Oh boy. You can tell he's pretty into this car.
After the video I added my 2 cents:
And this guy gives some decent advice, as well:Couple things.
1. No variable valve timing until the heavily redesigned LH2 for the 2004 SRX and 2005 STS. This engine is solid.
2. I have heard the green coolant Northstar does not have nearly the prevalence of head gasket issues as the 96-99 years.
3. I do not buy that reliability of the Northstar was the big Cadillac issue. People have purchased much more expensive and still unreliable German cars all through this period. Reliability is not the smoking gun.
Also please do a thorough service of the cooling system soon.
So that overflow tank thing....the theory goes that more than a few of these cars have gone to the junkyard over this issue and not actual head gasket failure. They definitely DID have a problem but over heating symptoms are not always caused by head gasket failure.-New stat to control the temp, to prevent softening of the heat-bolt aluminum threads.
-New overflow tank since the metal ring where the radiator cap gasket contacts it, will crack and leak coolant, lowering pressure, causing boiling in the motor, and excess heating.
-Replace the flimsy little belt running the water pump.
-Replace the water pump, since they croak around 120k.
-Pray, pray, pray.
We owned a few of that era SLS and sevilles, overall very comfy and powerful, but lessons learned made the subsequent one last longer.
Best seats in the business.
But yeah back to my #3. The theory of "people bought them, they were garbage, so people stopped buying them" is waay too simplistic and also only works in a vacuum. Now, perhaps the expensive German competition of the time didn't have this particular head gasket issue but certainly they were plenty expensive to keep on the road post-warranty. Probably more so than any Seville was. And yet people continued to buy those. So reliability cannot be the major, or at least not the only, driver for this kind of thing. I look at Lexus as successful because they were significantly more reliable, and initially, a lot cheaper, than the Germans. Let's say Cadillac was cheaper but not more reliable. Unless you already desire that brand, buyers will not look past any flaws to own the vehicle. Frankly Cadillac was seeing sales declines since the 1970s. The 80s didn't help but I think the 90s was actually a turnaround, not a decline. I think the 80s did far more damage to the brand than the NorthStar did. They had multiple engine lines with major issues in the 80s. It was really bad. The Northstar, unlike those, is actually a good engine for that one flaw (citation: The Car Wizard). The 80s crap was bad kind of all around. Didn't even make any power. They were miserable brand new. And despite all of this, I think a buyer would have had a better experience with a 90s Cadillac than an 80s one. This isn't too hard to imagine - any buyer probably had a better average experience with ANY 90s car than a typical 80s one. Those were just the times.
We'd have to look at it more in depth but I do not accept any thoughts along the lines of "the NorthStar is why Cadillac has a bad reputation." Many of them got fixed - they were only throwaway cars when they hit 15-20 years old. Not back in the 90s when the reputation supposedly was sullied. And can we honestly say someone's 1999 Cadillac suffering a head gasket failure in 2016 is of any real relevance to new car buyers? I'll answer: it is not.