The AMC Javelin SST 401 has quietly shifted from quirky outlier to serious contender in the classic muscle market, driven by a mix of rarity, racing heritage, and usable performance. Collectors who ...
Back in the heyday of big-blocks and Tang, one American automotive brand stood outside the norm—American Motors Corporation, or AMC. Created out of what was at the time the largest corporate merger in ...
Matt Nelson is an automotive journalist with nearly a decade of experience in all things cars. He's spent years working at dealerships in sales, finance, and service. He's since traded in his pens and ...
American Motors Corporation, better known as AMC, was one of the true underdogs of the American car industry in the 1960s and 1970s. The company, formed in 1954 after a merger between Nash-Kelvinator ...
This AMC muscle car only appeared in small numbers, but today it has a bigger story to tell.
AMC (American Motors Corporation) was formed in 1954 by the merger of the Nash-Kelvinator Corporation and the Hudson Motor Car Company. It survived until being bought by Chrysler in 1987, mostly for ...
Though overshadowed by Detroit's Big Three, the AMC left its mark on the original muscle car era with some iconic tire-shredders. Follow us: In 1954, the Hudson Motor Car Company joined forces with ...
Underrated AMC cars include the 1970 AMX/3, 1971 Hornet SC/360, 1972 to 1974 Gremlin Randall 401XR, 1965 to 1967 Rambler Marlin, and 1971 Javelin AMX 401.