Junkyard Find: 1983 Cadillac 'Bustleback' Seville

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

The first-generation Cadillac Seville was a sibling — or maybe first cousin — to the proletariat rear-wheel-drive Chevrolet Nova, selling well while also cheapening the Cadillac brand. The second-generation Seville, introduced for the 1980 model year, moved to the Eldorado’s front-wheel-drive platform and gained a bold “bustleback” rear body design.

Here’s an example of a Bustleback Seville I spotted last week in a Phoenix self-service wrecking yard.

“Neoclassical” kit cars reached their pinnacle of popularity during the 1970s, and all of these cars featured mash-ups of various styling cues of the 1920-1940 era. The bustle-type trunk, along with (fake) leather hood straps and (nonfunctional) side exhaust pipes, was seen on many such vehicles.

Some Cadillacs and LaSalles had bustleback trunks through the late 1930s, so there was corporate precedent.

Cadillac shoppers weren’t enthusiastic about the look in 1980, however, and sales numbers for the 1980-1985 Seville was lower than that of its predecessor.

The Arizona sun has not been kind to the upholstery inside this car.

The Touring Suspension option made the Seville handle a bit better, and included 225/70R15 radials. The cassette deck boasted auto-reverse (a highly desirable feature in 1983, when a lot of factory cassette decks didn’t even have a rewind feature) and Dolby noise reduction.

The problem-plagued V8-6-4 engine that came in the 1981 Seville was gone by 1983; this car has one of the early HT4100 V8 s, rated at 135 horsepower in 1983. The HT series of Cadillac engines continued in production into 1995, finally replaced by the Northstar V8.

“The car for those who, like you, choose to go first class… all the way.”






Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

More by Murilee Martin

Comments
Join the conversation
5 of 62 comments
  • Whitworth Whitworth on Jul 25, 2017

    Even when these were relatively new I was like "what the hell are they thinking!" it was like some kit car monstrosity.

    • See 1 previous
    • Speedlaw Speedlaw on Jul 27, 2017

      @skor I worked with a guy who had one. Lincoln Continental left in the dryer too long. He loved, loved his Versalles ! GF's family had a Seville, while I had a 73 Nova. This started my lifelong obsession with "find the matching parts", which I was able to play later too, comparing my Mercury Mystique to a Jag X type. I can't report on the Seville driving, as it had a bad engine or trans mount, so if you pushed it, it made bad sounds. Also, that GF didn't like driving quickly....among her other issues. Steering Columns, plastic parts below the knee, seats, trunk fittings, and pop the hood. Switchgear. Always fun to see how many parts they can re use, or just assume "no one will notice"

  • JEFFSHADOW JEFFSHADOW on Jul 25, 2017

    Copart had one of these for sale in San Jose two years ago. Thirty-four thousand original miles, two-tone canyon yellow and brown, one owner(an attorney)and in mint condition. It sold for $3,300.

    • Speedlaw Speedlaw on Jul 27, 2017

      California Car ! Running around CA for two weeks made this salt encrusted northeastern guy cry...every single day. Volvo 240 with not a bubble ? Datsun Wagon with just a hit of sun fade ? First gen Rabbit diesel still clattering away ? Amazing !

  • Analoggrotto Sell Canada to Mexico.
  • MaintenanceCosts Just here to say thanks for the gorgeous picture of Vancouver, which may be my favorite city in the world.
  • TheMrFreeze I don't doubt that trying to manage a company like Stellantis that's made up of so many disparate automakers is a challenge, but Tavares asking for so much money is simply bad form. With the recent UAW strike and the industry still in turmoil, now is not the time. And as somebody with a driveway full of FCA products, I'd just like to say how much I miss Sergio and FCA. At least with him Chrysler and Dodge stood a chance of long term survival...
  • TheMrFreeze None of my cars are worthy of actual summer performance tires but our daily drivers do run all-seasons from about now until November, then winter tires the rest of the year because we're well into the snow belt. I always make sure the all-seasons I buy have good winter tire performance too, just in case we get caught with a very late or early winter storm
  • Akear The front reminds me of the Pontiac Aztec, though it does look better than that infamous vehicle. I predict they will sell about 5,000 of these annually.
Next