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

Convertible, Custom, Cadillac, Convertable, Eldorado, 1970,1971,1972, on 2040-cars

Year:1972 Mileage:70000
Location:

Council Bluffs, Iowa, United States

Council Bluffs, Iowa, United States

New paint
Fresh Interior
New Battery, new top, new exhaust, new tires, all new brake system, new radiator, all new hoses, new carpet.
Motor has been tuned up, runs great. AC works great. Everything works. 
More photos per requst.

    Auto Services in Iowa

    Yaw`s Auto Salvage ★★★★★

    Automobile Parts & Supplies, Used & Rebuilt Auto Parts, Automobile Electrical Equipment
    Address: 919 SE 21st St, Swan
    Phone: (515) 318-7310

    Walker`s A To Z Auto ★★★★★

    Used Car Dealers, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automobile Salvage
    Address: 2020 Camanche Ave, Teeds-Grove
    Phone: (563) 242-3941

    Stew Hansen Hyundai ★★★★★

    New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers
    Address: 11344 Hickman Rd, Clive
    Phone: (515) 253-3000

    Red Rock Restorations ★★★★★

    Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Antique Repair & Restoration
    Address: 613 N Depot St, Tracy
    Phone: (641) 954-5177

    Ream Auto Body ★★★★★

    Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Automotive Roadside Service
    Address: 801 Blairs Ferry Rd NE, Robins
    Phone: (319) 393-6131

    Pat McGrath Chevyland ★★★★★

    Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
    Address: 1600 51st St NE, Robins
    Phone: (877) 309-4165

    Auto blog

    Cadillac's de Nysschen won't budge on raised pricing

    Thu, 18 Sep 2014

    According to new Cadillac boss Johan de Nysschen, it will take between 10 and 15 years to elevate GM's top brand, which was once hailed as "The Standard Of The World," back to prominence in the minds of American customers. And to hear the executive talk of it, the brand is going to have to be willing to see sales falter in the near-term before they recover:
    "Either you have to bring your volume aspirations into alignment with reality and accept that you will sell fewer cars... Or you have to drop the price and continue to transact at the prices where you were historically... I think the logical conclusion is that it's better to build off a very solid base in terms of [product] credibility, charge a fair price for the car and realize you have to wait until the volume comes."
    In other words, sales will fall before they rise, and the brand has to be okay with that. Notice, too, that de Nysschen speaks of "a fair price" for Cadillac cars and utility vehicles. In this case, "fair" means more than many of the brand's traditional buyers are accustomed to, and roughly in line with the brands and machines Cadillac believes it is competing against. For instance, the newly enlarged 2014 CTS carries a suggested retail price that is over $6,000 higher than it was in 2013, and some trim levels boast an even higher price premium over the models they replace.

    2013 Cadillac XTS [w/video]

    Wed, 30 Jan 2013

    The Cadillac Of Stopgaps
    As confusing as most alphanumeric car names have gotten in recent years, at least one constant has been that the letter "X" is generally indicative of a crossover. Then why did General Motors use this letter on its new 2013 Cadillac XTS luxury sedan? Well, for that, we'll have to look to the world of mathematics where "X" stands for an unknown variable or a placeholder. Now we're talking. The XTS is just an interim product sitting at the top of Cadillac's four-door food chain until the brand gets a true flagship in place. That sounds like a lot of resources to spend on what will likely be a one-and-done model, but the automaker needed to get something - anything - to replace the DTS.
    So here you have the 2013 XTS. A big luxury sedan that was created to bridge the gap between Cadillac's recent past and its pending future. Going into our week with this XTS knowing that it was a stopgap measure proved to be both a blessing and a curse. On one hand, we know (or hope) that this car will act as a baseline for future high-end Cadillac models, but at the same time, we couldn't help but be mindful of past stopgap models, albeit in more entry-level segments, like the Cimarron and Catera.

    New Cadillac ELR ad more educational, less controversial than 'Poolside'

    Mon, Mar 24 2014

    Cadillac's first TV commercial for its ELR plug-in hybrid, Poolside, was a smash hit, in that a lot of people saw and talked about it. The 60-second spot didn't say the car was a plug-in, took potshots at the work ethic of all non-Americans and has raked in over a million views on YouTube (you can add one more here). Caddy's new ELR video will get a lot less media attention, but that's exactly the point. Cadillac claims it was happy with the way actor Neil McDonough strutted his way into the controversial ELR discussion. This time around, though, the coupe gets promoted in a more traditional way: with information about the car and what it can do - you know, drive on electricity, capture braking energy into the battery, go further on gas power when needed, those kinds of things – courtesy of GM's executive chief engineer for electrified vehicles, Pam Fletcher. The tone of the video has not been changed because of the Poolside controversy. David Caldwell, manager of Cadillac communications, tells AutoblogGreen that the new video is not destined for TV and is completely different because it's meant for a different audience. "It doesn't have any direct relation to Poolside," he says. "TV advertising is not necessarily the heart of marketing something like the ELR. Notwithstanding the fact that we had a very thought-provoking ad [laughs]." "We definitely have a need to communicate what the ELR is" - Cadillac's David Caldwell The way you reach out to people via the web is different than the mass-media techniques used in spots like Poolside during big TV events (it aired during the Winter Olympics). The two video spots are different because you need to offer different information in different ways, for example having an ELR website as well as an iPad filled with ELR information at the dealership. For Cadillac, TV is "not going to be the predominant methodology," used to sell the ELR, Caldwell said, "the web is closer to what you need to do to reach people. We definitely have a need to communicate what the ELR is. It's not television advertising at all." Caldwell said a handful of other short videos similar to the new one will go live in the near future, showcasing design and powertrain aspects of the car. Keep an eye out for them – just don't look for them on TV. You can watch the new video below.