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 really talk about this 6.6-liter V8, four-speed tribute 1974 AMC Gremlin 401-XR without talking about the original, and we can’t talk about the original without talking about the basic compact ...
Throughout the late 1960S and early ‘70s, American Motors Corp.--the Rocky Balboa of American automakers--released a surprising variety of high-performance models, all in an unsuccessful effort to win ...
Want sick power from a basically stock engine? Try a 401. Using factoryheads on the portly 4.170-inch bore, you can build torque where itcounts and still make good power on top with a reasonable cam, ...
The AMC AMX was smaller, faster, and arguably bolder than its rivals, yet it never got the recognition it truly deserved. That’s finally changing.
In 1971, the state of Alabama had two issues to solve: the officials had to buy new cars for the state troopers, and they didn’t have heaps of money to make ends meet. Since the Big Three offers were ...
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