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AMC was home to many legendary nameplates, from the Rambler to the Eagle. A new book tells its intriguing story.
Many of AMC's muscle cars have gone largely ignored by collectors and enthusiasts, but that doesn't mean they're not worth a nod.
What's the definition of a good car? Sales figures, easy maintenance, or modding ability? The AMC Gremlin, mocked by many over the decades, had all of them.
The AMC AMX, built from 1968 through 1970, was one of the only two-seat sports cars made in the U.S. when introduced.
During the 1970 model year, which saw the introduction of some of the most epic muscle cars ever built, AMC managed to sell 2,326 Machines.
AMC didn't sell that many Matador Go-Machines, and few of them survived to this day. Therefore, the model is one of the rarest classic muscle cars out there.
“The car I learned to drive on and that started my infatuation with AMC vehicles was my mother’s 1974 Firecracker Red Hornet X,” says Roscoe native Bud Brick.
American Motors Corporation, or AMC for short, was a company that made automobiles between 1954 and 1988, and it's unusual to find an enthusiast who collects AMC cars because these cars are ...
Noteworthy Tar Heel Traveler: AMC cars in Pikeville For years, a rusted graveyard of Gremlins and Pacers has been rusting and rotting away at Collier Motors in Pikeville.
Manny Athans in his 1973 AMC Gremlin X, a car often called one of the weirdest of the 1970s.
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