2026 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the 1976 Cadillac Eldorado convertible, what was at the time, supposedly, the last factory convertible sold in this country. Someone must have really missed the good old days of Eldorado convertibles because on top of this 1998 Cadillac Eldorado's $42,000 window sticker, the original owner forked over an additional $25,000 to get this literally converted to a convertible.
Problem with convertibles whether they're factory or not, they don't all look good top up, top down. or both. This conversion here actually doesn't look half-bad top up or down. Also means it doesn't look half good. At the end of the day, how a convertible looks is what it's all about because the experience of driving topless is not all it would appear to be cracked up to be.
You'd think it would be. I mean, what wouldn't there be to love? Top down, the wind in your hair, you and perhaps your passenger or passengers becoming one with mother nature's song. Doesn't that sound lovely? It does. Then reality sets in. Trust me, I currently own two-convertibles, which is ironic since I'm not a convertible girl per se, so I know a thing or ten about convertible motoring.
First off, if you live up here on the cusp of the North Pole, "convertible season" is incredibly short; shorter than "pool season" which is, on paper, Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day weekend but more like the Fourth of July through Labor Day. You drop the top on any day outside of that window and the wind chill will have you pulling over the first chance you get to put the top back up. My wife and I both have hoodies stashed in our 1991 Corvette convertible "just in case". Perfect weather can feel less so once the wind hits you.
In the height of summer, even up here, with the top down, the sun will broil you. We drove with the top down on an anniversary weekend trip to Toronto several years ago in my wife's 2004 Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder GTS and I got sun sick so bad I nearly threw up at the border. The poutine didn't help either.
On the open road, though, when the weather is perfect, even at night, driving a convertible can be a clandestine experience. Again, problem up here is those moments are few and far between. Also, most convertibles with fabric tops like ours both have and this car has, are much noisier inside than their comparable fixed roof versions. Head room is also compromised with the top up.
The biggest problem with this car, though, is not its after-market chopped top - it's the fact it's powered by Cadillac's infamous "Northstar" V-8 engine. Especially one with 95,000-miles on it and the seller asking $14,000 for it. The "low refrigerant" light is on too. Bruh, seriously? The problems with these engines are well documented which is a shame since when they're not eating their head gaskets, they're wonderfully smooth and powerful. Until they're not. The fix is expensive and I've yet to see anyone swap in a different engine into these cars and have everything work right.
Sadly, someone who doesn't know about the Cadillac Northstar will buy this and hopefully they won't soon be sorry.
My friend sheepishly tells the story of his Mercedes-Benz conversion because he felt it was a waste of money and wished he hadn't done it. He said the conversion looked clumsy and awkward and diminished the structural integrity of the car. He took a bath on it when he traded it in on his, ahem, 1997 Mercedes-Benz SL 500. Details are few and far between with regards to this conversion which, when it's all said and done, doesn't look half-bad. In fairness, it doesn't look half good either.
That's the thing with convertible conversions whether factory or after market - not all cars look good with their roof chopped off and replaced with a canvas one not to mention they all have the wiggles. On 1992 to 2002 Cadillac Eldorado's, which happen to be a favorite of mine, I'd prefer it with the roof it was born with.
If General Motors had intended this car to be a convertible, it would have designed it as such. Judging by this boot cover, which resembles the one on my 1991 Corvette convertible, seems for twenty-five grand, the person who had this done spent all that money for a manual operating top. Then again, fourth-generation Corvette convertibles were all manuals and buyers paid a stiff premium to put their tops up and down by hand. Personally, that's one of the many things I love about my car, but I didn't buy it brand new. I don't know what my friend's Mercedes had, power or manual.
Funny how folks who have money or appeared to have money, have regrets about what they spent it on as they get older. Whether they have it or not, people do crazy things with their money. How many people do you know that you'd think were loaded are actually destitute? Frankly, I know a number of them. Families in big expensive homes with two if not three luxury cars in the garage who are actually struggling.
This ain't rocket science, people. Act your wage.
Asking price on this low-mileage oldie is $14,000, all things considered, we are talking early "Northstar" here, seems like a lot of money to the enlightened buyer. there's no price that would have me seriously considering it.