This 1956 Cadillac Eldorado barn find had a serious glow-up
It sat in a garage under a tarp for 20 years
However, the car beneath the grime will make you gasp
If watching barn finds being washed for the first time in decades is your ASMR, you won’t want to miss this 1956 Cadillac Eldorado getting a serious glow-up.
After sitting in squalor for 20 years, some serious dirt had accumulated – taking the car from its original shade to a dirty brown.
And the color it returns to is simply stunning.
How did the 1956 Cadillac Eldorado get there?
Carchaeology
Carchaeology
A find from the Carchaeology team of content creators including Randy Carlson, they focus on ‘automotive mayhem and adventure’.
They cover classic cars and historical vehicles and, as in this case, barn finds.
Part of their ‘Massive California Car Hoard’ the 1956 Cadillac Eldorado Convertible came with a story as rich as the layer of dirt covering it.
Not unlike this WW2 veteran’s 1946 Cadillac – and his reaction to his son fixing it up will warm your cold heart.
20 years ago the owner’s father was approached in a restaurant by a stranger with a Cadillac.
Carchaeology
Carchaeology
Carchaeology
The two-door convertible 1956 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz was likely to be one of the first to drive off the production line.
He jumped at the chance to take the almost 50-year-old Cadillac back to his garage – where it sat covered for another two decades.
How did they restore it?
However, the tarp didn’t keep the dirt away and almost stuck to the body of the car.
With the driver’s window open the light-blue-leather interior of the second-generation Eldorado sustained some damage with some components from the engine bay removed and placed in the passenger seat.
Carchaeology
Carchaeology
Carchaeology
However, surprisingly the V8 engine, mated to the Hydra-matic transmission, is still running.
After pushing the 2,268 kg (5,000 lb) convertible out of the garage it’s clear that the brakes and brake lights of the Eldorado Biarritz work, too.
When they discover the button to open the trunk in the glove box, they find tires, body components, and the front registration plate inside.
If Cadillac surprises are your thing, you might like to read about the man who bought Snoop Dogg’s abandoned Cadillac and found something unexpected inside.
In other news of famous Cadillac owners, this 1963 Cadillac supposedly owned by Elvis was discovered in a scrapyard and was fired up for the first time in years.
Carchaeology
The Carchaeology team plans to fully restore and resell the classic car.
Per classic.com, the average price can reach an impressive $400,000.
Back in 1956, the 1956 Cadillac Eldorado originally entered the market from $5,738 – equivalent to $65,000 today.
6,050 units were sold.