Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

1995 Cadillac Deville Concours on 2040-cars

US $3,175.00
Year:1995 Mileage:120906 Color: White Diamond /
 Cashmere
Location:

555 State Road 37 S, Martinsville, Indiana, United States

555 State Road 37 S, Martinsville, Indiana, United States
Fuel Type:Gasoline
Engine:4.6L V8 16V SPFI SOHC
Transmission:4-Speed Automatic
Condition: Used
VIN (Vehicle Identification Number): 1G6KF52Y0SU244429
Stock Num: P9754A
Make: Cadillac
Model: DeVille Concours
Year: 1995
Exterior Color: White Diamond
Interior Color: Cashmere
Options:
  • 4 Door
  • 4-wheel ABS Brakes
  • ABS Traction Control
  • AM stereo/FM stereo
  • Automatic front air conditioning
  • Cargo area light
  • Cassette player
  • Clock: In-dash
  • Cornering Lights
  • Cruise control
  • Diameter of tires: 16.0"
  • Door pockets: Driver
  • Driver adjustable suspension ride control
  • Driver seat memory
  • Dual illuminated vanity mirrors
  • Dusk sensing headlights
  • Engine immobilizer
  • Floor mats: Carpet front and rear
  • Front and rear reading lights
  • Front and rear suspension stabilizer bars
  • Front bench
  • Front Disc brakes
  • Fuel Capacity: 18.0 gal.
  • Fuel Consumption: City: 16 mpg
  • Fuel Consumption: Highway: 25 mpg
  • Fuel Type: Regular unleaded
  • Heated driver mirror
  • Heated passenger mirror
  • Leather seat upholstery
  • Mechanical remote trunk release
  • Overall height: 56.3"
  • Overall Length: 209.7"
  • Overall Width: 76.6"
  • Passenger Airbag
  • Power remote driver mirror adjustment
  • Power remote passenger mirror adjustment
  • Power steering
  • Power windows
  • Privacy glass: Light
  • Rear air conditioning
  • Rear heat ducts
  • Rear leveling suspension
  • Rear seat vanity mirrors
  • Rear seats center armrest
  • Rear Stabilizer Bar: Regular
  • Regular front stabilizer bar
  • Remote power door locks
  • Seatback storage: 2
  • Simulated wood door trim
  • Spare Tire Mount Location: Inside
  • Tires: Prefix: P
  • Tires: Profile: 60
  • Tires: Speed Rating: H
  • Tires: Width: 225 mm
  • Total Number of Speakers: 11
  • Trip computer
  • Type of tires: AS
  • Variable intermittent front wipers
  • Wheelbase: 113.8"
Drive Type: FWD
Number of Doors: 4 Doors
Mileage: 120906

Welcome to Community Chrysler. Thank you for viewing this 1995 Cadillac DeVille. This vehicle is fresh to our inventory and you can expect to have more information and details listed very soon. If you have a specific question, or if you would like to request photos, video, or other info, please give us a call or submit your contact info above, and you will be contacted shortly. Thank you for choosing Community!

Auto Services in Indiana

Zang`s Collision Consultants ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
Address: 4165 Harrison Ave, Lawrenceburg
Phone: (513) 574-5330

Woody`s Hot Rodz ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Automobile Customizing
Address: Cross-Plains
Phone: (812) 637-1933

Wilson`s Auto Service ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Tire Dealers
Address: 210 E South St, Perrysville
Phone: (217) 442-3382

Vrabic Car Center ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Wheel Alignment-Frame & Axle Servicing-Automotive, Brake Repair
Address: 1300 Lafayette Ave, Staunton
Phone: (812) 232-0681

Vorderman Autobody ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Truck Body Repair & Painting
Address: 5515 Industrial Rd, Churubusco
Phone: (260) 482-7775

Voelz Body Shop Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Automobile Parts & Supplies
Address: 3471 Market St, Clifford
Phone: (812) 376-8868

Auto blog

Why Cadillac needs a real truck in its lineup

Mon, Aug 31 2015

Premium brands such as BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Lexus, and Cadillac sell vehicles that cover the spectrum from car to crossover to SUV. But trucks? They remain the last frontier when it comes to luxury brands. These days Chevy, GMC, Ford, and Ram sell cheap, bare-bones work trucks alongside loaded models that top $75,000. There is a reverse elitism that comes with this sales tactic. A brand gets to reflect a rugged working class lifestyle with the emblem up front, while what's behind it costs as much as a small house in middle America. But Americans who spend big money on cars and SUVs have always gradually tailed towards luxury nameplates over time. Everyone knows what an Escalade is, and thanks in large part to that image the Escalade is now the best-selling fullsize luxury SUV in the USA. Cadillac's flagship model, along with its midsize luxury crossover, the SRX, routinely outsell the competition from Audi, Mercedes, and BMW, not to mention Ford's Lincoln brand and most of the Japanese rivals. With trucks already dominating overall sales and headed into the pricing stratosphere, I believe it's time for Cadillac to consider a fullsize truck. And no, not a lipstick version that merely takes a Chevrolet Silverado pickup and throws in a few leather seats and some slight interior touches. That experiment already failed both for Cadillac (the Escalade EXT) and for Ford's Lincoln brand (Blackwood, Mark LT). Cadillac is an American brand that currently focuses a ridiculous amount of energy and resources trying to compete with European car offerings. The brand needs to create the Cadillac of trucks. Head honcho Johan de Nysschen has been blunt in his desire to "restore Cadillac to the pinnacle of global premium brands, not in sales but in aspirational brand character." This sounds well and wonderful. But the present problem in achieving this goal is that, on a global basis, Cadillac is a failed brand. Look at Europe, where Cadillac has sold so poorly in recent years that former Soviet manufacturer Lada managed more new registrations in 2014 by a factor of more than four to one. Cadillac is an American brand that currently focuses a ridiculous amount of energy and resources trying to compete with European car offerings. After more than 20 years of Cadillac models selling themselves as import killers, the only one with sustained success has been the CTS, and even that has been a marketplace loser for the last several years. The CTS-V?

2015 Cadillac Escalade

Fri, 29 Aug 2014

I have never liked traveling to Monterey, CA. The picturesque coastal city is about 300 miles from my home in Los Angeles, which means cramped and uncomfortable regional aircraft are part of the equation when the turnaround is only one night. Over the years, I have cursed the LA Basin's bumper-to-bumper traffic en route to the airport, argued with TSA personnel over carry-on baggage and waited countless hours for the fog to lift just for the anguish of being packed into a small regional jet for the flight. Of course, the process repeats on the trip home with equal misery.
Yet this time I am not suffering.
Cadillac has dropped its all-new 2015 Escalade in my driveway. Instead of battling city congestion, attempting to reason with misinformed government agents, snacking on a too-small bag of pretzels and physically rubbing shoulders with a dubious stranger for 90-plus minutes within the confines of a bumpy aircraft, I have chosen to forgo air travel and drive myself door-to-door in a fullsize luxury sport utility vehicle.

MIT puts V2V technology on its 2015 Top Ten list

Thu, Mar 5 2015

Of all the technologies swimming around the automotive world, it is vehicle-to-vehicle communication that the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has fished out as one of its Ten Breakthrough Technologies of 2015. It joined emerging tech like brain organoids, supercharged photosynthesis, and Project Loon on the list, and got the nod over autonomous driving because, as the MIT Technology Review wrote, V2V communication "is likely to have a far bigger and more immediate effect on road safety." How so? Because actual cars transmitting data like their location, speed, steering angle, and state of braking to one another at least ten times per second provides a greater degree of awareness than sensor readings and algorithms. The US Department of Transportation and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration have been working for years on standards and a regulatory schedule for introducing V2V to the marketplace, and Cadillac plans to incorporate V2V into at least one of its vehicles by 2017. Since we've begun the year with a number of stories of cars being hacked into, that got us wondering about the security of V2V communications. In a recent piece by our own Pete Bigelow on what motorists should know about getting their cars hacked into, he wrote that although cyber break-ins are extremely difficult, expensive, and time-consuming to do remotely, V2V is "one more conceivable avenue a hacker could use to impact multiple cars at a given time." So we spoke to Wilmington, Massachusetts-based Security Innovation about it. The automotive consultancy company has been working with the DOT since 2003 on V2V technology and the issues around it - namely security and privacy - and its chief scientist, William Whyte, is the technical editor of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 1609.2 standard outlining its security protocols. Those protocols are expected to be finalized by the DOT toward the end of this year and then come into effect in 2016, and the company's Aerolink product is the security solution Cadillac will use. Whyte said, "If you hack into a car, V2V is the hardest place to start," and Pete Samson, the general manager of Security Innovation's automotive team, said "There are ten or 12 alternate attack surfaces" around the car that would make much easier targets.