A Diesel Cadillac? It’s Not as Strange As It Sounds When It’s the 2021 Escalade

Oil-burning power under a Caddy’s hood provides some pleasing benefits.

cadillac escalade dieselWill Sabel Courtney

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Cadillac hasn’t had much history with diesel-powered vehicles, and the little history the brand has had with oil-burning engines has been rather ignominious. During the Malaise Era, General Motors sought refuge from fuel crisis-inspired shocks in diesel powertrains that found their way into Cadillacs for a hot moment, but those asthmatic, overly complicated motors were, for lack of a better term, pathetic; their horsepower figures barely broke into triple digits, and they broke so often, GM was slapped with a class-action lawsuit over the cost of replacing the motors.

Luckily for Cadillac, most of the people who remember driving cars with those engines aren’t looking at buying Escalades in 2021. Even more luckily, diesel powerplants in general and GM’s powertrain development has come a loooooong way since the 1980s. For the first time in years, GM has seen fit to plop an oil-burning powertrain in its non-heavy duty pickups and SUVs — and Cadillac’s biggest vehicle is no exception.

So how well do diesel power and Caddy’s giant flagship mesh? We took one out for a day to find out.

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