If I had to guess, without going through the tedium of actually counting, I would say that more songs have been written about Cadillacs than any other make. From Bruce Springsteen to Southern Culture On The Skids, GM’s flagship brand has captured the imagination of songwriters everywhere – but I guarantee you none of them had these two models in mind.
Yesterday’s turbocharged hatchbacks probably didn’t capture many imaginations either, but you sure had some opinions about them. In particular, the Juke’s weird styling was a point of contention; some folks love it for being different, others can’t stand the sight of it. The little Fiat, being far less polarizing of a style, won by a sizeable margin.


I don’t hate the Juke, and in this trim it actually looks kinda cool, but I’ve wanted a 500 ever since they came out. Not badly enough to buy one (yet), but I am definitely a fan, and this is a good spec and a good price. Like some commenters, I wish it were a real color, but I don’t hate it in white.
For some reason, I was thinking about the song “Royals” by Lorde the other day, in particular the line, “We’re driving Cadillacs in our dreams.” It’s a strange callout to make, especially since Cadillac hasn’t been an aspirational brand for a long time. It was, once, certainly, but its “Standard Of The World” reputation didn’t survive the malaise era, and the brand has spent decades chasing former glories. Today we’re going to look at two cars that Cadillac desperately wanted to be seen as aspirational, but they fell somewhat short of the mark.
1986 Cadillac Cimarron – $4,500

Engine/drivetrain: 2.0-liter overhead valve inline 4, three-speed automatic, FWD
Location: Pennsville, NJ
Odometer reading: 225,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives well
The Cadillac Cimarron has been the butt of jokes for as long as it has existed, but as someone who has not only driven one extensively, but also spun one out on a freeway on-ramp at sixty miles an hour and lived to tell the tale, I feel obligated to defend it. Yes, it was too expensive new. No, it was nowhere near the BMW 3 Series and Audi 4000 competitor Cadillac wanted it to be. Yes, it looks just like a Chevy Cavalier with more chrome. All that is true. But once the Cimarron hit the used market and depreciation took its toll, something funny happened: it became a great used car deal. My dad bought his, a 1984 model, for $2,600 in 1989. It lost ten grand of excess price in just five years, becoming roughly the same price as an equivalent Cavalier, but with power everything and nice leather seats.

The Cimarron’s base engine was the Cavalier’s 2.0-liter pushrod four, commonly mistaken for the Pontiac 2.5-liter Iron Duke, but it’s actually a totally different engine. Four- and five-speed manuals were available, but they’re rare. A 2.8-liter V6 became available in 1985, but GM wasn’t shy about adding badges to the outside announcing it, so I’m almost certain this one is a four-cylinder. It has 225,000 miles on it, but it has been well cared for, and it runs just fine.

The inside is dirty, and the driver’s seat bolster has seen better days. I’m pretty sure duct tape wasn’t on the Cadillac option sheet. But I do remember these seats being very comfortable. The seller says the interior will get cleaned out and detailed before the sale, but they should have done it before taking the photos.

It’s in better shape on the outside. The paint is shiny, and I don’t see any signs of rust, though admittedly the photos aren’t great. It’s missing the center cap on one wheel and possibly one end cap on the front bumper, but otherwise it’s remarkably well-preserved.
2001 Cadillac Catera – $2,700

Engine/drivetrain: 3.0-liter dual overhead cam V6, four-speed automatic, RWD
Location: Newburgh, NY
Odometer reading: 86,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives well
The next time Cadillac wanted to try selling a smaller car, instead of pulling from the rest of the GM domestic lineup, it looked across the ocean to Opel, GM’s European division. The Catera is really just an Opel Omega with every option in the book and some Cadillac badges. It was even built in the same factory in Germany.

Unlike the Cimarron, and most of the rest of Cadillac’s lineup throughout the 80s and 90s, the Catera is rear-wheel-drive. It’s powered by an Opel-designed V6 with an unusual 54 degree angle between the cylinder banks. No manual transmission was offered in the Catera; all of them have the same four-speed automatic. This one has very low miles, only 86,000, and the seller says it runs great.

It’s in good condition inside, and the seller says the air conditioner is ice cold. It doesn’t look much like a proper Cadillac inside, though; it has a distinctly European feel. I’m sure it’s very comfy, though.

It’s clean outside and rust-free, which the seller makes a big deal of. This was a Pennsylvania car until recently, and that state’s inspections are very strict about rust. Weirdly, the “CATERA” letters have been removed from the trunk lid, and the A and the T have been relocated to the lower-left corner. Seller’s initials, maybe?
When you think “Cadillac,” you generally don’t think small sedans, which is probably why neither one of these sold very well. But neither one is a particularly bad car. They’re just not very good at being Cadillacs. Ignore the badges, and just accept them as they are, not what Cadillac thought they should have been. Which one deserves a second chance?
Blah, these are both boring…
“the seller says the air conditioner is ice cold”
Ok, I’ll vote for that one.
Let’s get Ziggy in the Catera!
I feel the need to additionally point out that the Cimmaron has been for sale for FOUR MONTHS.
There’s a reason for that.
Fun fact: The Caterra was built to handle an LS, and supposedly one will drop right in. I’ve wanted to have a LS swapped Caterra ever since. So Give me the ziggy not the peak of shit Cimmaron.
I read that config was fully designed and almost made it into production.
It would probably be best with a cheap salvage yard motor and self install, because when it’s done it would be a fun car but not worth much on the resale.
Yes absolutely.
I really wanted to vote for the
Cavalier BroughamCimarron here, but the ad raised enough red flags beyond misspelling the model name (wrong model year, trunk lid badges in the wrong places, general interior condition) to scare me off.Also, I’ve always wanted a Senator/Monza, and the Catera is as close as I’d probably ever get. So we’ll take the Opel Omega with the overbite.
We owe the Cimarron an apology. While this one is roached, making me vote for the Caterra, the Cimarron was an attractive car with a far nicer interior than the plastic crap of the 90s and 2000s.
The Caterra was also underrated. People saw Cadillac as such an old man car that they didnt give the brand any credit when it was due
My friend had a catera and loved it. I enjoyed riding in the passenger seat drunk so that’s my pick..
Both are the result of MBAs in GM’s marketing group assuming that if you give them a cheap Caddy, when they have more money, they will come back for a more expensive one.
The marketing premise was completely different than the 50s and 60s GM where they wanted you to buy an Impala, then move up to an Olds88 then a Caddy.
If GM wanted a small lux car…they could have just used Opel which had interesting cars that did not look much like anything from Ford or Chrysler (or AMC ha).
If you can’t guess by now. I am all in on the Catera.
I read something (maybe on this site?) that suggested GM looked first to Opel for what would become the Seville, but decided US plants couldn’t build the Diplomat (which was designed to compete with the Mercedes-Benz W116) without significant re-tooling.
I drive an ATS, I’ll take it’s grand pappy over the Cimarron.
Why is the much shittier car more expensive than the newer one in better condition with fewer miles??? Who priced that Cimarron??? Neither of these are “real” Caddys, but a relatively modern car with a V6 and RWD is always going to beat a sub-100 hp FWD with a 3-speed auto even if the latter wasn’t a clapped-out shitbox.
I’ll take the Caddy that Zigs instead of the caddy with cigs.
Even if the “Simaron” wasn’t a hot piece of 80’s garbage, I’d never buy it just on the principle that the seller took photos of a filthy car. The Catera is well presented, is a better car by any metric, and I never really got the hate that people dumped on it. Sure, it was a smaller car with the Cadillac nameplate, but it upheld the promise that the nameplate implied much better than “Der Grossen-Cavalier” never did (apologies to Richard Strauss).
COTD
As one one of my old college professors would say after completing a theorem proof:
“Beautiful.”
“Beautiful.”
“Beautiful.”
There’s reason behind wanting a Cimarron, and I get it. There will always be a contingent that wants to own the vehicle that is widely panned, or always makes the “worst of” lists. I really get it, thinking of this sort is what put Pacer into a somewhat more favorable light of late. The problem is that this particluar Cimmaron ain’t it. Ideally you’d want one of the manuals, just to say “only Caddy w/ a stick”, or a D’oro model, or a V-6, or a late one that had a modestly nicer appearance w/ composite headlamps and revised grille. This one is noping all over the page…4 cyl, 3-speed auto, base trim, and a pack of Marlboro Menthols sitting in a very grimy and worn interior.
Take the Catera (insert obligitory Lisa reference here) and daily it. Use it for a longer commute to keep the miles off the better car. It’s a perfectly fine driver that looks good enough inside and out without looking so good that you might actually consider holding on to it for some reason. Driving it will make you virtually invisible to most while generating a “haven’t seen one in a while” from folks like us.
Easiest choice ever.
15 years newer, RWD, built in Germany, about half the price. As far as old Opels go, the Catera is the answer.
I thought the Catera was FWD. Slightly more respect for it now.
My parents HAD BOTH: first mom’s ’85 Cimarron, and later dad leased 2 Cateras… for 1985 the Cimarron’s front end was revised (new grille, recessed lights, hood bulge), so what’s offered here is no 1986 model, rather an OG 1982-84 (unless an older front clip was used as a repair, but why?). I enjoyed driving mom’s V6 with sweet leather buckets when I came home from college, and it was her lifetime favorite car; not everyone loathes the Cimarron! That said, I voted for the German duck in this particular battle…
I was thinking it looked an awful lot like my dad’s ’84.
If the Cimmaron had been the first, and initially, only J-car with a V6, it might have been worth the Cadillac badge and price tag. It didn’t have to compete with BMW/Audi; it just needed power and nicer interior materials/luxury worthy of the Cadillac name. But by the time they put a V6 in the car, the damage was done.
Even new it looked like a shitbox. Style wise there is a zero (or near as possible to zero) chance that Anyone looking for a BMW 3 series or Audi 4000 (or Mercedes 190) would have even a passing thought about this Cadillac other than to LOL.
A truly awful badge engineering job by GM trying to sell this basic bitch Chevy as a Caddy
“it looks just like a Chevy Cavalier with more chrome”
That’s because it IS a Chevy Cavalier with more chrome.
Catera all the way. At least it’s only got 86,000 miles on it.
Neither?
Neither.
I was gonna say Cimmaron, but it’s disgusting inside and has the 4 cylinder, so no.
With a V6, they were basically a plush Z24. Of the J-cars, I think the best one is the early Z24 with 4-speed manual. It’s a neo-ponycar.
And the Catera, while it looks to be in great shape, is still a Catera.
So…no thanks.
Nothing ages worse than a Cadillac, except maybe the owners.
This…no way at all.
I’m sorry, wait… a 39 year old mid-aughts GM shitbox with dirty floors, duct-taped seats, almost certainly smells like an ashtray and 225,000 miles… FOR $4500???!!!
Why is this even a comparison? When did we leave Earth? What planet are we now on???
I know I’m getting old, but the mid aughts were not 39 years ago (yet)
Maybe recheck your maths?
1985-2025 =-40…
1985 was not the “mid aughts”, am I losing my mind here?
My mistake again, sorry. Read that as mid 1980’s. Getting old sort of sucks at times. Appreciate it…
Thanks.
Well that’s what I meant when I typed it so apparently we’re all getting old. Oops.
Thanks. That is helpful to realize I’m not the only one here with this issue? LOL
Nope, I’m apparently just getting old and my brain no longer works. My bad.
Yeah seriously. Take both zeros off the price on that POS and it makes more sense.
“No lowball offers. I know what I got.”
Planet Autopian!
IF the Ci-moron had the V6 AND a 5 speed, and IF it weren’t 25% “duck” tape on the inside, and IF it were half the asking price, it would be the obvious ironic choice.
However, it’s none of these, so for me it’s the characterless Cataract by default.
FORTY FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS FOR A WORN OUT 1986 CIMMARON?!?!
That guy is pants-on-head crazy. Even with today’s inflated prices, that is a $2k car AT BEST.
Gimme the zig master.
The “U.S. Army Retired” is the tip-off. He started his career being ripped off by the BHPH lots near the post’s front gate, never making sensible car purchases, and finally used the post “lemon lot” to sell his junk at outrageous prices using the “bigger fool” theory.
At $450 it still would be questionable.
Normally, I would agree. However, nowadays it seems like $2k is the floor for running and driving cars.
the interior will get cleaned out and detailed before the sale
Sure it will. You can see the cigarettes on the passenger seat. No detailing will get rid of the smell.
I’ll take the Omega with the ducks.
This, in Europe an Omega V6 is kind of sought after by Opel fans. Condition isn’t too bad, mileage is rather low. So that’s a fair deal.
As a Brit I like this sort of parallel universe. Vauxhall Omega motorway police patrol car all the way!
The only Catera I specifically remember seeing in the wild was already long in the tooth at the time. The funny thing is, it was missing all its badging, so it took the longest time to figure out what it was. It looked kind of like a Lumina, but I knew that wasn’t it. Maybe the slightly upscaler grille finally clued me in. Anyway, even though the Cimarron was refreshingly honest about what it really was, I’d take the Catera any day.
Catera, all day.
I drove both a Euro-spec Omega and a Catera, and have to say Cadillac really didn’t screw the Opel up all that much. The Catera handled pretty well, and was, as you’d expect from a German car, a nice highway cruiser.
In fact, GM’s later Opel-derived cars — Some late Saturns were built in Russelsheim, too — were, IMO, better than just about any domestic GM products in style, build quality and driving dynamics.
Not hard to pick this one over a tarted-up Chevy Cavalier.
Last-gen Buick Regal Turbo is a great example of an Opel that was supposed to be a Saturn that was a quietly decent and even fun car to drive.
Wasn’t SAAB 9-3 based on an Opel?
Shared a bunch. Epsilon underpinned a lot of stuff.
Hard no on the old 80s GM garbage.