Junkyard Find: 1987 Cadillac Allanté
Let's say you traveled back in time to 1987 with enough money to buy a brand-new Mercedes-Benz 420 SEL, which was $54,440 (about $153,989 in 2024 dollars). But wait! The General would sell you a sleek new Pininfarina-styled roadster built in both Turin and Hamtramck, for just $54,700. What do you do?
That car was the Cadillac Allanté (yes, the accent is mandatory, just as it is with the Plymouth Volaré and Oldsmobile Toronado Troféo), which was sold for the 1987 through 1993 model years.
I found this car in Sparks, Nevada, a couple of months back.
The idea behind the Allanté was that GM would shove those troublesome European luxury invaders off our continent once and for all, by combining Michigan engineering with Italian styling.
Pininfarina was tapped to handle the design work, while a shortened version of the Eldorado/Toronado platform provided the underpinnings.
Car shoppers willing to pay S-Class money might have expected S-Class levels of powertrain sophistication in their Allantés, but what they got was GM's High Technology V8.
This version of the HT4100 got a unique intake rig that gave it 170 horsepower and 235 pound-feet. For 1989, the 4.5-liter version took over, followed by the Northstar for 1993.
The only transmission ever offered in the Allanté was a four-speed automatic.
There was a digital instrument cluster and what seemed like hundreds of buttons.
The interior was all sumptuous Italian leather and cool-looking gadgets, but the price tag of $154,724 (when reckoned in inflated 2024 bucks) seemed a bit steep. Sales weren't strong, to put it mildly, and in the end only 21,430 Allantés were built ( I've documented eight of them in junkyards through now).
Part of the problem for GM was that the cars had to be flown between Detroit and Turin via specially-modified Boeing 747s, at stupendous expense.
Meanwhile, Lee Iacocca and his buddy Alejandro de Tomaso were going for much the same approach with Chrysler's TC by Maserati, with similarly unimpressive results. At the same time, Chevrolet shoppers could still buy new Chevettes.
So here we are, fully depreciated 37 years later in the Nevada high desert. Sometimes it works out like that.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
1987 Cadillac Allanté in Nevada wrecking yard.
Imagine a world-class car with Cadillac comfort!
[Images: The Author]
Become a TTAC insider. Get the latest news, features, TTAC takes, and everything else that gets to the truth about cars first by subscribing to our newsletter.
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
Latest Car Reviews
Read moreLatest Product Reviews
Read moreRecent Comments
- Todd Reasland "For the SV, the FWD starts at $23,680 and AWD adds $25,330. " Yikes...25K more to get AWD? :)
- 1995 SC I think it's different now and the manufacturers just sort of leak them to the desired automotive "influencers" but it is still interesting with some cars. The C8 was a good example because it was such a radical change.
- ECurmudgeon One wonders why they didn't just go with a fleet of RHD Ford Transits, but the answer is, of course, "money."
- RHD Part XXXIV.Talk about whipping a dead horse!
- 1995 SC First gen Ranger is the best Ranger
Comments
Join the conversation
Need this, a Reatta and a Maserati TC!
I'm surprised how intact this still is, these used to get picked over just for all of the one off pieces which were unobtanium. Guess nobody cares anymore? If this wasn't two time zones away I'd snatch a few pieces on the cheap.