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  2. Cadillac de Ville series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadillac_de_Ville_series

    1950 Cadillac Series 62 Coupe de Ville Cadillac Coupe de Ville badging. The name "DeVille" is derived from the French de la ville or de ville meaning "of the town". [1] In French coach building parlance, a coupé de ville, from the French couper (to cut) i.e. shorten or reduce, was a short four-wheeled closed carriage with an inside seat for two and an outside seat for the driver and this ...

  3. Cadillac Series 62 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadillac_Series_62

    1940 Cadillac Series 40-62 2-door convertible 1941 Cadillac Series 41-62 coupe 1941 Cadillac Series 41-62 4-door convertible. The Fisher-bodied Series 40-62 was the new entry level product for the 1940 model line and was upgraded with a low sleek "torpedo" style C-body with chrome window reveals, more slant in the windshield, and a curved rear window. [1]

  4. List of Cadillac vehicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Cadillac_vehicles

    DeVille/Coupe de Ville – 130 in wheelbase V8; Fleetwood – 126 133 151.5 and 157.5 in wheelbase V8; 1975 – Cadillac Calais, De Ville, Seville, and Fleetwood Fisher Fleetwood. Calais – 130 in wheelbase V8; DeVille/Coupe de Ville – 130 in wheelbase V8; Seville – 114.3 in wheelbase V8; Fleetwood – 126.3 133 151.5 and 157.5 in wheelbase V8

  5. Cadillac V8 engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadillac_V8_engine

    This engine was designed under the leadership of Cadillac's chief engineer (1914–1917), Scottish-born D (D'Orsay) McCall White (1880 -), later a vice president of Cadillac. [2] Hired by Henry Leland for his V-engine expertise from his employment as chief engineer at Napier , and previously Daimler at Coventry, he was later to move to Nash ...

  6. List of General Motors platforms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_General_Motors...

    1985 – 1993 Cadillac Deville; 1985 – 1990 Buick Electra; 1985 – 1996 Oldsmobile 98; 1987 – 1993 Oldsmobile Touring Sedan; 1987 – 1993 Cadillac Sixty Special; 1991 – 1996 Buick Park Avenue; GM's first fullsize FWD, transverse engine platform. 1958 Cadillac Series 75. D I: RWD: 1936: 1984: 1936 – 1984 Cadillac Commercial Chassis ...

  7. Cadillac Sixty Special - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadillac_Sixty_Special

    The new GM full-size bodies for 1971, at 64.3 inches front shoulder room (62.1 inches on Cadillac) and 63.4 inches rear shoulder room (64.0 inches on Cadillac) set a record for interior width that would not be matched by any car until the full-size GM rear-wheel-drive models of the early to mid-1990s.

  8. Cadillac Fleetwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadillac_Fleetwood

    For 1993, the Cadillac Fleetwood was reintroduced as a rear-wheel-drive sedan, replacing the 1987–1992 Brougham as the largest Cadillac sedan. As Cadillac revised its model range, the Fleetwood nameplate was no longer the companion model to the de Ville, and was dropped from the flagship Sixty Special series (itself retired after 1993).

  9. Cadillac Series 70 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadillac_Series_70

    The Cadillac Series 70 (models 70 and 75) is a full-size V8-powered series of cars that were produced by Cadillac from the 1930s to the 1980s. It replaced the 1935 355E as the company's mainstream car just as the much less expensive Series 60 was introduced.

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