Yeah buddy congratulations you got it.. I chose this song because these engines are considered whisper quiet. And anybody that could afford one of these cars would be careless on how much they spent
The '37 models were much sleeker and more elegant looking, in my opinion... But all of the 16 cylinder Cadillacs were the utmost in luxury for their time!
Totally agree The second generation Cadillac V 16 in a lot of ways was very understated for what it was in my opinion you either knew what it was or you did it it was much like a packard twin six
Finally found a V-16 from the 38-40 eras my favorite ones. Had to get the CLC Authenticity manual for the 38 40 V-16. According to the book, the left indicator light under the speedometer is the driving (country) beam, middle, passing beam, right city (low) beam. The headlight knob selects park, city, country, the dimmer switch works as normal, in city beam. In country beam the dimmer switch dims the left light only for passing beam. The dash diagram in my book shows 3 knobs on the left of the key is the radio on-off-volume-tone the middle button is a added on later for something? next to the key is the station selector, but this car has a Motorola instead of the Cadillac radio, so they may be dummy knobs, and the clock has been removed when they installed the Motorola, the plastic on top is broken from the radio being too tall, but the car is beautiful just like it is. First choice, any 38-40 Cadillac series 90, second 38 Pierce-Arrow.
Mallard and many other engines are at our rather magnificent national rail museum here in York, England. It also has the flying Scotsman (1st 100mph train) and the only bullet train outside of Japan and, added bonus, it’s free to visit 😊 few years ago they had all the remaining A4 pacific class together in the great hall: Mallard, Bittern, Sir Nigel Gresley, Union of South Africa, Dominion of Canada and The Dwight D Eisenhower (which is back in your national railroad museum in Green Bay, Wisconsin)
This is a car that if I got the opportunity to drive one I don’t know if I would know Packard on the other hand.. These have gone astronomically expensive not saying that Packards aren’t on the same level it’s just these have gotten really expensive
Thanks for showing a very interesting and rare car! Styling-wise the Packard 12 is far more attractive to me as the V-16 Caddie is just a bit too busy in design. The V-16 looks very presidential though. Anything from the 1930s is attractive to me, however. I wonder what it must have been to steer and drive a car with a half ton engine in front… it must have required a well muscled gorilla for a chauffeur to parallel park the beast without power steering!
Oh that we could see cars like these on the roads once again. Sometimes I feel like i was born in wrong era, but I can dream. If you could afford to buy & operate a luxury car like these, you didn't worry about what some folks might think of you😊.
Jay, nice posting well done! This looked like an unrestored survivor we kept. I had mentioned way back in a correspondence that the Nethercutt Collection in Sylmar California, has several examples of Cadillac's series 90 in amazing, restored condition. Thanks.
I've been to the Nethercutt collection, and it is amazing! Not only do they have a lot of immaculate old classics (which they say are all ready to drive at a moments notice), but they have a Mighty Wurlitzer Pipe Organ. If you have never heard one, you owe it to yourself to put it on your bucket list!.
In 1975 my friend and I went inside parked 1938 Cadillac 2 door business coupe, which belonged to a night club called 'Starvin Marvin'. This Cadillac was not in running order as it had rear end damage. About a year later the car was repaired and restored.
Cool car. Excellent video. The glass in the partition could have been used for privacy, but, remember, this is a convertible, so the window was most probably used as a wind deflector for the passengers in the rear. Just as with the side windows, the partition glass can be left in the most useful position.
13:51 Wow! My '69, '71 and '73 Cadillacs had little trash cans like that one. I had no idea the idea went back to the 1930s, assuming that was original equipment. Ironically, even though I eat in my cars, I've never used those trash cans, or the add-on ones they used to sell (with the drink holders) for the transmission hump. It's easier to throw out whatever trash I have whenever I get out of the car.
Thank you so much for watching I respected the backseat and did not get in the rear of the car because the seats looked delicate.. There was so much to see with this car the hood was hard to open and it was really heavy I could not believe how far that engine sits down inside there there was so much to see with this car the hood was hard to open and it was really heavy I could not believe how far that engine sits down inside there Glad you dig =)
That looks like a very well preserved original, but it would benefit from a complete sorting. It also looks like it would probably pass the glovebox test. @@What.its.like.
Thank you for the look at the 1938 Cadillac. I have a 1969 that has become a parts car. I also like a lot of the older ones such as the 1956 Fleetwood 60 special, the 1935 model particularly the top of the line. Most all of them are so luxurious. I have also seen some others that you have highlighted such as the 1949 Mercury (stock), and others. I will subscribe.
I know a guy who has a 38 Cadillac and the 3 idiot lights are for your headlamps and parking lights one is for normal headlamps, another for high beam, and another for the parking lights. Another great video!
What a huge vehicle! Just head shaking that such a massive engine puts out so little power, but for the day, I guess it would be considered high output! Interesting with the dual coils and distributors, almost like they welded two straight 8's together and said "there"... As with other luxury brands of the day, I can't imagine tooling around in this as a daily driver. Talk about a workout! WYR: 1) & 2) Actually, none of them blow me skirt up... LOL Maybe a '38 Pontiac...
The multi-cylinders were more for quiet, smoothness, & torque than power. You needed that to get these big heavy beasts moving. Once they were rollin' you stayed rollin'!
Hi Jay!: What a cool ride that V-16 Caddy is! You would think that with that INTERESTING engine mounted so low in the chassis, that the V-16 might have had pretty good handling for a car of its type in those days! The 1937 is a better looking car in my opinion, but the 1938-40 had that COOL engine!! WYR#1 (Can't believe I'm going to diss that BEAUTIFUL Packard!) 1938 Cadillac V-16. #2 1938 Cadillac again! (That Pierce is SO SWEET though!)
Glad to see you back in Canton! for WYR#1, I'd go with the Packard. Those cathedral hoods always get me. For #2, I'd take the Caddy. the Pierce Arrow and Lincoln are just kinda ugly to me. Pierce Arrow had patented the whole headlights in the fenders in 1914, and the patent expired some 15 years later- though other American companies didn't really start to copy it until around 1938, when P/A went out of business.
Great choices =) Yeah I went out there last Wednesday I did 3 cars going to go back in January and do a few more 1941 packard 110 And the Holmes are the others I did Thank you so much for sharing that trivia, that I didn’t know
Im a Cadillac guy through and through, and from birth, but I would only ever stray for one of the 3 Ps. So, the 38 Packard, but Ill stay with the 38 Cadillac coupe.
Hi Jay. One thing you didn't notice was that this Cadillac has a column gearshift, a year before the rest of the industry went that way. On the V16, it will have been developed at the same time as Cadillac's famous flathead V8 (introduced in 1936), which powered lots of WWII military vehicles. Thus I'd expect there to be design similarities and some commonality of parts. This car is ready for a full restoration, which will of course be expensive, but thesedays 3D printing will be able to replicate all the deteriorated plastic parts. Cheers.
Awesome observation thank you so much for pointing that out Yeah if you had one of these cars and you needed something you would probably have to get it 3-D printed from somewhere
This is a very nice unrestored car...I'd love to see it once somebody gets it and does the job. For WYR, it's going to be either the Packard or the Cadillac for the first scenario, and the Lincoln for the second (I love the front end).
While I appreciate the 2nd gen 16 for what it was, by this time they have mostly become huge formal cars, and were somethign of a Leviathan - not just proportions but the ultra dignified styling. A bit too 'Godfather' for me. Some have questioned the 2nd gen production decision, why bother with the expense. But yes, they did make an exclamation point against Packard, which, with the Lincoln K, were the only rivals left. I was surpirsed the K actually outsold the 16 in 38, though priced just slightly less. WYR: 1) the Packard 2) the V16
Nice video on a super interesting car. This would be so neat to drive and hear run. My favorite year for the Cadillac V16 is the 1932. To me the styling on this 1938 is a bit plain for what the car is. In the WYR I would take the 1939 Packard 12 and the 1938 Pierce Arrow.
Awesome choices glad you dig this video maybe this spring/summer we could find one that is running definitely want to try to do more drives this spring/summer well technically next spring lol
@@timothysotelo3868 That and punitive taxation. New 90+% top tax rate caused the deep recession of '38, which was largely why so few later V16s were sold.
@@timothysotelo3868Sadly, it was WW2 that finally pulled us out of the depression. Some say it can never happen again, but I'm not so sure of that one😢.
His name is Archie he is a King Charles.. I want to do some more random stuff with my kids maybe my wife my dog Archie is a trip.. he has crazy eyes have to do a random bit with that Great choice glad you dig the channel =)
I may be one of the few that just isn’t that impressed by the 38 Cadillac in rather have the Packard and the Lincoln both just look elegant and refined
Gas was cheap so going downmarket to flat heads probably may not have affected performance too much, bit of a shame though, guess it was because of the depression years.
I’m going to take the Packard. I was disappointed with this car….it seemed, clunky. Maybe if is was fully restored it would stand out. But as is….not impressed.
Careless Whisper by George Micheal 🤞🤷
Yeah buddy congratulations you got it.. I chose this song because these engines are considered whisper quiet. And anybody that could afford one of these cars would be careless on how much they spent
Way to go John
@@andreamills5852 Thank you ☺️✌️
Isn't it a song by Wham?@@What.its.like.
Wow! Good job John!
The '37 models were much sleeker and more elegant looking, in my opinion...
But all of the 16 cylinder Cadillacs were the utmost in luxury for their time!
Totally agree The second generation Cadillac V 16 in a lot of ways was very understated for what it was in my opinion you either knew what it was or you did it it was much like a packard twin six
Finally found a V-16 from the 38-40 eras my favorite ones.
Had to get the CLC Authenticity manual for the 38 40 V-16. According to the book, the left indicator light under the speedometer is the driving (country) beam, middle, passing beam, right city (low) beam.
The headlight knob selects park, city, country, the dimmer switch works as normal, in city beam.
In country beam the dimmer switch dims the left light only for passing beam.
The dash diagram in my book shows 3 knobs on the left of the key is the radio on-off-volume-tone the middle button is a added on later for something? next to the key is the station selector, but this car has a Motorola instead of the Cadillac radio, so they may be dummy knobs, and the clock has been removed when they installed the Motorola, the plastic on top is broken from the radio being too tall, but the car is beautiful just like it is. First choice, any 38-40 Cadillac series 90, second 38 Pierce-Arrow.
Wow thank you so much for following up with that information =) great appreciate that
Great choices =)
Mallard and many other engines are at our rather magnificent national rail museum here in York, England. It also has the flying Scotsman (1st 100mph train) and the only bullet train outside of Japan and, added bonus, it’s free to visit 😊 few years ago they had all the remaining A4 pacific class together in the great hall: Mallard, Bittern, Sir Nigel Gresley, Union of South Africa, Dominion of Canada and The Dwight D Eisenhower (which is back in your national railroad museum in Green Bay, Wisconsin)
I like the 1938 model hands down.
Sweet =)
Nice Jay! Imagine driving that 🫠oops no live comments!😳😝🇺🇸
This is a car that if I got the opportunity to drive one I don’t know if I would know Packard on the other hand..
These have gone astronomically expensive not saying that Packards aren’t on the same level it’s just these have gotten really expensive
Thanks for showing a very interesting and rare car! Styling-wise the Packard 12 is far more attractive to me as the V-16 Caddie is just a bit too busy in design. The V-16 looks very presidential though. Anything from the 1930s is attractive to me, however. I wonder what it must have been to steer and drive a car with a half ton engine in front… it must have required a well muscled gorilla for a chauffeur to parallel park the beast without power steering!
Magnificent car.
Totally agree
Oh that we could see cars like these on the roads once again. Sometimes I feel like i was born in wrong era, but I can dream. If you could afford to buy & operate a luxury car like these, you didn't worry about what some folks might think of you😊.
I was born too late as well when I get some money going to buy a 30s car and share it with as many people as I possibly can I want a 37 air flow
@@What.its.like. 👍👍👍
Jay, nice posting well done! This looked like an unrestored survivor we kept. I had mentioned way back in a correspondence that the Nethercutt Collection in Sylmar California, has several examples of Cadillac's series 90 in amazing, restored condition. Thanks.
I've been to the Nethercutt collection, and it is amazing! Not only do they have a lot of immaculate old classics (which they say are all ready to drive at a moments notice), but they have a Mighty Wurlitzer Pipe Organ. If you have never heard one, you owe it to yourself to put it on your bucket list!.
It is truly a gem! I agree about the Wurlitzer, when I hear it play, I tear up.
I live 30 min drive from the Nethercutt and it's a gift! @@61rampy65
In 1975 my friend and I went inside parked 1938 Cadillac 2 door business coupe, which belonged to a night club called 'Starvin Marvin'. This Cadillac was not in running order as it had rear end damage. About a year later the car was repaired and restored.
Cool car. Excellent video.
The glass in the partition could have been used for privacy, but, remember, this is a convertible, so the window was most probably used as a wind deflector for the passengers in the rear. Just as with the side windows, the partition glass can be left in the most useful position.
Back when a trunk actually was a trunk! 🧰 😊 Thanks Jay for the fantastic presentation! Henry Leland would be happy to see where his baby went by 37' 🎁
Its the Cadillac of Cadillacs 🎉❤
1:28 That looks like a really nice chandelier !!
13:51 Wow! My '69, '71 and '73 Cadillacs had little trash cans like that one. I had no idea the idea went back to the 1930s, assuming that was original equipment. Ironically, even though I eat in my cars, I've never used those trash cans, or the add-on ones they used to sell (with the drink holders) for the transmission hump. It's easier to throw out whatever trash I have whenever I get out of the car.
It iis a beautiful automobile!🤩 I'd go with the Caddys both times!😎
Hats off to you for all the great videos you create!
Thank you it means a lot glad you dig the channel =)
I can smell the old leather seats. So many flowing lines and jewelry but still looking heavy and clunky to me. I love this car.
Thanks J.
Thank you so much for watching I respected the backseat and did not get in the rear of the car because the seats looked delicate.. There was so much to see with this car the hood was hard to open and it was really heavy I could not believe how far that engine sits down inside there
there was so much to see with this car the hood was hard to open and it was really heavy I could not believe how far that engine sits down inside there
Glad you dig =)
@@What.its.like.
My pleasure. Thanks.
Packard 😊👍 always Packard.
Cadillac would be a good 2nd 🤷😂..
Great Episode 👏👏
Happy Motoring ✌️🤠
Awesome choices =) glad you dig this episode
That looks like a very well preserved original, but it would benefit from a complete sorting. It also looks like it would probably pass the glovebox test. @@What.its.like.
Yeah it did pass the glove box test for whatever reason that clip got erased
After WW 2, Cadillac knocked the shit out of Packard and Lincoln…
Packard had a well deserved reputation of being better built than Cadillac.
Thank you for the look at the 1938 Cadillac. I have a 1969 that has become a parts car. I also like a lot of the older ones such as the 1956 Fleetwood 60 special, the 1935 model particularly the top of the line. Most all of them are so luxurious. I have also seen some others that you have highlighted such as the 1949 Mercury (stock), and others. I will subscribe.
Welcome to the car community =) glad you dig the channel
So very glad to hear your back Jay.. What great joy you release tp the wprld.
Haven’t gone anywhere where have you been =D
I know a guy who has a 38 Cadillac and the 3 idiot lights are for your headlamps and parking lights one is for normal headlamps, another for high beam, and another for the parking lights. Another great video!
Thank you so much for that for some reason I couldn’t come up with that my head I was like what are those for hahaha
Glad you dig this episode =)
What a nice car with a wonderful patina, Jay. So unusual to see a red car like this back in the 1930's. I'll take the Cadillac and the Lincoln.
What a huge vehicle! Just head shaking that such a massive engine puts out so little power, but for the day, I guess it would be considered high output! Interesting with the dual coils and distributors, almost like they welded two straight 8's together and said "there"... As with other luxury brands of the day, I can't imagine tooling around in this as a daily driver. Talk about a workout! WYR: 1) & 2) Actually, none of them blow me skirt up... LOL Maybe a '38 Pontiac...
The multi-cylinders were more for quiet, smoothness, & torque than power. You needed that to get these big heavy beasts moving. Once they were rollin' you stayed rollin'!
The car was probably a handful, but of course, it was not intended to be owner-driven.
Hi Jay!: What a cool ride that V-16 Caddy is! You would think that with that INTERESTING engine mounted so low in the chassis, that the V-16 might have had pretty good handling for a car of its type in those days! The 1937 is a better looking car in my opinion, but the 1938-40 had that COOL engine!! WYR#1 (Can't believe I'm going to diss that BEAUTIFUL Packard!) 1938 Cadillac V-16. #2 1938 Cadillac again! (That Pierce is SO SWEET though!)
Glad to see you back in Canton! for WYR#1, I'd go with the Packard. Those cathedral hoods always get me. For #2, I'd take the Caddy. the Pierce Arrow and Lincoln are just kinda ugly to me. Pierce Arrow had patented the whole headlights in the fenders in 1914, and the patent expired some 15 years later- though other American companies didn't really start to copy it until around 1938, when P/A went out of business.
Great choices =)
Yeah I went out there last Wednesday I did 3 cars going to go back in January and do a few more
1941 packard 110
And the Holmes are the others I did
Thank you so much for sharing that trivia, that I didn’t know
Im a Cadillac guy through and through, and from birth, but I would only ever stray for one of the 3 Ps. So, the 38 Packard, but Ill stay with the 38 Cadillac coupe.
Hi Jay. One thing you didn't notice was that this Cadillac has a column gearshift, a year before the rest of the industry went that way. On the V16, it will have been developed at the same time as Cadillac's famous flathead V8 (introduced in 1936), which powered lots of WWII military vehicles. Thus I'd expect there to be design similarities and some commonality of parts. This car is ready for a full restoration, which will of course be expensive, but thesedays 3D printing will be able to replicate all the deteriorated plastic parts. Cheers.
Awesome observation thank you so much for pointing that out
Yeah if you had one of these cars and you needed something you would probably have to get it 3-D printed from somewhere
This is a very nice unrestored car...I'd love to see it once somebody gets it and does the job.
For WYR, it's going to be either the Packard or the Cadillac for the first scenario, and the Lincoln for the second (I love the front end).
While I appreciate the 2nd gen 16 for what it was, by this time they have mostly become huge formal cars, and were somethign of a Leviathan - not just proportions but the ultra dignified styling. A bit too 'Godfather' for me. Some have questioned the 2nd gen production decision, why bother with the expense. But yes, they did make an exclamation point against Packard, which, with the Lincoln K, were the only rivals left. I was surpirsed the K actually outsold the 16 in 38, though priced just slightly less. WYR: 1) the Packard 2) the V16
21:23 That Zippo woman seems to be enjoying the effects of the wind just a little too much.
WYR Packard, Pierce, but Linc is tempting
WYR: All of them.
Mallard is part of the A4 Pacific class of locomotives, and those things are FAST.
Yeah I would love to go to England and witness the fast steam trains in person..
@@What.its.like. I'd love to go to the Tallylynn Railway to see some narroe gauge running, and the Bluebell Railway for standard gauge.
Nice video on a super interesting car. This would be so neat to drive and hear run. My favorite year for the Cadillac V16 is the 1932. To me the styling on this 1938 is a bit plain for what the car is. In the WYR I would take the 1939 Packard 12 and the 1938 Pierce Arrow.
Awesome choices glad you dig this video maybe this spring/summer we could find one that is running definitely want to try to do more drives this spring/summer well technically next spring lol
The LeMay collection in Spannaway WA. Has two V-16 Cadillacs, I am not sure of the years but I think they are the first generation.
Sweet thank you so much for sharing that information =)
I think the 1930s were a bad time to look wealthy .
Yeah but this car to me is very understated for what it is.
Yes but rich shaming prolonged the depression People spending money creates jobs
Very true @@timothysotelo3868
@@timothysotelo3868 That and punitive taxation. New 90+% top tax rate caused the deep recession of '38, which was largely why so few later V16s were sold.
@@timothysotelo3868Sadly, it was WW2 that finally pulled us out of the depression. Some say it can never happen again, but I'm not so sure of that one😢.
This made it clearer just how much better Packards of the period were.
In my opinion aside from maybe an auburn cord or Duesenberg there’s nothing better...
Cadillac V16 over all of them
I love it, except for the color! Ferrari’s can be red and maybe a Corvette, but that’s about it‼️
I doubt very much if that is the color that car was originally painted.
I get so tired of people painting every classic car "auction red".
Like the Caddy,but it's a hard choice with the Packard.
1938 LINCOLN 🤔Now I know I like this channel!! You have a Shoppe Dog and didn’t tell us !! What’s cocker spaniels name! 🤔😎🇺🇸
His name is Archie he is a King Charles.. I want to do some more random stuff with my kids maybe my wife my dog Archie is a trip.. he has crazy eyes have to do a random bit with that
Great choice glad you dig the channel =)
2:50 I remain a fan of Harley Earl.
Both Nice ,37,Packard,Series 90
Sweet choices =)
I may be one of the few that just isn’t that impressed by the 38 Cadillac in rather have the Packard and the Lincoln both just look elegant and refined
It’s a very understated car for what it is but I do agree with you I would rather have the Packard or the Lincoln
My grandpa Roland was born that year
The glass partition acted as a windscreen for rear passengers when the top was down.
Still 2000 lbs lighter than the Cybertruck
Haha right =D
Lighter than Rivian and Lucid too.
Those cars are super heavy that’s for sure
Gas was cheap so going downmarket to flat heads probably may not have affected performance too much, bit of a shame though, guess it was because of the depression years.
Packard and the Peirce-Arrow. Just to be different.
The video of '37 versus '38 dashboards is missing.
Yes for to add that
4:46 I think the 1938 grill is _much_ nicer!
Wonder why they went from an OHV design on their earlier V-16, to an inferior flathead design on the later V-16.
Not sure but the flathead produces as much power as the overhead valve Version
14:59 Is that really a hand-throttle (sort of a poor-man's cruise control), or just a choke?
Well, Cadillac did hire Marmon's chief engineer, wh was working on their V16...just saying...
38
38 Caddy
39 Pierce Arrow
38 Cadillac and 38 Lincoln.
Sweet choices =)
If only we have that car again with air conditioning and GPS system with a modern gasoline engine! 😊
1. Packard. 2.. Pierce Arrow.
Groovy choices =)
Packard and Lincoln
Awesome choices I’d choose the same =)
"Careless Whisper" by Wham
Yeah buddy George Michael or wham would both be excepted as artist choices. John Boyd beat you for title.
I'll bet Andrew Ridgeley would not agree with you. @@What.its.like.
I would rather a Packard any day.
38 Lincoln.
Sweet =)
38 Packard
I would take the packard as well and probably the Lincoln
Foreigner --I want to know what love is ?
Great guess it’s not foreigner or that song
hot rod lincoln
I wonder if the 12 cylinder Packard could outrun it
That would be a cool race
I’m going to take the Packard. I was disappointed with this car….it seemed, clunky. Maybe if is was fully restored it would stand out. But as is….not impressed.
Careless Whisper? Wham?
I li
Messy interior.
😭😭😭 I just want to cry how cars are so fkn ugly. 1940ies cars were art. I see only vomit and trash on the streets these days
I’m right there with you not just that are cheaply made and cost a premium all in the name of safety
I like the content but please stop trying to sound like an AM radio DJ!
I’m not trying to sound like anything
Me too!
Cadillac V16 over all of them
Sweet choices =)