The Cadillac Series 90 for 1938 was essentially a Series 75 with a V-16 engine. Even though the wheelbase was
thirteen inches shorter, the bodies were equal or larger in all dimensions than previous Cadillac V-16's. This was
accomplished by fitting the nearly flat engine low in the frame and partially behind the line of the firewall.
V-16's were distinguished from the counterpart V-8's by a coarser pitch eggcrate grille, fender lamps, and
streamlined louvers on the hood side panels and all fender skirts.
The new V-16 engine was of L-head, short stroke square design, cast-en-bloc, with 135 degree Vee. With each
block in running balance, the engine was basically a twin-eight. Dual accessories included carburetors, oil bath
air cleaners, manifolds, distributors, coils, fuel pumps, and water pumps. The fuel pumps were interconnected so
that either one could supply both carburetors if needed. Only the left hand distributor contained breaker arms; the
two arms being electrically independent but operated by a single eight-lobe cam. The right hand unit acted only
to distribute the high tension voltage to the spark plugs in the right bank. A cross pipe connected both exhaust
manifolds and fed into a single down-pipe at the left. The generator was placed low in the Vee and was driven
by an internal rubber ring in the fan hub acting on a driven wheel on the generator shaft. This arrangement
allowed for fan speeds less than engine speed and generator speeds nearly twice engine speed - it lasted only one
year.