2022 Cadillac CT4-V Blackwing Review

Maybe Bigfoot is real.

Something almost as unusual has just been sighted: A Cadillac sedan with a manual transmission plus 472 horsepower–through the rear wheels only.

If that can exist, then Bigfoot just might.

What It Is

The CT4 is Cadillac’s compact-sized, entry-level sport sedan. It usually comes with a turbocharged four-cylinder engine and an automatic transmission.

The CT4-V Blackwing comes with a V6 and two turbochargers.

The automatic is optional.

This one stickers for $58,995 vs. $33,395 for the regular CT4 with the four and without the six-speed manual. If you’d prefer the automatic, it’s available for $2,000 more.

The CT4-V Blackwing is also not available with all-wheel drive. It is exclusively rear-drive.

That plus the third pedal makes it as uncommon as Bigfoot–only this one’s for real.

What’s New

The Blackwing trim and the manual and twin-turbo V6 that define it are new for 2022.

What’s Good

  • The standard manual sets this apart from automatic-equipped rivals such as the BMW M3 (a manual is available, at extra cost) and automatic-only competitors like the Mercedes-Benz CLA AMG45.
  • It is reasonably priced given the price of the competition.
  • Something different is hard to put a price on.

What’s Not So Good

  • If you want to shift for yourself, it will still cost you almost $60k.
  • Absurdly small (10.7 cubic foot) trunk.
  • Tight back seat with 33.4 inches of legroom.

Under The Hood

GM uses the 3.6-liter V6 that is the beating heart of the CT4-V Blackwing in many GM models, ranging from the Chevy Camaro to the Buick Enclave. But it beats a lot faster in this Cadillac, courtesy of a pair of turbos and various other upgrades that boost the power to 472 horses and 445 ft.-lbs. of torque.

This makes it even more powerful than several current high-performance V8s, including the 460 horsepower 5.0-liter V8 in the Mustang GT and the 470 horsepower 6.4-liter V8 used in the just-launched Jeep Wrangler 392 I test drove last week.

No surprise–the Blackwing is extremely quick and can get to 60 in 3.8 seconds. GM says the top speed (not electronically limited, as in many rivals) is 189 MPH.

The surprise is that getting there is more up to you.

Unless you opt for the available ten-speed automatic, you will have to release the clutch while bringing up the revs and then engage and release the clutch yourself. The six-speed Tremec manual requires you to do the shifting and the clutching.

This used to be a given thing in a high-performance car, two doors or four. In part because it was the expected thing.

If you didn’t know how to shift, the thinking went, you probably didn’t have what it took to drive a high-performance car. It is why historically, the highest-performance cars were often manual-only. It kept the people who probably shouldn’t try to drive such cars out of trouble.

But automatics have largely replaced manuals even in high-performance cars for three main reasons.

One: they can be programmed to shift faster, more accurately, and more consistently than a human driver can consistently shift a manual; the result is consistently (but not always) better performance in terms of the numbers. And car companies love to tout numbers. Zero to 60, quarter-mile; through a road course.

Two: the automatic can also be programmed to maximize the car’s gas mileage on the government tests that determine whether a vehicle achieves the average MPG number decreed as par by the government. Falling short of that number defines the car as a “gas guzzler.” The government will then incur fines onto the automaker that is then passed on to the buyer in the form of a higher price for that car and all the other vehicles made by that company. The fines are based on fleet averages.

Three: automatic-equipped high-performance cars are easier to drive, and that makes it easier to sell more high-performance cars, especially to people who either never learned to drive a manual or don’t like them. This, in turn, makes more money for the car company trying to sell the high-performance car to more people.

And that, ultimately, is what it’s all about.

But Cadillac decided to give people a choice and even more laudable, to make the manual-equipped Blackwing lower cost–two grand less, which is no small thing, even at just under $60k.

It’s six months of free gas, at any rate.

A final interesting thing about this high-performance car is that it is not all-wheel-drive or even available with it. All of its rivals are sold only with AWD, which provides the objective benefit of greater controllability at the cost of zero tail hanging out, rear-tires-roasting fun.

It also helps keep the car’s price under $60k, though barely.

On The Road

This Caddy does zig. Remember the commercial?

That was back in the late ’90s when Cadillac was rebooting itself as an American alternative to BMW, with sporty sedans like the Catera that were available with (you guessed it) a manual transmission.

But the Catera never zigged as this Caddy can.

427 horses through two wheels, the rear wheels, is just the ticket for sideways running, whenever you like. Just turn off the stability control and put your right foot to the floor–instant asphalt abuse. Your left foot will be busy with the clutch, while your right hand manages the gears. This involves you in the action much more so than the usual put it in Drive and floor it, which almost anyone can do.

It also closes any significant gap between a high-performance IC car and a high-performance electric car. In both, there’s plenty of performance but not much to do.

In this car, you’ve got some fun things to do. The car doesn’t launch–you launch the car. Watch the light. Bring up the revs and, just at the right moment, let up the clutch, just so, modulating throttle as you do to keep it all hooked up, or at least somewhat. Then grab the next gear, left and right foot, in alternating syncopation.

Obviously, it takes a bit more skill to do this well, which makes it more satisfying. And it’s fun when done well–an intangible increasingly absent from even very high-performance cars, which have not nearly enough personality to go with their power.

This one has an abundance of both.

The V6 is not a V8, but you’d be hard-pressed to tell it from what happens when you punch it. Or even press it lightly. V8s were once regarded as the crown jewel of a true high-performance car–not so much because of their high power but because of their tremendous, effortless low-end torque.

It is also why Cadillac was once defined by its huge V8s, which made even 4,500-pound Eldorados and Fleetwoods feel fleet.

This used to take displacement liters and cubic inches. Cadillac had the biggest V8s GM ever made, some of them displacing 500 cubic inches or more than 8 liters.

A fairly small V6 like the one in this Caddy can make as much or more torque than those old torque monster V8s via boost. The turbos breathe heavy, summoning 445 ft.-lbs. out of just 3.6-liters, an achievement right up there with catching a Bigfoot and bringing him into town for everyone to see.

Only this is for real.

At The Curb

This is a small car.

That’s also a historically unusual thing for Cadillac, which was once the brand known above all for its big cars. This car, 187.6 inches long overall, would just about fit in the trunk of a ’74 Fleetwood Brougham d’ Elegance.

That means there is only so much room to work with inside this car. Since the driver (and front seat passenger) need plenty of space, it becomes unavoidable that the backseat passengers have much less room.

So there’s 42.4 inches of legroom up front but just 33.4 inches behind. The trunk has barely any room at all at 10.7 cubic feet.

These stats explain why sedans, especially small ones, are becoming almost as rare as Bigfoot in favor of crossovers. By dint of their layout, they can easily provide three times more space inside while having about the same footprint outside as a small sedan. The reason for–the passenger compartment and cargo compartment aren’t separated. The hatchback opens up to the rear seat area, and the seats can be folded down to make one area making for a lot of usable space.

A sedan’s trunk is walled off from the rest of the car’s interior; a pass through can help but with a lid rather than a liftgate, there’s still only so much you can fit.

This sedan, though, has one thing almost no crossovers still have–the third pedal, and that makes up for a lot.

Visually, it’s not an arresting car. The overall shape is a generic modern sedan, with the only clues that it’s a Cadillac sedan: the vertical-stacked/slit-style head and brake lights. There is also some carbon fiber, a set of air vents in the front fenders, but neither of those touches is uncommon.

The only obvious clue that it might get you arrested is the ducktail wing on the trunk, which could keep you out of trouble (with physics) at the near 200 MPH speeds this car can attain.

Otherwise, it can pass for nothing out-of-the-ordinary, which is a plus, given that it isn’t.

The Rest

A fun feature that comes with the deal is a built-in camera system that records your performance to view it later. Not merely your numbers, how fast to 60 and such, but actually video records you going through the curves, almost like ESPN. This way, you can share your memories of your day at the track visually.

Also part of the deal is an enlarged (over the standard CT4’s) digital dash display and a phenomenal 14-speaker ultra-premium audio system.

It also sports huge, very high-performance brakes, GM’s Magnetic Ride Control suspension system, tuned for high-performance dynamics, heavy-duty cooling systems (including for the differential, which is cast of aluminum to shed heat further as well as reduce weight), and a set of sticky Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tires developed specifically for the Blackwing.

Inside, there’s a set of firm but very comfortable (because 18-way adjustable) sport seats with massaging lumbar function. Plus more carbon fiber and contrast-color stitching.

The Bottom Line

Bigfoot may be real. This Caddy is for real.

Eric Peters lives in Virginia and enjoys driving cars and motorcycles. In the past, Eric worked as a car journalist for many prominent mainstream media outlets. Currently, he focuses his time writing auto history books, reviewing cars, and blogging about cars+ for his website EricPetersAutos.com.

Editor’s Note: The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author.

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