American Motors Corp. was formed in 1954 by the merger of Rambler, Nash and Hudson. By the 1960s Nash and Hudson were gone, and to most American buyers Rambler meant dowdy, compact cars. In the ...
Chad has been a muscle car and classic truck lover since he could walk. The classic vehicles from the '60s and '70s are the best in his eyes, but he is more than willing to give the new technology a ...
There are many cars from the 1950s to 1980s that still mean a lot for the car collectors of today, and some of them for the wider public as well. We've got things like the muscle and/or pony Camaros ...
Joe Parker is a nationally award-winning journalist and columnist from the Atlanta area. He has served as an automotive journalist for the past four years alongside extensive sports, business, ...
View post: 1965 Ford Mustang For Sale In Classic Blue With Dual Racing Stripes. Among the rarest of the American muscle cars that went racing in the early Seventies — cars including the Camaro Z/28 ...
For those who want something a little different from the usual Detroit Three muscle-car fare, this 1970 AMC Javelin SST Trans Am Edition will be part of an upcoming Mecum auction in Dallas, scheduled ...
Carlisle Auctions is set to showcase a well-preserved piece of American Motors history when a 1969 AMC Javelin goes under the hammer as Lot 150. This example shows just 35,000 original miles and ...
In 1971, Mark Donahue dominated the SCCA Trans-Am competition with a race-built AMC Javelin AMX, a Roger Penske-sponsored car that was the last competitive gasp of American Motors. Two years ago, that ...
"Stuff's gonna break, stuff's gonna happen; these things require maintenance. That's just typical of these kinds of cars," says Tom Lodge as we talk on the phone. He has just listed off the repairs he ...
Found in the Canepa Collection is this 1971 AMC Javelin Trans-Am champion. It’s said to be the only car built by Roger Penske Racing in 1971, and the last car driven by Mark Donahue before he retired ...
IF YOU WERE THE FACTORY RACE team for a company named American Motors, how would you paint your race cars? In all-American red, white and blue, of course. And if you were a company named American ...