This is the redhead step child of Cadillac. It was designed by Opel (a german company). Manufactured by Saab (a french company). GM pushes the car onto Chevy in South America and Cadillac in North America.
These cars are miles different then what a Cadillac technician sees in a day. Keep in mind that alot of technicians that where around during their release never even got trained how to work on them. A new technician probably has never heard them talked about in depth.
You might want to call your local Saab dealer, explain what you have been through so far and they might take it in. They have many cars with similar systems, engines....etc...if anyone can help you they will probably be it. My local dealership actually sent my Catera over to the next city. There is a Saab/Cadillac dealership over there and they have one guy who works on Saabs and any Cateras that come through.
I would suggest that next time you by a car find a forum site like this one regardless of the make or model and find out some insider information. Owners that work on their cars can at least give you a list of problems and what to look out for in regards to specifics. The first thing that would have came up with a Catera was a trip to the local dealership and pulling repair information to see if the timing belt had been done. (example)
I sorry about what you are going through. It seems that so many people jumped on this car as their first nice car, a Cadillac. They ended up with a bad taste in their mouth by the end of it.
These cars are miles different then what a Cadillac technician sees in a day. Keep in mind that alot of technicians that where around during their release never even got trained how to work on them. A new technician probably has never heard them talked about in depth.
You might want to call your local Saab dealer, explain what you have been through so far and they might take it in. They have many cars with similar systems, engines....etc...if anyone can help you they will probably be it. My local dealership actually sent my Catera over to the next city. There is a Saab/Cadillac dealership over there and they have one guy who works on Saabs and any Cateras that come through.
I would suggest that next time you by a car find a forum site like this one regardless of the make or model and find out some insider information. Owners that work on their cars can at least give you a list of problems and what to look out for in regards to specifics. The first thing that would have came up with a Catera was a trip to the local dealership and pulling repair information to see if the timing belt had been done. (example)
I sorry about what you are going through. It seems that so many people jumped on this car as their first nice car, a Cadillac. They ended up with a bad taste in their mouth by the end of it.