
      Every car my dad had from at least’77 onward, had a right side mirror.

  • @votingcitizen
    @votingcitizen Год назад +1

    That radiator hose is quite serpentine. Are replacements easy to find?
    Those tail lights are knife blade nice.
    thanks for the colour tour.

  • @HypocriticYT
    @HypocriticYT Год назад

    If you ever get tired of owning this beauty 😊??

  • @patrickmcgrath5411
    @patrickmcgrath5411 Год назад +1

    ADAM..."I AM UP FOR ADOPTION"❣️

  • @P.Galore
    @P.Galore Год назад

    "Life Is Just One Cadillac After Another". I too prefer the 67 but this is a stunning car as well.

  • @geyser3445
    @geyser3445 Год назад

    It is beautiful.

  • @vincentbasso4903
    @vincentbasso4903 Год назад

    Adam, What is your backround ? Love you videos

  • @anthonydelgiudice3245
    @anthonydelgiudice3245 Год назад

    How many cars are in your collection Adam love all of them

  • @althunder4269
    @althunder4269 Год назад

    A very nice and handsome car.

  • @RootsandTendrils
    @RootsandTendrils Год назад +1

    A truly trim and elegant automobile, perhaps the most handsome American car ever designed. If the car was integrated into the same chassis as the Riviera it would have been a dream ship. I would like to see a presentation on the history of the conception and development and rationale for the creation of this front-wheel-drive powertrain. GM's insistence on employing it in their upper-echelon cars instead of trying to develop GT cars of them was I think a major mistake of the corporation. They had the opportunity with the second generation to build the Toronado and the Eldo, and the Riv on the Special A Chassis, as the '69-'72 Grand Prix, which was a far better car dynamically; but no, they made ridiculous hulks of them from '71-'78, and then continued using the same FWD configuration in generation three, finally also bringing in the Riviera. Hence does anyone wonder why competition from Germany began to take away domestic business in this segment?

  • @g2skinny
    @g2skinny Год назад

    Cool old car dude

  • @colewebb5569
    @colewebb5569 Год назад

    hi Adam could you turn on the caption please and let me know when you have caption working and I will come back to watch thank you and the Cadillac Eldorado is one of my all time favorites I have owned four Cadillac Eldorado's my first Cadillac and first convertible was a 1973 Eldorado and had 74 hard top Eldorado a 79 Eldorado and 88 Eldorado all in exlent original shap loved them all well thank you and you have goodnight and great coming week :-)

  • @pcno2832
    @pcno2832 Год назад +1

    In many years, full-sized Chevrolets had more styling similarity to Cadillacs, at least in the front, than any of the mid-priced GM brands. But the similarity between the face of the '69 Eldorado and the '71 Caprice is particularly striking. Of course, no one knew that in 1969.

    • @tombrown1898
      @tombrown1898 Год назад +1

      That was always the case, at least as far back as 1939. If you look at the 1949 re-design, Ed Glowacki styled it as a baby Cadillac, minus the fishtail fins.

    • @70sleftover
      @70sleftover Год назад

      Yes - I thought how the headlights on this '69 Eldo reminded me of my parents' '71 Buick Skylark, too.

  • @billeudy8481
    @billeudy8481 Год назад

    Beautiful personal luxury car.

  • @donk499
    @donk499 Год назад +1

    Love everything about this car, except for that damn gas cap door! Often wondered why I have seen air pumps on 1969 cars sometimes, and just "guessed" that they were california cars. Ditching that air pump and all its plumbing was the first thing I did to my 73Caprice once I inherited it. Plugging the EGR off was easy. My 2bbl was horribly lean though, the car would not run in cold temperatures unless that hot air plumbing from the manifold to the air filter housing was in good repair and working properly. I'm wondering what prompted Cadillac to employ that sub frame/monleaf spring set up, just cost? How could they not realize that customers would be upset by the harsh/noisy ride when going over bumps? I love the interior though, too bad the front seats are "hard". I'm wondering how that "vacuum system" could close the trunk. What happens when the low pressure in the tank has bled off (after sitting or when continually activated with the engine off)? How do you get the trunk closed? Perhaps it partially "latches", then the vacuum system finishes up once the engine is started...

  • @WalkiTalki
    @WalkiTalki Год назад

    The best door window design for firing a rifle. It is perfectly horizontal and the barrel will slide front to back with nothing to get hung up on. The car is quiet so they won't hear you roll up and the 472 gets you gone before anybody realizes who did it. Sorry I'm Italian and I have a 69Caddy and that's what everybody says when I show it to them. Joking aside 69 Cadillacs are some of the sexiest American cars that have ever been built. Mine is white on tan but that green is the best.