#36
And that's where trap speed will be fairly indicative of those times.
Official manufacturer times mean nothing. Cadillac said the 3.6 would get 0-60 in 5.0 flat. That obviously isn't happening. Maybe another pub will test faster. We'll see, but either way its a disappointment for me going off what Cadillac had been touting. I think the 6MT 2.0T model would be the way to go (with the ability to at least tune the turbo) but I prefer the drive and sound of a V6.
Last edited by jepva; 08-08-2012 at 11:08 AM.
#37
#38
Last edited by JustinCSVT; 08-08-2012 at 11:22 AM.
"She's workin' at the pyramid tonight..."
'08 BMW 335i Sedan
#39
Bang, I think Cadillac did it.
Beautiful interior, and both the objective and subjective performance is there.
Shenandoah hot lap 1:46.92: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RmYq3mBbwPg
#40
You're right that we have to wait for a direct comparison, but I stand by my assumption it's significantly quicker. The auto 328i when tested by Road and Track was only a tenth of a second slower in 0-60 and the QM than the 6speed 335i tested by Car and Driver, which was significantly slower than other 335's tested by C&D before.
#41
Jared![]()
Originally user 22691
"I'm trying to live vicariously through jrod here and my vicarious
life would be better if he had a twin turbo. Or a ****ing pirate
ship." nm+
#42
haters gon' hate
its a great car. would love to have one.
needs more pics!
#43
Shenandoah hot lap 1:46.92: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RmYq3mBbwPg
#44
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#46
#47
I like this thing a lot. Pretty good fuel economy to go with the performance. I wonder what the 2.0T's figures will be like.
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#52
Man, the retards are out in force already.
I love all cars, I just happen to own a few pieces of german crap at the moment.
#53
I'm fairly certain that at some point down the line I'll be replacing the Mustang with one of these as my daily driver, and just garaging the Mustang except for special occasions.
#55
I think its a great looking car. Bravo Caddy! I guess they're not offering the V6 with manual trans though, which stinks. Waiting to see more about the turbo.
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'12 Trek X-caliber // '11 Cervélo R3
2010 VW GTI
#56
By the second year, you'll be able to get a manual with the 3.6. You watch.
I love all cars, I just happen to own a few pieces of german crap at the moment.
#57
AWD, when it's added to a FR car is a goddamn gimmick - a snow-belt security blanket for people who don't trust snow tires. It's not oriented towards performance, it's oriented towards timid drivers whose buttholes clench when snowflakes start falling. They could do it, but why on Earth would you buy a RWD-based sport sedan and then make it...not RWD anymore? Isn't RWD kind of the point here?
Exactly. FWD platforms make a better basis for an AWD car for a variety of reasons. If you must have AWD, buy a car with AWD baked right in. Kludging on a transfer case to satisfy the nervous and incompetent isn't a benefit for a RWD car- why ruin excellent RWD dynamics, by asking it to do something it's not going to be inherently good at anyway?
Last edited by Turbio!; 08-08-2012 at 11:30 PM.
The Cooking Animal is my side project: a blog for horngry food geeks. Check it out!
#58
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"The very powerful and the very stupid have one thing in common. Instead of altering their views to fit the facts, they alter the facts to fit their views...which can be very uncomfortable if you happen to be one of the facts that needs altering."
- Doctor Who (Fourth Doctor) "Face of Evil"
#62
#63
Professional wiener dog herder/craft beer drinker
#64
Eh, AWD can be a very nice thing....I just don't see its merit when applied to a RWD performance car. There are a number of cars that do "secure AWD winter warrior" well, and a number of cars that do "RWD sport sedan" well, but they're just not really compatible areas of competence - sort of like how "capable weekend offroader" and "sensible daily commuter" aren't really compatible. Pick what matters to you; something that tries to do both is going to be compromised.
The Cooking Animal is my side project: a blog for horngry food geeks. Check it out!
#65
#66
I would prefer the AWD, yes at the limits of traction, steering feel, and higher weight of the AWD aren't as good as the RWD but I live in an area where I don't need snow tires but travel occastionally for work to areas much farther north where A/S tires and RWD won't cut it and while I realize the AWD and A/S aren't the greatest, my current FWD and A/S are sufficient. I don't want to have snow tires on the whole winter or change out wheels and tires before each trip.
At what point on the street will I wish I had RWD? I guess when I am trying to cut seconds off of my drive across town?
I have a 2nd car which is manual, RWD car that is far better for perfomance driving, why would I care about these lost seconds or the steering feel that isn't as good as it could be?
It's a 4 door Cadillac, not even the most powerful once the V comes out, not an all out track car.
#67
I'm glad we've invented these things so that the northern parts of the US and Canada are now habitable. Can you imagine people trying to live there before AWD and things like traction/stability control were available??? It would have been impossible!
Hopefully they'll invent some way to remove the majority of snow from the streets so that it's even easier to brave the elements in winter!
#68
I like nearly everything about this car sans the rear end styling. I could get over it though if I could get a good deal. Will have to investigate when looking into next car purchase.
2010 A4
#69
#70
I don't dislike the rear end styling at all. Cadillac has a rear end graphic that only the less scrupulous Chinese car companies would be so bold to copy. I would like to see Cadillac experiment with the formula a bit so that more youthful or sport oriented models don't all end resembling the rear end of the more formal XTS. The early 1990s Caddy Eldorado ETC had import market rear amber turn indicators. Splitting the traditional Caddy vertical red tail light horizontally between red and amber looked great and was an unexpected detail.