Skip to main content

Back to the Future's Best Scenes

Cadillac History: 1987-1993 Allante


The Cadillac Style For the 80′s



The Allante was Cadillac’s first attempt at the lucrative ultra luxury roadster market. Like most American luxury car makers of the time, the
infatuation with “European Styling” and performance meant that to make a real world-class car ,a connection with Europe was needed for legitimacy. The ideal was to compete directly with Europe (and later the emerging Japanese luxury sedans). Americans were already making the transition to European luxury sedans at the expense of the old Detroit guard.
Younger buyers were no longer interested in Cadillac, so a halo car was needed to capture the imaginations and bank accounts of this new generation. Downsizing was tough on Cadillac, resulting in smaller less distinctive cars that were… boring. An image reboot was in order.

The 1987-1993 Cadillac Allantes were luxury two-seaters built to compete with European cars that were wooing well-heeled American customers. It was new territory for General motors at a time when the company was dealing with corporate reorganization, product downsizing, look-alike styling, and uncompetitive quality in the face of strengthening foreign competition.

It was still early in Roger Smith's tenure as chairman and chief executive officer -- which began in 1981 -- when Cadillac decided it needed a top-of-the-line two-seater. It would be a high-tech, high-style, high-price, but low-volume "halo" car intended to boost the image of a Cadillac line that was shrinking and becoming less distinctive.

Bob Burger, Cadillac's general manager from 1982 to 1984, said he's not even sure whose idea it was. "Our market research indicated a need for a vehicle of that type. We probably had several meetings at lower levels to put together a presentation to see if it was feasible and could sell in sufficient quantities to make money."

The result was the Allante, introduced in 1987. Naturally, its creation took several years, beginning early in 1982 when Cadillac dispatched a group of engineers to Italy to discuss with famed designer/coachbuilder Pininfarina the possibility of designing and building a special luxury roadster body.  

Ed Anderson was sent along, as far as he knew, to observe. "We went to find out if they had the capability to execute a car to the degree we were looking for," he explained. "A lot of things were discussed, and we came back thinking that Pininfarina should be selected. Two weeks later, they told me I would be the program manager. What better way to do that than to enlist the help of Pinfinarra, the Italian firm responsible for the design of many Ferraris. 
 
"We placed three contracts with them that year," Anderson said. "The first was to design the car. Second was the body engineering. Then, in August 1983, we placed the contract to execute the car for production. We had a lot of things to work out. This was prior to the 1984 GM reorganization. "Fisher Body was still a very powerful division and they didn't like the idea of giving responsibility to someone else. It took several months to come to an agreement on Fisher's involvement, but they knew the legal ramifications and the testing that had to be done."That decision did not sit well at GM Design. When then-Cadillac Studio Chief Designer Wayne Kady heard that the division planned to farm out this exciting program to an overseas design house, he was hurt and angry. Kady's team worked up its own design anyway. 
"We did a full-size clay model, interior and exterior," Kady said. "My boss, Stan Wilen, and his boss, Chuck Jordan, were going back and forth looking at the model Pinin­farina was creating, and they'd come back and wonder why we were still working on ours. I told them it was studio pride, that we took it upon ourselves to show that we could design a car as well as anybody.  

"We didn't know how Pininfarina would build the body, put all the electronics in, and test it to make sure everything worked. We finally agreed that they would buy the diagnostic equipment and send their people over here for training to do those tests." The body was designed and built-in Italy while the mechanicals were all Cadillac. Once the car bodies were completed, they were shipped to America via a special 747 from Italy to Cadillacs assembly plan in Detroit. 
Allante chief engineer Dave Hill -- who later served as chief engineer and vehicle line executive for the C5 and C6 Chevrolet Corvettes and Cadillac's current XLR two-seater -- commuted to Italy at least once a month for five years. He pointed out that all that electronics complexity did not lead to reliability problems. Once there the bodies were joined to the chassis and the final assembly was completed. The process added considerably to the cost, making the $55k Allante the most expensive Cadillac up to that time. Some of the high cost was justified by the use of some of GM’s most advance technology using very little of GM’s parts bin. The rest of course was the trans-Atlantic assembly process, called the “longest assembly line in the world”.

There were a few components used from the Eldorado, but for the most part only the grille and headlight cluster resembled other Cadillacs. The Allante was Cadillac’s way to showcase technology that would eventually power it’s entire lineup through the 90′s . The most important element of which was the all new Northstar V8. This power plant single handedly pushed Cadillac into the post modern era with it’s 32 valve all aluminum V8. Initially a 4.1 L multi-port fuel injected engine producing 170 hp. Later versions of the Northstar peaked at 295 hp and remained the most advance engine offered by GM well into the 90′s.
The look was very European, with crisp styling. The classic Cadillac grile was subdued with long single lens halogen headlights that had become the hallmark of other Caddies in the 90′s. The Allante came with a removable hardtop or cloth convertible configuration and were produced in limited numbers. Inside was typical of most late 80′s era GM cars: boxy kitchen counter like dashboards with a cluster of buttons all similarly sized with digital displays for engine and entertainment functions.

Much of what made the Allante so special was its engine. It’s refined appearance somehow
did not look out-of-place with the rest of Cadillac’s otherwise visually un-exciting line of downsized cars. Many of the styling cues of the Allante found their way to the new Seville STS which was launched later, using the same Northstar, but in its more potent 4.5 litre form.
The automotive press was lukewarm over the Allante at its initial launch, mostly due to its high cost and what seemed at the time an underpowered engine. Front wheel drive was unheard of in a high-priced luxury/performance car aimed at rear wheel drive competition. Quirky handling in early cars were noted by the media and Cadillac rushed to make refinements. Once displacement and power were increased in 1987 and once again in 1993, the promise of performance came closer to matching the high asking price. A compliant ride with some road feel was aided by a fully independent suspension with a road sensing active damper system. Not as fast or agile as a Corvette, but still a distinctive looking car ,Cadillac had a flagship car it could be proud of. Unfortunately, the European competition was building rear wheel drive cars that had much better overall performance.

The Allante’s most nagging issues were resolved into the 90′s, but the market had moved on. Over across town Chrysler sold a similar car (in concept only) call the TC. Unfortunately for Chrysler, the public and press saw the TC for what it was, just a dressed up LeBaron and its sales suffered despite being much cheaper than the Allante and being associated with Maserati. Not that the Allante sold well. The TC never did a good enough job of convincing anyone that it was anything more than a fancy K car and it was scrapped in 1991. The Alante’s soldered on, but its days were numbered. Cadillac produced about 21,000 cars over the 7 years the car was produced, about half of what its initial projections.  Ironically each year as the car improved, it’s sales went down until it was finally canceled in 1993. The last Allante built was flown to Turin on July 2, 1993, and completed at Detroit-Hamtramck 14 days later. With 21,430 built, assemblies averaged just a little more than 3,000 a year throughout the car's lifetime. The technology and some of the style of the Allante was carried over to the new flagship Seville STS and eventually the rest of the Cadillac line.

As a collector object, the Allante holds a curious place in American automotive history in that it was part of a small and short-lived wave of modern American cars that got European design input. Kind of a reversal of the late 60′s/early 70′s when American manufacturers were often sought after to supply engines for elegant European sports cars. In good condition, they can still command prices in the $20k range. Your chances of finding good examples is better than that of other cars from the era. The high initial price kept them out of the hands of would be tuners, but they lacked the resale value of say a Mercedes or BMW. Still an attractive car today, the Allante secures its place as part in the start of Cadillac’s modern-day renaissance.

text and sources:1 2

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Cute girl drifting in rally car unfastened

【中継】日産モータースポーツファンイベント

World’s Best EV Crossover? Volvo EX30 Vs EVERY Rival

All NEW 2025 Chevrolet Corvette Zora Revealed! First Look Will Shock YOU!

Lee Greenwood - God Bless The U.S.A.

The All-New 2019 BMW X5 Sports Activity Vehicle.

Here we go again.This time official Today, BMW launches the all-new 4th generation 2019 BMW X5 Sports Activity Vehicle with two variants, the X5 xDrive 40i and the X5 xDrive 50i. Since its introduction almost 20 years ago, the BMW X5 has been built exclusively in Spartanburg, SC. To date, more than 2.2 million X5’s have been sold worldwide, one third of those sales being in the U.S. The all-new 2019 BMW X5 will again be built at BMW Plant Spartanburg, SC. This center of competence for BMW X models also handles production of the BMW X3, BMW X4, BMW X6 and will soon add the BMW X7. New design language exudes confidence and authority. A wheelbase that is 1.6 inches longer than its predecessor’s, a 1.1 inches increase in vehicle length, an extra 2.6 inches of width and a 1.0 inches increase in height give the all-new 2019 BMW X5 both a muscular appearance and a more generous level of space for passengers and their luggage. The latest X5 retains the hallma

GM's Missed Opportunity: Buick Conceives a Gorgeous Two-Seater, Mid-Engi...

Teaser: Opulent Velocity | Cadillac Concept

Artura Spider: All the Exhilarating Details

Labels

Show more