1988 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz on 2040-cars
Socorro, New Mexico, United States
This rare Eldorado Biarritz with the trunk lid mounted continental kit is simply a gorgeous car. It has been well cared for by its former owner, the interior and exterior are in amazing condition, with minor wear on the front leather seats. The car fax shows no problems. I have personally driven the car over 400 miles and it rides and drives like a new one. The 4.5 V8 has plenty of power, it averaged 28 miles per gallon on the trip from Phoenix to New Mexico. I am not sure, but i think a new compressor would fix the problem with the air conditioner. Every thing else on the car works perfectly, except the radio antenna which is unplugged. I am going to check on that and see if it needs replacing. The tires were put on the car in June so they have very few miles on them. The car has been garaged kept and most of the time it had a car cover on it. It is an Arizona car so there no rust issues. Don't pass up a chance to own a classic like this, this is its original condition. I will include the car fax report with the car. You can't go wrong with this car.
Good luck bidding and contact me if you have any other questions. Delivery able to the lower 48 states for $1.25 a loaded mile. Check NADA price, you will be surprised. |
Cadillac Eldorado for Sale
- 1965 cadillac el dorado convertible
- 1983 cadillac in excellent condition
- 2000 cadillac eldorado esc coupe 2-door 4.6l
- 1985 cadillac eldorade with only 43k miles!!! everything works! great condition!(US $10,200.00)
- 1997 cadillac eldorado no reserve!!!!(US $1,800.00)
- 1954 wind wings show car we find them ( 1956 1957 1958 sabres )
Auto Services in New Mexico
Tim`s Auto ★★★★★
Ray`s Truck Service ★★★★★
Jiffy Lube ★★★★★
Garcia Autoworks ★★★★★
Garcia Auto Repair ★★★★★
Enchantment Auto Service ★★★★★
Auto blog
Carpool Deville aims to be the world's fastest hot tub
Wed, 16 Jul 2014The world needs crazy inventors with wild dreams. While we might not long for the things that they create, their contraptions certainly make the day a little more enjoyable. Take the Carpool Deville as an example. Nobody (well, almost nobody) is asking for a hot tub fashioned from a 1969 Cadillac that is still drivable. But now that you know that such a beast exists, don't try to tell us you aren't at least intrigued.
The team behind the six-year-long project has a pretty ingenious setup worked out. The Caddy's original 472-cubic-inch (7.7-liter) V8 both provides propulsion and heats the water. The interior is entirely replaced with a watertight, fiberglass tub that includes working jets, and the controls are all done by hand.
As if just building a mobile hot tub isn't enough, the team behind the Carpool Deville plans to take it racing too. Specifically, they intend to go to the Bonneville Salt Flats later this year to make a top speed run while immersed in water at over 100 degrees. They even have a roll cage all set to install to meet the safety requirements there.
Weekly Recap: New bosses try to jump-start Cadillac and Lincoln
Sat, 26 Jul 2014
Both of America's domestic luxury brands seem to be stuck in neutral.
It's ironic that Cadillac and Lincoln got new bosses within days of each other this month. It's also a commentary on the fact both of America's domestic luxury brands seem to be stuck in neutral.
Autoweek divulges details on Presidential limo
Tue, 22 Oct 2013Ever since the latest presidential limousine, also known as The Beast, debuted in 2009, we've wondered what's underneath that black Cadillac body. We already know a few details, like the fact it isn't a Cadillac at all, but a very heavy duty truck chassis from General Motors with a body that resembles a super-sized Caddy. Autoweek, however, has managed to extract new details from veteran Secret Service agents about the closely guarded presidential limo. Their methods, of course, are classified.
Designed to be a rolling office, bunker and escape pod all in one, the current presidential limo is far different from previous presidential state cars, which were heavily modified production vehicles. As we would expect, The Beast uses thick, military-grade body armor (eight inches on the doors), an armored fuel tank, special run-flat tires with Kevlar lining, an encrypted satellite phone, a fully sealed cabin with its own oxygen supply and a trunk full of weapons and medical equipment that includes a supply of the President's blood type (in case the car gets cut off from the ambulance that's always present in the President's motorcade).
The Beast also comes with a Halon fire-suppression system, night vision and is powered by a V8 engine, which we already knew runs on gas and not diesel, that returns an EPA-unfriendly estimated 3.7 miles per gallon. The Secret Service operates a fleet of 12 limos and each Beast costs $1.5 million. Lastly, AW estimates that the 18-foot-long state car weighs 15,000 pounds, and each Secret Service agent that drives the car must be specially trained to maneuver such a massive vehicle.