The 2004 Cadillac XLR brought the marque back to the convertible segment after a long absence. The roadster was based on the sixth-gen Chevy Corvette to keep costs in check, and the link between the ...
Once Cadillac’s boldest design statement, this ambitious roadster is now a bargain on the used market. Here’s why prices are ...
Seriously, unless you're a diehard detractor, you really can't say too many bad things about Cadillac these days – unlike a few years ago when the luxury American carmaker was completely overwhelmed ...
With its angular ‘Arts & Science’ design language, and a two-seat layout that was highly unusual for a Cadillac in the mid 2000s, XLR was always a distinctive car. But not even the high performance ...
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2004 Cadillac XLR For Sale With Just 3,370 Miles
The early 2000s were weird—in a good way—and Cadillac’s XLR is proof. Built on the same Y-body platform as the C6 Corvette but aimed squarely at the Mercedes SL, the XLR was Cadillac flexing its ...
Cadillac did the impossible and reinvented its image in the 21st century, elevating itself from the quintessential producer of bench seat-wielding vehicular barges that were built for grandmas, to a ...
One of the many strange and obscure automotive tidbits that lives in my mind rent-free is the totally bonkers trunk mechanism on the Cadillac XLR. I love the XLR, always have and always will. I know ...
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