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The AMC AMX/3 Supercar Was Too Advanced For The '70s
The 1960s were a wild time for Detroit. Automakers were locked in a horsepower arms race, throwing ever-bigger V8s into muscle cars and designing showroom specials to attract buyers. But behind it all ...
Buying a '60s muscle car is easy, right? You just set your search filters on one of the big auction or secondhand car sites to Ford, Pontiac, Chevy, or Dodge, and job done. These big players tended to ...
Built from 1968 to 1970, the AMC AMX is an oddball muscle car due to its two-seat layout. It wasn't very popular either, selling 19,134 units over three model years. This figure isn't low enough to ...
Confusingly, the ad for today's Nice Price or No Dice AMX describes its condition as "excellent" despite the car lacking much of its interior trim, and, on the outside, some of its paint. Let's decide ...
AMC offered high-performance cars as early as 1957 (the four-door Rambler Rebel came with nearly 300 horsepower on tap), but the company didn't join the muscle car market until 1968. That's when the ...
AMC was originally going to include electronic fuel injection on a selection of its models from 1957, but design flaws led to ...
Historians may have consigned Pontiac and American Motors Corporation (AMC) to the history books, but fans of both car brands are keeping the spirit alive and putting the classics through their paces ...
Brian is a published author who has been writing professionally for a decade in politics and entertainment, but found his calling covering the automotive industry. His love of cars started at an early ...
For muscle car collectors, acquiring a 1970 Chevrolet Chevelle SS 454 LS6 ranks among the ultimate discoveries—comparable to unearthing the Ark of the Covenant—while a 1971 Plymouth Hemi 'Cuda ...
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