The AMC AMX was smaller, faster, and arguably bolder than its rivals, yet it never got the recognition it truly deserved.
Though overshadowed by Detroit's Big Three, the AMC left its mark on the original muscle car era with some iconic tire-shredders. In 1954, the Hudson Motor Car Company joined forces with the ...
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Do “Cheap” AMC Cars Still Exist? Kind of…
When my co-producers and I first announced that we were making a documentary about the history of American Motors Corporation, a few of our fellow AMC enthusiasts voiced a surprising complaint: Once ...
Today, hot hatches and muscle cars are two fundamentally different types of vehicles. However, back in the early 1970s, an AMC dealership created a model that could wear both hats with flying colors.
I can’t be the only enthusiast out there that’s kinda… blasé about car museums. Most of them are just a tax-dodge for a bunch of the same old muscle cars and hot rods. When you’ve seen one 1970 Dodge ...
American Motors Corporation was an absolute mess by the mid-1980s, and its financial problems in the U.S. market were compounded by infighting at its European corporate parent, Renault, where ...
The 1960s and ‘70s were the golden era for muscle cars, an iconic breed of automobiles designed for raw power and speed, as well as their classic look. Born from the competition between American ...
Between the gas crisis and the slow steady slip in quality and ingenuity from the Big Three, the 1970s seems like a wasteland when looking for good cars. Big, flimsy boats piloted around town to the ...
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