1996 CADILLAC DEVILLE

Used Sedan - 1996 Cadillac DeVille For Sale In Great Meadows, NJ

Price $5,800
1996 Cadillac DeVille
7 Photos Available
(7 photos)

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Great Meadows Auto

Contact: Anthony Armeni

908-637-8868
326 Rt. 46
Great Meadows, NJ. 07838

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About This 1996 Cadillac DeVille 

Price:
$5,800 
Condition:
Used - Clear Title
Mileage:
104,000
Body Style:
Sedan
Exterior Color:
 Royal Green (Green)
Interior Color:
 Buckskin (Tan)
Interior Material:
Leather
Engine:
8 Cylinder
Transmission:
Automatic
Drivetrain:
Front Wheel Drive
Doors:
Four Door
Stereo:
AM/FM Stereo CD Player
Stock Number:
001996
VIN:
1G6KD52Y4TU292619
Fuel Economy Estimates
City MPG
17
Miles Per Gallon
Highway MPG
26
Combined Fuel Economy For This Vehicle: 22 MPG
Estimated Monthly Fuel Cost: $149.43*

*Based on national average fuel price of $2.63 per gallon and 15,000
miles per year. Actual costs may vary due to driving habits & other factors.
Seller's Notes:

Cadillac, Cadillac, I just love Cadillacs. In fact, when I had my classic car business in Pompano Beach, I always had so many Caddys that the local businesses called me Tony Cadillac (true story). This is a very solid car, clean, nice leather, got that 4.6 Northstar which is so good on gas that it's a mystery why such a big car can get over 20 mpg. Beautiful paint, alloy wheels, just serviced, ready to go with a good warranty package. If my 17 year old would drive this safe and solid car, I would rest easier. Tony Armeni

Vehicle Options - Tan Leather Interior, Green Exterior, Front Wheel Drive, 8 Cylinder Engine, Automatic Transmission, AM/FM Stereo CD Player, Four Door, Sedan, Air Conditioning, Cruise Control, Driver Air Bag, Dual Exhausts, Leather Steering Wheel, Power Brakes, Power Door Locks, Power Mirrors, Power Seats, Power Steering, Power Windows, Rear Defroster, Remote Keyless Entry, Tilt Wheel, Tinted Glass, Alloy Wheels, Electronic Climate Control, Full Power, Traction Control, Anti-Lock Brakes, Driver Side Air Bag, Passenger Side Air Bag

By the way, do you see that red Sedan de Ville next to this one? Well, it has 90k miles and is $3800. I sold this car six years ago to an older couple with 56k miles and the wife doesn't drive anymore, so I just bought it back. Tony

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Additional Photos of this Cadillac DeVille
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1996 Cadillac DeVille Review

This car review is specific to this model, not the actual vehicle for sale.
1996 Cadillac DeVille
Northstar verve in a velvet glove.

 

Introduction
Think of the words luxury car and what comes to mind? A strong-yet-silent V8? Undoubtedly. Glove-soft leather and exotic wood? Yup. How about lavish space and a boulevard ride? If you're a traditionalist, those last two perks probably top your list.

 

While even Cadillac has made most of its models smaller and sportier, both the DeVille and its uplevel Concours twin are aimed squarely at folks like you. Both are big, roomy, soft-riding, leather-laden paeans to what luxocars--American luxocars--have always been. Yet the front-drive Northstar-powered DeVille and DeVille Concours are also a techno-leap beyond the soon-to-be-gone Fleetwood--the rear-drive car both will replace as Cadillac's most conservative model.

 

Walkaround
Except for the Cadillac script on its trunk and the crest in its grille, a $41,135 DeVille Concours looks just like a $36,635 DeVille. Both share the hidden rear wheels and tail fins that have been Cadillac trademarks since 1949, although the tailfins are a mere suggestion of those bygone days.

 

Both editions of the DeVille also share a rich palette of toney hues that include Cotillion White, Polo Green and the Dark Cherry that adorned our Concours test car.

 

While both cars get the 32-valve Northstar V8 for 1996, the Concours gets an extra 25 hp. H-rated tires also give it a heady 130-mph top speed versus 112 mph for the DeVille.

 

Concours has more head, hip and legroom and a larger trunk than its Lincoln Continental rival. It even beats the larger Town Car in some key dimensions, including rear head and hip room and overall space. It also wins the horsepower competition hands-down, with 40 more than the Continental and a 90-hp advantage over the Town Car. Although sheer acceleration isn't a key buying point for cars in this class, power is part of the prestige formula, and it always comes in handy when you're passing on a 2-lane highway.

 

Interior
The ecclectic blend of yesterday and tomorrow continues inside. Deep-toned Zebrano wood wraps around the dash and continues straight back to the rear seat. The Concours also comes with the leather seating that's optional on regular DeVilles. Though it hails from Michigan rather than Corinth, it is soft yet supportive, if a bit slippery. As you would expect, the seat is roomy, and there is not much in the way of lateral support. Cadillac does not expect that customers in this segment will be hurling their cars around mountain switchbacks for the sheer joy of driving, a view we endorse.

 

On the techno side are the sheer number of tasks the Concours does for you. While the DeVille comes with one remote keyless entry fob, Concours owners get two that allow two drivers to program the automatic door locks four different ways. Each fob is recognized by the seat-control computer, which automatically adjusts the 8-way driver seat to one of two pre programmed settings when you slide your gold plated key into the ignition.

 

Personalization is the latest game in the luxury car market, and the Concours is keeping pace with its competition in this derby.

 

Seat adjustments are where the past and future sometimes collide. The Concours has one of the only height-adjustable lumbar supports. Yet the tab that controls it is mounted low on the side, where it's hard to differentiate from the tabs that recline the seatback and heat its bottom (a $225 option).

 

Other seat controls for height, tilt and distance are clustered on the door, along with the buttons for the dual memory settings and the ones for the windows. A more modern, multi-function control like the one on Lexuses and Lincolns would be easier to use.

 

The digital instrument panel is yet another area where tradition and the computer age clash. The stark black screen makes a jarring contrast with the warm wood and graceful sweep of the dash. It's also flanked by dated-looking chrome buttons for the trip computer and temperature-set climate controls. While pushing them prompts such informative displays as average fuel mileage and speed--and such critical ones as coolant temperature and voltage analog dials like those on Eldorado and Seville tell you far more at a glance.

 

The revised sound-system controls are more user-friendly. New jumbo-sized tabs allow you to tune, seek and scan stations without looking. You can also adjust tuning, volume and even the climate with auxiliary tabs on the steering wheel.

 

Our Concours test car had the $790 topmost audio system, which includes a cassette deck, 11 speakers and a 12-disc remote CD. It also includes digitally processed sound, another new addition that times sound signals to mimic a room setting or auditorium, and concentrates them around the driver.

 

Oddly enough, the performance often begins with a less-than-luxurious moment of static until the automatic antenna can catch up with the radio. After that, though, the sound quality is as good as the best.

 

In back, the Concours soundly trounces Lincoln Continental and comes within an inch or so of the Town Car in hip and shoulder width. But those who buy by the inch may long for Cadillac's nearly departed Fleetwood, which is some 3 inches wider in both dimensions.

 

Driving Impression
Tradition and technology coexist comfortably on the road most of the time. On the coexistence side is the Northstar V8, a quad-camshaft marvel that vaults this two-ton car instantly off the line, cruises silently and revs very, very quickly to well over 6000 rpm when you nudge the accelerator.

 

The Northstar system, including its excellent computer-controlled 4-speed automatic transmission, has been an industry pacesetter since it first appeared in the Cadillac Allante, and it just keeps getting better.

 

Along with added power, the Concours has lower gearing than DeVille's. Result: sizzling 0-to-60 jaunts in under 7 seconds. The smooth 4-speed automatic transmission shifts imperceptibly when you're loafing along, and briskly when you're in a hurry.

 

Both models come with speed-sensitive steering and a suspension that automatically adjusts ride quality and ride height based on load and road conditions. The Concours refines both systems with a blend of hydraulics and electromagnetics designed to allow even easier steering and gentler damping at lower speeds, and firmer doses of both at faster, curvier clips.

 

The Concours succeeds admirably on the softer side of that scale. Follow the V8's siren song on fast, twisty roads, however, and the steering feels too light and too vague. The Concours also wallows a bit over bumps and still feels floaty over dips. But then, it's not a sport sedan.

 

You will also feel some steering-wheel pull during hard accleration, especially from a standing start, despite efforts to eliminate it. Known as torque steer, it won't surprise anyone accustomed to front drive. But it is as alien to rear-drive converts as corporate downsizing would have been back in 1949.

 

In the course of our evaluation, we gave the antilock brakes and traction control a thorough workout. Both function as they were supposed to, and braking performance was impressive for a car of this size. Though the torque limiting traction control made progress up slippery hills slower than we liked, pushing a button shuts it off. The bad news: The switch is nestled inconveniently in the glovebox.

 

Another system that worked almost too well was the RainSense wipers, which vary speed depending on how fast you're driving. We found them too fast for light-mist conditions. The good news: You can override the system.


 

Summary
Like the DeVille, the Concours is a contemporary update on the traditional full-size American luxury car tradition, for buyers who like their space. Who choose refinement and move-around roominess over sportiness. And prefer the open road over side roads.

 

Those are whom these traditional luxury cars are aimed at. While the Concours competes strongly in that arena, the DeVille may be the ultimate bargain. It is almost as cushy, nearly as powerful, and costs $4500 less.

 

Assembled In
Detroit, MI.

 

Options As Tested
Chrome wheels, AM/FM cassette sound system with CD and digital signal processing, theft-deterrent system, heated front seats, electronic compass.

 

Model Tested
DeVille Concours.


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326 Rt. 46
Great Meadows, NJ. 07838

Contact: Anthony Armeni

Phone:   908-637-8868
Phone Pager   908-813-4078
Fax: 908-637-8113

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