Drivetrain
Chassis
Body
1987 Cadillac Allante 58k Orig Mi. Excellent Running and Driving Condition
The Cadillac Allanté is a two-door, two-seater luxury roadster marketed by Cadillac from 1987 until 1993. It used a Cadillac chassis and running gear with a body built in Italy by coachbuilder Pininfarina. It was expensive to produce with the complete bodies flown to Detroit for final assembly. To maintain luxury market position in the 1980s, Cadillac sought an aspirational model that would combine the prestige of a European design with the renown of a European coachbuilder — to help Cadillac compete with Mercedes and Jaguar. It would become the first modern-era two-passenger Cadillac roadster, and the first to wear the Cadillac name since the Cadillac Series 355 roadster of the 1930s.
Cadillac General Manager Bob Burger sent engineers in 1982 to Italy to meet with designers and coachbuilders, to explore a partnership with Cadillac. According to program manager Ed Anderson, the team identified Pininfarina as their top choice, and Cadillac chose them to design the Allanté, under the direction of Sergio Pininfarina, working with a team of designers including Mario Vernacchia. At GM, Chuck Jordan was torn because delegating the design to Pininfarina implied that GM's 3,000 internal designers were unable to pen the design. GM stylist Wayne Kady along with Vice President of Design, Irv Rybicki, fought to have the design crafted in house, Kady later saying GM leadership had decided to go with an Italian design even before Cadillac's designers began work. Burger later told the in-house designers the company was "looking for a car with a designer name to it. It's like Levi's, it's that tag on the back of the jeans".
All Allanté models featured a fully electronic instrument and control panel, which was angled towards the driver, without knobs or manual controls, The nameplate Allanté was selected by General Motors from 1,700 computer generated potential names.[4] Originally designed to compete with the Mercedes-Benz SL and Jaguar XJS, the Allanté initially featured a slightly modified variant of the 4.1 L V8 used across Cadillac's model line. The front-wheel drive Allanté roadster had a transverse multi-port fuel injected variant of GM's aluminum 4.1 L (250 cu in) HT-Cadillac 4100 V8, along with roller valve lifters, high-flow cylinder heads, and a tuned intake manifold. The suspension was independent strut front and rear, with Bosch ABS III four-wheel disc brakes. A removable aluminum hardtop, Delco-GM/Bose Symphony Sound System (a $905 option on other Cadillacs), the industry's first power retractable AM/FM/Cellular Telephone antenna, and a complex lamp-out module that substituted an adjacent lamp for a burned-out bulb in the exterior lighting system until the dead one could be replaced were all standard. The only option was a cellular telephone, installed in a lockable center console. The base price was $54,700 ($146,700 in 2023 dollars).
This very nice Allante has been in the seller's care for roughly a decade. Used on Sunny Summer days only, the soft top was put up for the first time under his ownership for this photo shoot. Having covered only 58,000 miles from new the car is in very nice condition exhibiting minimal wear on the leather seating surfaces, the paint and brightwork are all in very good to excellent condition. This is a well cared for car that has always been garaged.
Finished in the desirable and striking Sliver over Red color combination with Red side moldings, this is a very nice looking car. Complete with all accessories including an auxillary Wind Deflector, Original Owner's Manual, Tools and a Shop Manual, this Allante has it all.