AMC, or American Motors Corporation, may not have ever elevated itself to the level of the United States' "Big Three" automakers. However, it still made several legendary AMC muscle cars and built ...
American Motors Corporation, also known as AMC, began life in 1954 after a merger between automakers Nash-Kevlinator and Hudson Motors. It lasted until 1987 when it was purchased by Chrysler. During ...
The AMC Gremlin X 304 sits at the crossroads of quirky design and genuine muscle, a short-wheelbase subcompact hiding a V8 that belonged in something much larger. Collectors have finally caught up to ...
This video highlights the 1972 AMC Gremlin X 304, a compact muscle car that proves size isn’t everything. Freshly restored and finished in standout Wild Plum, it combines lightweight design with V8 ...
Learn about Jeep V-8 engines from the AMC 304 of the past to today’s 392 Hemi.
AMC never built cars for the faint of heart. Whether you called it weird, bold, or ahead of its time, the Gremlin was a shot across the bow of Detroit's subcompact scene. And in 1973, the Gremlin X ...
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 ...
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.
On April 1, 1970, American Motors Corporation introduced the AMC Gremlin, arguably the first American subcompact car on the market. While it was homely to look at and derpy to love, it sold nearly ...