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Auto -- > Cadillac - CTS

The CTS is Cadillac's luxury sports sedan.

Introduced in 2002 for the 2003 model year, the CTS rode on General Motors' new Sigma rear-wheel drive architecture and signified both a return to rear-wheel drive and was the first Cadillac with a manual transmission since the Cadillac Cimarron. The CTS was nominated for the North American Car of the Year award for 2002.

Originally powered by a 3.2 L LA3 V6 producing 220 hp (164 kW), the CTS received an upgraded 3.6 L DOHC V6 with Variable Valve Timing in 2004, producing 255 hp (190 kW) and 252 ft·lbf (342 Nm) of torque. In addition, a CTS-V model offering an LS6 V8 engine, similar to the Corvette engine, with 400 hp (298 kW) matched to a six-speed manual transmission, became available in 2004. The 3.2 L engine will go out of production in 2005, when a new 2.8 L version of the DOHC 3.6 will debut in an entry-level version of the CTS. In Europe, the 2.8 L replaces the previous entry level 2.6 L.



 
General
Manufacturer:   Cadillac
Model:   CTS
Years in Production:   (2003-current)
Powertrain Layout:   Front Engine/Rear Wheel Drive
Body configuration:   4dr sedan
Price:   34850-48000 Euro
  32100-51395 Dollars
Engine
Configuration:   2.8L V6/3.6L V6/5.7L V8
Power:   215 / 257 / 400 / - (bhp)
Torque:   193 / 250 / 395 / - (ft lbs)
Transmission
Gear Type:   6spd manual/5spd auto
Performance
Top speed:   140 / 145 / 163 / - (mph)
  225 / 233 / 262 / - (km/h)
0 - 62 mph (100 km/h):   8.1 / 6.8 / 4.9 / - (seconds)
Fuel economy combined city/hwy:   24 / 24 / 19 / - (miles per gallon)

Cadillac

Cadillac is a brand of luxury automobile, part of the General Motors corporation, produced and mostly sold in the United States; outside of North America, they have been less successful. The Cadillac automobile was named after the 17th century French explorer Antoine Laumet de La Mothe, sieur de Cadillac, founder of Detroit, Michigan in 1701. Cadillac was purchased by the General Motors conglomerate in 1909.

Pre-World War II Cadillacs were well-built, powerful, mass-produced luxury cars, aimed at an upper class market. Postwar Cadillacs innovated many of the styling features that came to be synonymous with the classic (late 1940s-late 1950s) American automobile, including tailfins and wraparound windshields. The tailfin style gave birth to the enduring vertical-tailight pattern, which is a subtle trademark of the Cadillac line.

The mid-1980s saw Cadillac try to rebuild its image, aware that European and Japanese imports were on a rise. The greatest challenge to the imports was the Cadillac Allante, a convertible designed by Pininfarina of Italy, and built on what was touted as the world's longest production line—with the car's bodies fabricated in Italy and flown by Boeing 747 to the United States to meet their transmission and engine. The Allante's styling influenced other Cadillacs, especially the Seville, which adopted its sharper, tailored lines. Indeed, Cadillac was so confident of the Seville that it was exported to Europe.

The latest incarnation of Cadillac styling - Art & Science (A&S) was previewed with the 1999 Cadillac Evoq concept roadster at that year's Detroit Auto Show. Distinctive characteristics of Art & Science design include stacked headlamps, vertical taillamps, angular grille, and creased body lines in addition to alphanumeric model names.


 
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