Cadillac Sixteen headlines Amelia Concours concept car class

(February 24, 2013) AMEILA ISLAND, Fla. — Cadillac's 2003 "Sixteen" will headline the 18th annual Amelia Concours d'Elegance's Cadillac Concept Car Class March 8 through 10. A decade ago, the elegant excess of Cadillac's "Sixteen" Concept Car set off alarms throughout the global auto industry as it rolled into the North American International Auto Show.



Cadillac's "Sixteen" Concept Car is a 1.000 horsepower 13.6 liter V-16, 5,000 pound, 19-foot long engineering and design statement taking conceptual cues from the legendary Cadillac V-16s of the 1930s.

The Sixteen is an example of truly advanced, leading edge automotive engineering and design wearing few of the typical bells, whistles, video games and gimmicks that clutter some concept cars.

Its "Displacement on Demand" V-16's Active Fuel Management system shuts down 12 of its 16 cylinders during normal motoring and cuts eight cylinders during more spirited driving. Only full throttle allows all 16 cylinders to fire and deliver 1,000 horsepower and 1000 lb/ft of torque. Four-wheel steering helps ease the Cadillac Sixteen concept car through real world driving situations.

Part of Cadillac's "Art and Science" design theme, the Sixteen, it was widely rumored, came very close to achieving production status. One thing it did very well was to influence and flavor Cadillac's product planning. The latest generation of Cadillacs carries the spirit of the Sixteen's concept and execution in their design DNA.

"We wanted a super luxury flagship," said Wayne Cherry, the retired Vice President of GM Design who led the Sixteen design project. "The Sixteen had to have a presence. We wanted it to be the ultimate expression of Cadillac; to reinstate Cadillac as a world leader in design and technology and a reminder of the heritage of Cadillac."