Try instead
displayAllCars :: [Car] -> IO ()
displayAllCars = mapM_ (putStrLn . show)
naturally this generalizes to something like
putStrLnAll :: Show a => [a] -> IO ()
putStrLnAll = mapM_ (putStrLn . show)
I think this does what you desire. Your code is pretty much indecipherable because the names of the functions don't match what they actually do.
An example of iterating over the Cars:
iter [] = ?
iter x@(v1, v2, v3, v4):xs = do stuff with x (the car) and its values v1, v2, v3, v4 then call iter xs.
To fold them all into a string, you probably want something like (assuming displayCar :: Car -> String
exists). I'm again avoiding explicit recursion here in favor of using an auxiliary function.
displayAllCars = foldl' (\acc val -> acc ++ "\n" ++ val) []
However, we could use recursion: (The usual warning applies here as with any non-tail-optimized recursion function. You will get a stack overflow if the list is large. Use the foldl' version in production code. Alternatively foldr is the best if a backwards list is acceptable.
displayAllCars [] = []
displayAllCars c:cs = displayCar c ++ "\n" ++ displayCar cs