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1938 Cadillac

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1938 Cadillac Model 60

What may well be the single most influential prewar Cadillac originated during the most difficult period in the marque's history. The year was 1934, and General Motors' prestige outfit stood at the crossroads. The luxury-car market had all but disappeared in the chaos of the Depression, and Cadillacs were not selling very well. Production that year stood at only about a fifth of what it had been back in record-setting 1928, and the operation had been a consistent money-loser in the intervening years.

1938 Cadillac

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1938 Cadillac

Worse, the division's medium-price companion make, LaSalle, was not doing much better, yet its sales volume was looming ever more crucial to Cadillac's survival. To be sure, Cadillac was protected from the economic upheaval of the Thirties in a way its rivals were not: by the great size and financial strength of its parent company. But clearly, even Cadillac would have to change if it hoped to return to prosperity. Indeed, GM management had already instituted a number of measures toward this end, such as reducing the number of components unique to each car line. Into this sour situation stepped a new general manager, the man who would lay the foundations for the fabulous Sixty-Special.

1938 Cadillac

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1938 Cadillac

Nicholas Dreystadt was certainly no stranger to Cadillac. Before being promoted to the division's top post in late 1934, he had been manager of Cadillac's Clark Avenue home plant for more than two years, and served as general service manager for six years before that. Efficiency was his stock-in-trade, and cost-effectiveness ranked high among his goals. As Ernest Seaholm, Cadillac's chief engineer in those days, would later recall: "Nick made us look closely at everything . . . . If someone made a part for two dollars, why did ours have to cost three or four?"

Dreystadt knew better than anyone at GM that Cadillac could literally no longer afford to pursue the cost-bedamned practices that were by then customary among "carriage trade" automakers, yet he was determined to maintain the marque's standards of quality and engineering excellence. Interestingly, an important development that would reconcile these seemingly contradictory aims was already in the works at the time he took over the helm.

1938 Cadillac

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1938 Cadillac

It was a new monobloc V-8, so-called because the cylinder head was cast integrally with the block. Devised under the leadership of Owen Nacker and, later, John E "Jack" Gordon, it was projected to be much cheaper to build than Cadillac's existing 5.793 Liters V-8, let alone its mighty 6.035 Liter V-12 and 7.416 Liter V-16. Moreover, it was expected to be quieter, thanks to hydraulic valve lifters, and to have better performance and durability. As time would prove, this smooth, strong, and refined powerplant was so good that it would be continued without major change from 1936 through 1948. It also hastened the departure of the V-12, which it rendered virtually obsolete.

1938 Cadillac

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1938 Cadillac Model 60

Meanwhile, Dreystadt had been taking a close look at the market. Inevitably, his attention was drawn to the $900 price gap between the new straight-eight LaSalle, introduced for '34, and the least expensive Cadillacs. What this amounted to was that a buyer could have both a LaSalle and an Oldsmobile for the price of one new Caddy--and still have enough money left over to purchase a first-class living room radio. The difference was even greater at Packard, still the leading U.S. luxury marque at the time, where a fat $1325 separated that firm's new 1935 One Twenty series from its least expensive senior models. It's not clear why it took so long for the powers at Cadillac--or Packard, for that matter--to see that the market was ripe for a car priced to bridge this gap. What is clear is that once he recognized the problem, Dreystadt moved swiftly to solve it.

1938 Cadillac

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1938 Cadillac Model 75

The answer was a new low-end offering for 1936. Designated the Series 60, it rode a 3073mm wheelbase, 254mm shorter than the 3327mm chassis used for the Series 70 and Fleetwood Series 80, and shared the General Motors "B" bodyshell used by LaSalle, Buick, and Oldsmobile. All Cadillacs this year featured GM's much-ballyhooed all-steel "Turret-Top" construction for closed body styles, plus big duo-servo Bendix hydraulic brakes, doubly effective on V-8 models because the new monobloc engine weighed less than the previous V-8.

Other changes included a more rigid frame, a refined front suspension, and a handsome face-lift carried out by GM's Art & Colour section under the direction of Harley Earl. Marked by a stylishly tall, narrow grille and a divided vee'd windshield, it suited the new Series 60 especially well. Lean and trim in appearance, the "budget" Caddys were arguably the best-looking models in the '36 line. Best of all, they were the lowest-priced cars to wear the Cadillac crest since 1908, listing at $750 less than the cheapest 1935 V-8 Series 10, a savings of more than 30 percent.

1938 Cadillac

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1938 Cadillac Model 60

Though it was very much a "junior edition," the Series 60 was no less a Cadillac than its larger linemates--which would prove to be an enormous sales advantage. The engine was a smaller version of the one used in the big Series 70 and 75 V-8 cars: 5.295 Liters, 85.9mm x 114.3mm bore and stroke dimensions, and 125 bhp, compared with 5.678 Liters, 88.9mm x 114.3mm bore/stroke, and 135 bhp. It drove through a redesigned transmission that was so smooth, fast-shifting, and durable that it would become a prime favorite among hot-rodders. "Knee-Action" independent front suspension was still something of a novelty in 1936, even in the luxury field, but the Series 60 had it, a noteworthy sales point for passenger comfort.

What Cadillac had here was an entirely new kind of automobile: a high-quality, high-prestige package of compact dimensions, fast and powerful, easy to handle, and priced within reach of many Buick and Chrysler buyers. Predictably, the Series 60 brightened Cadillac's fortunes in a way the LaSalle by itself could not. Sales went up by an astounding 254 percent, with the new line accounting for more than half of Cadillac's model year production.

1938 Cadillac

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1938 Cadillac Model 75

Another event took place in 1936 that would brighten the division's fortunes even more: the arrival of 23-year-old William L. Mitchell to head the Cadillac design studio. In January of that year, Mitchell's mentor assigned him to create another new model using the Series 60 as its basis, but roomier, more luxurious, and more stylish by far than any previous Cadillac. The result was announced less than two years later. A predictive design with features that would be quickly copied by the rest of GM--and the industry--the Sixty-Special was a masterpiece that made everything on the road old-fashioned.

1938 Cadillac

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1938 Cadillac Model 75

Naturally, corporate brass had a few apprehensions about this daring new Cadillac. Don Ahrens, the division's sales director at that time, remembers: "As the Sixty-Special took shape . . . there were moments of uncertainty. The feeling arose not because we were apprehensive of the car's beauty but because, in its presentation, we were breaking with tradition . . . . The Cadillac market is ultraconservative. The bulk of our business is conducted with sound and substantial families. How would this revolutionary car affect our position in the industry? Was it too startling for our price class? Was it too rakish for our reputation?" In a word, yes--which is precisely why it had Harley Earl's enthusiastic endorsement. It was the sort of car that could only come from a younger designer: sporty yet sober, advanced yet appealing. It was an entirely new concept: the total car, with each design element fully and tastefully matched to all the others.

The Sixty-Special's styling represented a major departure for Cadillac in several respects. Presenting a smart, ultra-modern silhouette, it stood 76mm lower than any previous Cadillac, yet it had no less headroom inside. Running boards were conspicuous by their absence, a trend-setting move that GM chairman Alfred P Sloan observed "made it possible to widen the basic body pattern to the full tread of the wheels, so that the standard car became one that could hold six passengers."

An extended rear deck, a first for a U.S. production model, made the trunk an integral part of the main body. All four doors of this elegant sedan were front-hinged, an unusual arrangement then and one that would be widely imitated. Fulsome pontoon fenders front and rear added to the illusion of extra length, though it was really no illusion as the 3226mm wheelbase was 76mm longer than that of the Series 60.

The bright belt molding that traditionally separated the greenhouse from the lower body was eliminated. No brightwork adorned the sides, a brave move in a day when lavishly applied chrome was de rigueur for all but the cheapest cars. Equally bold was the use of very slim roof pillars, which allowed the windshield and doors to be wider than on any other car in the class for superior visibility. Replacing the expected, bulky upper door frames were tall, chrome-banded windows with thin-but-strong frames, a look clearly patterned on the convertible sedan body style that was still very much in vogue in the late Thirties. By combining closed-car comfort with the suggestion of an open car, the Sixty-Special was the precursor of the pillarless "hardtop convertible," the body style that would dominate the American industry more than a decade later.

"There has never been a car like the Cadillac Sixty-Special," enthused the ad writers, "a car with such definite modernity of line, yet so obviously right in taste . . . a precedent-breaking car prophetic of motor cars not yet on other drawing boards, yet a car wholly devoid of freakish trappings." Indeed, Mitchell's avoidance of "freakish trappings" was laudable, and the Sixty-Special was a sensational launch to his career. It can lay claim as the first Detroit "specialty" car, the sort of high-style, premium-price product that would appear from a number of manufacturers in the years that followed, cars like the 1940 Lincoln Continental and, much later, Mitchell's own 1963 Buick Riviera.

1938 Cadillac

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1938 Cadillac

The performance of the engine was impressive. Cadillac had settled on the 5.678 Liter version of the monobloc V-8 for all its eight-cylinder models except LaSalle beginning in 1937. Rated at 135 horsepower at 3400 rpm, the 5.678 Liter had five more horses than the 1935 V-8 and 10 more than the one-year-only 5.295 Liter monobloc. The Sixty-Special arrived weighing only some 105 kg more than a comparable 1938 Series 60 sedan, so its power-to-weight ratio was less than 14 kg per horsepower, quite good for the period. By contrast, that year's Packard Super Eight--which, incidentally, cost $700 more than the Special--carried nearly 16 kg per horsepower.

For 1938, Cadillac fielded five models. The first four (Series 38-60, 38-60S, 38-65, and 38-75) were eight cylinders and the 38-90 was a V-16. The V-12 series 85 was dropped this year. Also the Series 70 and Fisher bodied Series 75 Specials were dropped, but a Convertible Sedan was added to the Series 65 line. The styling bonanza for 1938 was the sensational new Sixty Special Sedan.

Series 60 was restyled with a squared off grille made up of horizontal bars extending around front and sides of the nose. Three sets of four chrome bars decorated the side panel louvers. Hood was front opening alligator style and headlights were fixed to the sheet metal between fenders and grille. Sixty Special had much the same nose as the Sixty, with one less bar in the grille assembly. The body was entirely new and unique, on a double dropped frame 76mm lower than the Sixty. There were no runningboards, the floor being at normal runningboard height. Large side windows in chrome frames were flush with the sides of the body. The convertible-shaped top featured a thin roof section and a notched back.

Series 65 (Custom V-8) and Series 75 (Fleetwood) shared a new front end style featuring a massive vertical cellular grille, three sets of horizontal bars on the hood sides, alligator hood, and headlights on the filler piece between fenders and hood. Optional sidemount covers were hinged to the fenders. Quarter windows were of sliding rather than hinged construction. Rear of bodies had rounder corners and more smoothly blended lines; trunks had more appearance of being an integral part of the body. Bodies were all steel except for wooden main sills.

New chassis details included:

  • Column gear shift
  • horns just behind grille
  • battery under right hand side of hood
  • transverse muffler just behind fuel tank
  • wheels by different manufacturer (not interchangeable with 1937)
  • "Synchro-Flex" flywheel hypoid rear axle on all series
  • deletion of oil filter

Compression ratio on Series 75 was raised to 6.70 : 1, necessitating use of high octane fuel.

I. D. DATA

Serial numbers were on left frame side bar, at the rear of the left front motor support.
Starting: Same as engine number.
Ending: Same as engine number Engine numbers were on crankcase, just behind left cylinder block.
 Series 38-60Series 38-60SSeries 38-65Series 38-75
Starting Engine No.8270001627000172700013270001
Ending Engine No.8272052627370472714763271911

STYLE

Fisher Series 38-60, 124" wheelbase
Style NumberStyleSeatingPriceWeightProduction
38-6119Sedan5$17751791 kg1,295
38-6119Sedan CKD5$17751791 kg12
38-6127Coupe2$16951752 kg438
38-6149Convertible Sedan5$22151809 kg60
38-6167Convertible Coupe2$18101748 kg145
38-61Commercial Chassis 159" wheelbase   101

STYLE

Fisher Series 38-60S, 127" wheelbase
Style NumberStyleSeatingPriceWeightProduction
38-6019SSpecial Sedan5$20851895 kg3,587
38-6019SSpecial Sedan CKD5$20851895 kg108
38-60Chassis   8

STYLE

Fisher Series 38-65 132" wheelbase
Style NumberStyleSeatingPriceWeightProduction
38-6519Sedan5$22852064 kg1,178
38-6519-FImperial Sedan 5$23602082 kg110
38-6549Convertible Sedan5$26002082 kg110
38-65Chasis   3

STYLE

Fleetwood Series 38-75 141 in. wheelbase
Style NumberStyleSeatingPriceWeightProduction
38-7519Sedan5$30752211 kg475
38-7519-FImperial Sedan5$31552239 kg34
38-7523Sedan7$32052248 kg380
38-7523-LBusiness Transformable Sedan7$31052248 kg25
38-7529Convertible Sedan 5$39402323 kg58
38-7533Imperial Sedan 7$33602320 kg479
38-7533Imperial Sedan CKD7$33602320 kg84
38-7533-FFormal Sedan 7$39902320 kg40
38-7533-LBusiness Transformable Imperial7$32552320 kg25
38-7539Town Sedan5$36352227 kg56
38-7553Town Car7$51152352 kg17
38-7557Coupe2$32752125 kg52
38-7557-BCoupe5$33802170 kg42
38-75Chassis   16
38-75Chassis, CKD   8
38-75Commercial Chassis, 161" wheelbase   11

ENGINE

TypeNinety degree
ValvesL-head
CylindersEight Cylinders
BlockCast iron block (blocks cast enbloc with crankcase)
Bore & Stroke88.9mm x 114.3mm
Displacement5.678 Liters
Compression RatioSeries 60, 60S, 65 = 6.25.1; Series 75 = 6.7:1
Brake Horsepower135 hp (140 hp on 75) @ 3400 rpm
Brake Horsepower101 kW (104 kW on 75) @ 3400 rpm
SAE/Taxable Horsepower39.20
Main bearingsThree
Valve liftersHydraulic
CarburetorStromberg AAV-25.

CHASSIS

ModelWheelbaseOverall lengthFront TreadRear TreadTires
Series 38-603150mm5274mm1473mm1549mm7.00 x 16
Series 38-60S3226mm5274mm1473mm1549mm7.00 x 16
Series 38-653353mm5369mm1537mm1584mm7.00 x 16
Series 38-753581mm5604mm1537mm1588mm7.50 x 16
Series 38-60Commercial Chassis4064mm   
Series 38-65Commercial Chassis4064mm   
Series 38-75Commercial Chassis4089mm   

DRIVETRAIN

TransmissionSelective synchro manual transmission.
Speeds3 Forward, 1 Reverse
ControlsLeft Hand Drive; Gearshift on column; handbrake at left (rhd opt).
ClutchSingle disc clutch.
DriveShaft drive Hotchkiss.
AxleSemifloating rear axle.
GearsHypoid gears.
Overall Ratio[60, 60S, 65) 3.92:l; [75] 4.58:1.
BrakesHydraulic brakes on four wheels.
WheelsDisc wheels.
Wheel size16 in.

OPTIONS

Radio for Fleetwood Bodies$95.00
Master Radio$79.50
Standard Radio$65.00
Heater$26.50-42.50
Seat covers$7.50 per seat
Spotlight$18.50
Automatic battery filler$7.50
Flexible steering wheel$15.00
Fog lights$17.50 pair
Wheel discs$4.00 each
Trim rings$1.50 each

HISTORICAL NOTES

1938 Cadillac Notes

  • Introduced: October, 1937.
  • Series 60 model year sales: 2052
  • Series 60S model year sales: 3704
  • Series 65 model year sales: 1476
  • Series 75 model year sales: 1911
  • V-16 model year sales: 315
  • Nicholas Dreystadt was general manager
  • Ernest W. Seaholm was chief engineer
  • William Mitchell was chief designer (Cadillac Studio)
  • Don E. Ahrens was general sales manager