AMC has to be the most underrated and underappreciated car company.
@j.kevvideoproductions.64632 жыл бұрын
My Dad was an AMC "Rambler" guy. I can remember our little Red '60 Wagon with a white top. Then Dad bought a slightly used (dealer Demo) '65 Ambassador 880 4 door sedan in late 1965. We went on a lot of vacations in that car from Colorado to Connecticut, to Los Angeles, and multiple trips to Ohio and Arkansas to visit relatives. It never let us down. In the mid 70's I learned to drive on that car with it's 3 speed column shift. Last Friday I purchased a '65 Ambassador 990 (kind of as a tribute to my parents). It's only got 80,000 miles on it, and minimal rust (less than my 2000 Chevy Pickup). I had the car out at the end of my driveway to take some photo's for insurance purposes. Someone walking by stopped and asked me if it was a Lincoln! Lol.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
80k miles on a '65? That's fantastic! Hope you love the car!!
@johnh25142 жыл бұрын
Thanks for another great trip down memory lane. AMC was a case study of a company that did more with less. Very telling when most AMC engineers were retained when their Chrysler counterparts were pink-slipped.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@meskes40592 жыл бұрын
Yep, AMC was a great company with horrible management… After Romney left.
@jamesbarrett6332 жыл бұрын
I 20
@HowardJrFord2 жыл бұрын
Most of Chrysler's well known engineers had started retiring by the late 70's and early eighties . Many of the engines that were used by Chrysler in the 90's were AMC designs , like the 2.7 V6 , and 3.7 and 4.7 V6 and V8's used in the trucks , and all of those engines were pure garbage . The LH cars were based on a Renault design , and they were pretty fragile , they had a lot of suspension problems among other things .
@Al-thecarhistorian2 жыл бұрын
I've been a big supporter of AMC since the early 1970's. Been fortunate to have owned several and participated in a number of AMC clubs and shows. You have done a really superlative job with the history of AMC. There have only been a handful of people documenting AMC that get it right. You, sir, are one of them. I am VERY impressed. AMC was much better during their 33 year life span than they were given credit for at the time. Most (even my father) made fun of their cars. But consider what they gave us: unit body construction, filtered ventilation, self contained air conditioning, seat belts, dual master cylinder braking as well as the way they developed, designed and built cars. Thank you for the video. Keep them coming.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words!
@Romiman12 жыл бұрын
For me as a German, the Gremlin and much more the Pacer are absolut masterpieces of design. Gremlins c-pillar shape you find on many many cars of today and of the last 2 decades. And the Pacer still looks kind of futuristic. And I very miss that idea, to have a compact car with the (front) space, ride, convenience and luxury of a big car. (Today you only can choose between harsh sportiness and truck... :-( )
@duanebolen5432 жыл бұрын
I had a AMC hornet fastback and I had a couple Gremlins and I think the Gremlins were the best there was and also had an AMC eagle 4 wheel drive and I thought they were of well-built
@johnerwin90242 жыл бұрын
Dad, car business, had a AMC Pacer he was selling, loved the room, riding in a bubble, but didn't have good horse power-
@wetoolow87502 жыл бұрын
In Mexico I remember a mechanic once asking me: Do you know why the Pacer has so many windows? His answer: So that everyone can see the idiot who bought it.
@RagShop12 жыл бұрын
You nailed it! Gremlin and Pacer were unfairly branded as ugly but were actually a bit ahead of their time, even if their designs were a bit compromised by the company's often poor finances. Gremlin may have been the most comfortable subcompact at that time for its driver and front passenger. And the Pacer's width and heft made it a stable cornering car. The huge glass areas on all sides elevated visibility above all else then on the market. I had both of those cars and an AMC-Renault Encore, which was a pleasant, if uninspiring car.
@RagShop12 жыл бұрын
@@johnerwin9024 Yes, it was too heavy for the 232 and 258 CID 6 cylinders. A base Pacer weighed just about 3000 lbs. and a Pacer X could top 3400 lbs. A V8 was added later but fuel economy in all wasn't good. My '75 base model with a 258 CID Six and automatic got only 17 MPG overall and only 21 MPG on a long highway trip.
@richdiscoveries Жыл бұрын
My grandfather was an AMC man. Before I was born he was a rambler man, but in the 1980s once I was around he had a gremlin, which I still have the little Gremlin emblems from. Then he had a Pacer in the late 80s, then in the early nineties he bought a beautiful golden brown Eagle wagon with the fake wood paneling on the side. It ate a valve in the late 90s and handed up junking it. Looking back I wish I took that damn thing. The body was in excellent condition even though it was a Northeast car. Now these damn things have a following, I really wish I took it
@richardjohnson28842 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the walk down memory lane. I grew in the Grand Rapids, MI area and my dad was both a Kelvinator and AMC fan. Family had Kelvinator appliances and a Kelvinator plant was beside our HS football field. Before I was born my family had an early 1960s Rambler. We then had a 1967 Ambassador and a 1973 Ambassador. Quality decline during the 1970s caused my dad to switch loyalties to Ford. My first car was a high mileage 1973 AMX Javelin. Have very good memories of AMC.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for being here!
@professormadlad7773 Жыл бұрын
We need more car companies in the USA to encourage more competition & innovation.
@jeffery28642 жыл бұрын
Your presentation of automotive history is outstanding. Very professionally presented. My first car was an AMC Gremlin that I purchased in Grand Rapids, Michigan. A $25.00 payment held it while I checked with my wife. We bought the Gremlin X in a metallic metal flake brown with gold flecks. Three-speed on the floor and all available options at the time. We took the Gremlin up to my wife’s parents in Gladwin, Michigan where my father-in-law said “Why did you buy half a car! When are you going to get the other half!” But it turned out to be a very reliable car that saw us drive it out west to the Rockie moun-rains. At the time Coors beer wasn’t sold east of the Mississippi & we end-ed up bringing back multiple cases of canned Coors. No tinted windows led to several ‘popped’ cans from the heat. But all-in-all, a memorable car!
@RoadRunnergarage85702 жыл бұрын
I'm really enjoying these history videos.. Keep up the great work Jon!!
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Thanks, will do!
@Randy.E.R2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this bit of history with me. I found it very interesting. I worked as a mechanic at the Ford dealer in my home town from 1983 - 2006. I started working there right out of high school. It was a small town of about 3000 people in the middle of the California desert without many job opportunities. It ended up working out well for me. About 30 miles south is a large town with several dealerships including a Ford dealer that was about four times larger than the dealer I worked for. I got to know several of their mechanics because we attended Ford training classes together. We would call each other for ideas on those stubborn cars we couldn't diagnose. That Ford dealer grew so large they built a bigger dealership in 1985 in another part of the city. I continued toiling away at my small dealer. After their Ford dealership moved, an AMC, Jeep, Renault dealership opened in the old Ford dealer. There had never been an AMC dealer anywhere remotely close. That AMC dealership crushed every other dealership in the area. They grew so quickly, the had to rent a closed transmission shop down the street just to accomodate the number of mechanics working at the AMC dealer. About half the mechanics I knew at the Ford dealer quit their jobs at their dealer to go to work at the new AMC dealership. It was insane! That went on for a few years before that city ended up building an auto mall where all the dealerships moved into. I stayed in my old run down dealership for 23 years resisting the temptation to move into the state of the art auto mall a 30 minute drive from home. I finally gave up the dealership life and became a fleet mechanic for a public utility. But I will never forget how a humble AMC, Jeep, Renault dealer came to the desert and crushed the competition without even trying.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing some memories!
@johnscanlan93352 жыл бұрын
This video is one of the very best analytical histories of any business I've ever seen. Clearly you stuck to a classic storytelling structure with a defined beginning, middle and end that allowed you to communicate important historical facts in a way that didn't confuse your audience. I hope you'll consider this presentation as an ideal template for any of your future presentations!
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@toklat19672 жыл бұрын
My family had an AMC dealership that dated back to Hudson. Sadly when Chrysler took over it was too expensive to convert. I remember the conversation about the specific Benjamin Moore paint they required alone being unreasonable. It was sold to a larger dealer and the historic building was abandoned. I had cousins racing them up to the Renault Alliance Cup series.
@government_costumes-ui5lx Жыл бұрын
What was the name and location of the dealership?
@hotelworker8122 жыл бұрын
I was always fascinated by AMC
@Manandmachine7722 жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed the AMC history
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@falcorthewonderdog2758 Жыл бұрын
AMC = ALL MAKES COMBINED We mechanics in the day knew AMC cars were made of a collection of components made by Chrysler Ford GM and others. We coined the term ALL MAKES COMBINED
@charlestait53032 жыл бұрын
I liked my 1969 AMX with a 390 cu.in. Engine and 4 speed transmission very much!
@djquinn1110 ай бұрын
That was a nice car. I don’t see many around at the cruises or car shows anymore.
@davefost2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for putting this together! I'm sad I only just found it now. I grew up in an AMC town: Bramalea. Bramalea was right beside Brampton. AMC had an assembly plant in Brampton and then they built the new modern on in Bramalea beside because Bramalea was less developed and had lots of open space for building while their original site was pretty well developed as much as it could be. (Sadly, it's a Walmart, Lowes, and a few other big box stores now.... ahhhh progress). The point is, I grew up with every third house on the street having AMCs and people working with or connected to AMC. It was like an AMC showroom driving by every day and there's still a few of the old AMC crowd driving around in Javelins and others. My sister even had an AMC Gremlin with the Levis interior: denim upholstery with Levis seams and brass buttons. It was truly awesome. They don't get the credit they deserve when it comes to innovation and bringing many of the things we take for granted today to the market (cross-overs, AWD passenger vehicles, etc..etc..). Interestingly, the Bramalea plant built the hugely successful LH (as you mention) and later, the LX (Chrysler 300, Charger, Challener)...
@mathewprystash48322 жыл бұрын
I happened upon a 1972 Matador Sedan as my first car at 16, back in 2020, paid $350 for it and spend $500 to get it back to fully functional order. But the memories made in those last two years, priceless
@mopedman666 Жыл бұрын
Damn dude. It’s virtually impossible to find someone like that now.
@mathewprystash4832 Жыл бұрын
@@mopedman666 bought it from a guy and hour away in Ortonville, Michigan. Luckiest find I'll ever have in my life
@jeffah31032 жыл бұрын
My dad bought a brand new Cherry Red 1965 Rambler American, smallest engine possible. He shipped it to Germany as he was serving in the US Air Force. We rode that car all over the autobahn from Netherlands to Italy. Darn near got run over by all the Mercedes while trying to pass huge US Army convoys on the autobahn. He had that car for over six years and not only did it go overseas on two different tours of duty, but drove across the US from the east coast to the Rockies twice. Finally had to trade it in when the fuel pump died on it's third and last transcontinental attempt. It was easier to get another used car to finish the trip than to wait 3 days to get a fuel pump. Loved that car!
@Democracy106 ай бұрын
30 years employee of AMC. I still own a 1979 , AMC Spirit. 38K original miles. We made fantastic cars. Period.
@erichimes30622 жыл бұрын
The Jeep XJ I’ve been driving for 320, 000 miles has(apart from some updates) is an AMC at heart
@toddinde2 жыл бұрын
My buddy had an AMX in high school. Nice car. He was right at home with us guys with muscle cars. I had a ‘70 Buick GS. I loved that car.
@bpigleason3 ай бұрын
This is a great video, and I join the others here who offer their accolades. You've undertaken good research. I worked for an AMC dealer in high school--Greenberg's AMC in Anoka, Minnesota in the late 1970s and am still fond of all of the models you detail here. As well, my parents drove a 1962 Rambler Classic station wagon and later a 1970 Ambassador station wagon--both white. My grandparents bought a 1953 Hudson Jet brand new from Greenberg's, and my dad had a 1932 Nash 970 that he owned for decades. The only alteration I can comment on in this well-done video, and perhaps this has already been mentioned here, concerns the clip from Adam-12 at 18:09. The car in the clip is a 1968 Plymouth Belvedere from the first year of the series, which was updated to a 1969 Plymouth Belvedere for seasons two and three. But you are correct that the show did feature a 1972 AMC Matador beginning with the fifth season and lasting through the end of the series in May 1975. Great video; many thanks. kzbin.info/www/bejne/onfNlIB_qbGlirM
@oldridersteve2172 жыл бұрын
Great video. I'd bet Jay Leno has a great AMC collection. Love the AMX still.
@jamesmcintire38002 жыл бұрын
My parents owned several Hornets in the 70's, including one Hornet station wagon I believe. Dad always liked AMC's and passed that appreciation onto me. I also tend to cheer for the underdog.
@bikingD2 жыл бұрын
The Brampton plant that was at Queen and Kennedy built the last Eagle in Dec 87 as an 88 making it the end of AMC cars and is now a Lowe's. The new in this video Brampton/Bramalea plant on Williams Parkway builds the 300, Charger and Challenger. Also built the Premier and all the LH's.
@rickturley68692 жыл бұрын
Lived in Peel Village and had a great view of the gremlins being loaded on the rails, always wanted to tour the plant as a kid
@325xitgrocgetter2 жыл бұрын
Late 1971....our local AMC dealer was clearing out the 71s for the 72 model years. My Dad, was a grad student and his old Chevy Impala wouldn't pass state inspection without a ton of work...so he needed an inexpensive new car...and something that could transport a family....so he got a deal on a 1971 AMC Hornet SST coupe. The next year, we moved to the midwest from the East Coast and the Hornet would spend its winters with studded rear snow tires and sand bags in the trunk for ballast...and never got stuck. Eventually, my older brother got his permit and license and learned how to drive in that car. It was almost totaled in a car accident when it was rear ended by a 1970 Cadillac towing a travel trailer in 1977. I got my permit in 1981 and thought I would get a chance to drive it but it was starting to rust and Dad thought it best to sell it. My driving career started with a VW Rabbit that took the Hornet's place. So we managed to get 10 years out of the Hornet and it was a well used car....the driveline was durable but the interior trim and plastics were not. The doors wouldn't hold alignment and being in a serious accident didn't help matters. I remember quirky things like a hood that would constantly pop open to its secondary catch on bumpy roads...and alternator light that would stay on even thought the charging system was functioning and door window glass that would fall out of the tracks. But it never stranded us......
@alanpeterson67682 жыл бұрын
I've had two AMC cars. I had a 1964 Rambler Classic with a V8 and 3 speed with overdrive. It got amazing fuel mileage for the time and was surprisingly peppy. Those fold down front seats made this a great drive-in theater car! I followed that with my first ever new car: a 1970 AMC Hornet SST.
@SDC509BowmanDeal Жыл бұрын
My dad had a 64 Classic with a V8 - we towed a 16 ft trailer with it, and dad drove it for well over 300,000
@michaelmorris8837 Жыл бұрын
My first car was a AMC spirit. It was a amazing car. I didn't realize what I had back then. I miss that car.
@The_Macho_Man Жыл бұрын
Born, raised, and still live in Kenosha. My great grandfather, grandparents, and my dad worked for Chrysler. We all still love seeing a Gremlin rollin down the road. Great job!
@AllCarswithJon Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@evi1dav32 жыл бұрын
Let us not forget their computer based file-sharing which was carried over and ultimately made Chrysler better. Another AMC innovation. Another interesting side note the AMC designed Jeep 4.0 was manufactured in the Kenosha plant and used until 2006
@WayneMemphisMojo2 жыл бұрын
My 1st experience with AMC was when my friend's mom got an AMC Hornet, we thought it was pretty cool backnthen because it looked so different due to it's hatchback.
@australiantrains89882 жыл бұрын
In Australia around 1973, my school history teacher had a Rambler Hornet in the early 1970.s lovely looking car, also a cousin bought a Rambler Rebel which was stylish for its time. AMI cars are collectors items in Australia. great video, well presented and interesting history.
@thhomasmarks Жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting - those weird cars were a big part of a lot of lives
@Abbecskin Жыл бұрын
I remember in 1974 my aunt bought a bright orange AMC Javelin with the small V8 and a half black vinyl top. What impressed me so much about that car was how the dash curved over to the driver, and I was only in 5th grade but I could still tell good ergonomics when I saw them. And as a kid I really thought the houndstooth seats we're very cool and modern for the time. She had it until 1979 when she sold it for a Chevy Nova. And she has said she still misses that Javelin. She is now 78.
@johnlavender2422 жыл бұрын
Glad that I found your channel. I hope that you are well rewarded financially for your contributions to the history of the automotive industry.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Welcome aboard! I appreciate your kind words!
@PresidentCheney2 жыл бұрын
Super cool recap. My first car in 1987 was a ‘69 Rebel. Just a kickass ride.
@raymondlugo99602 жыл бұрын
My dad bought a 1988 AMC era Jeep Cherokee. I bought it a few years later. Awesome car. My 2017 Wrangler Unlimited is so similar. I sold that Cherokee with the factory clutch still working. It had almost 200,000 miles on it. The 4.0 liter straight 6 engine was bulletproof.
@laranaarana2 жыл бұрын
My Grand Father owned an Ambassador, my Aunt an Eagle Wagon, my father the Concord and my brother in law a Gremlin among other well known U.S. makes
@mikeace58312 жыл бұрын
I had a 1969 AMC ambassador with the 390
@craigpennington12512 жыл бұрын
Gremlins are great for dirt track & drag strip racing. The Rebel Machine was another great one but few produced . I had a 1970 Mark Donahue SST Javelin (factory race car) which was an absolute rocket that handled corners. All of their cars were quality fit & finish. Never had a Lemon with AMC/Rambler products.
@dennisramstein282 жыл бұрын
Simple, but well researched stories such as this, is why I have a premium membership of KZbin. Thanks for the great stories.
@canadianwriterman2 жыл бұрын
An excellent history! My father and I both owned Many AMC and Rambler models.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@mikebrown94122 жыл бұрын
I had several ramblers when I was in high school and college. They were cheep as well. I had a 1959, 60, 63, and a 65, all classics. My father put in the 327 V8 made by Rambler into the 59 and it got 20 miles per gallon consistently. I really liked these cars.
@Dorpmuller2 жыл бұрын
Your history series is great and a wonderful education on the backgrounds of these companies! Nice work! I'd love to see you do Auburn-Cord. '37 Cord is my dream machine. Worked with a guy that had a Gremlin, plenty of room back there for a sound system, and another that had a Javelin. At the time they were just another car. Never took much notice.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Great suggestion! A-C-D is near the top of my list of histories to do... but it's a bit intimidating to take on. :)
@petervitti92 жыл бұрын
This is one of your best videos. I grew up in the 70s and lots of people that I knew owned a gremlin or hornet. One spinoff of the chrysler buyout was the eagle vision. I looked at one and didn't want to buy an orphan or explain what an eagle was. So I ordered a 1993 dodge intrepid. Last - when my brother was in 4th grade in 1964; he did a stand up report in front of the class. Topic of essay - why would anybody in their right mind own a rambler? He was sent home from school - his teacher owned one. My mother marched him right back to school ! Apparently nobody was laughing that day. By the way. We owned a 1962 ford ranch wagon.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words!
@gregpearson9644 Жыл бұрын
Always loved the “American Underdog!” Over the years had several AMX two seaters, two Javelins, a Hornet & Levy’s Gremlin. After 25 years just bought 4 AMX & Javelin project cars. Long live AMC!
@ralphalvarez54652 жыл бұрын
I had a neighbor who had 2 Metropolitans back in the mid 1980s. I know a family that owns 3 running and driving AMC Gremlins. As a high schooler in the 1970s, I always wanted the 1970 AMC AMX with the 390 engine. We never owned an American Motors vehicle but I did own a 1974 International Harvester Scout II. Built like a tank.
@JackRusselMan2 жыл бұрын
My great aunt had a AMC Gremlin she loved that car.
@jimmyg5636 Жыл бұрын
My uncle bought a Robin egg blue Pacer when it was brand new. Our neighbor purchased a couple Concord AWD wagons. There was a Rebel Machine ,Javelin in our town and a friend of mine drove a Levi edition Gremlin to high school.These are my childhood memories of AMC. I rode several times in the Pacer
@Condor5122 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid my uncle Roy had a used '54(?) Nash 'Ambassador'(?): it was HUGE inside & I loved riding in it. Then in '60 another uncle, Eddie, bought a new Rambler Station Wagon. And in 1970-71 one of the regular guys at the good old neighborhood tavern, Huey, had one of those AMC 'Muscle/Pony Cars' -- he was routinely mocked.😂
@jamesziegler43832 жыл бұрын
I owned several AMC products personally..I was always glad that that alternative choice was available
@mervynstent15782 жыл бұрын
AMC was always called Rambler in Australia till the end of 1978 when AMC pulled out of Australia! You didn’t mentioned legendary AMC designer Dick Teague! Performed miracles on a shoestring budget! His last design was the ground breaking Jeep XJ
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the comment, I didn't know that about AMC in Australia. When doing these history videos, sometimes I mention designers but that can end up down a rabbit hole so in this case I didn't bring him up. Besides, he deserves his own video. :)
@mrkeopele2 жыл бұрын
a lot of good information, and I loved my 1987 Jeep Wagoneer, great offroader and good street car too!
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@davidhomer782 жыл бұрын
I drove a Rambler my first year in college, 1971. It was well used by the time I got it but it had the best design under the hood of any car I have owned. I wanted a Gremlin when I first saw one. I bought a used 72 in 1974 and drove it for many years. When AMCs quality fell that was the end of the company. Thanks for the history.
@ravipeiris43882 жыл бұрын
Great analysis, thank you. My dad helped a preschool teacher by driving her to the local AMC dealership. Cars like the Vega, Pinto and Pacer were seen as ways to profit from small vehicles by the Big Three whereas the Japanese focused on quality. In the 80s is when the battle played out and the rest is history.
@ctjiujitsu12 Жыл бұрын
Great video. My family had an AMC Spirit when I was a kid. I want to say it was 1979 or 80 model. It was a solid car.
@AllCarswithJon Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@leonb26372 жыл бұрын
My brother had a 1974 Gremlin in yellow with the 'x' package hockey stick contrasting stripe. It had oversized tires (the guy worked at a nearby warehouse for Perelli tire), and 3 sp on the floor. He had a lot of fun with that car, it was quite reliable too. I would also note the AMC straight 6 engine with updates to the fuel and ignition systems were used on some Jeep models into the 2000's.
@edarcuri1822 жыл бұрын
Barney Navarro used that engine in the car he raced at Indy!
@gabrielv.43582 жыл бұрын
Cool!!
@jayg14382 жыл бұрын
Great job. You have a knack for organizing and presenting business history. 👍
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate that!
@rontorres92742 жыл бұрын
My first new car was a 1974 Matador Coupe, not shown in this video. I loved it, very comfortable. However, it was a lemon with endless repairs - the brakes went out in the first week. Still, I loved that car. I towed a tent trailer from CA , through Canada, down to DC and back to CA. I miss that car! It resembled the Pacer.
@wesleyhudson202811 ай бұрын
My mothers matador sucked
@rontorres927411 ай бұрын
@@wesleyhudson2028 Yes, but didn't she still love it?
@NickTarterOKC2 жыл бұрын
My grandparents drove a Rambler American when my dad was a kid. He speaks very fondly of that car. When I was a kid, my dad had a Jeep Grand Wagoneer which was an AMC vehicle. It has the good old 360 V8. That SUV was a tank. It ate up whatever terrain you pointed it towards. Personally, I had a 1984 Jeep CJ7 in my late 20s that I loved. I wish I still had it. I've also had a couple of Cherokees which were AMC designed. The 4.2 straight 6 which later became the 4.0 straight 6, is one of the greatest engine designs of all time. AMC was a special company.
@weekendgarage3299 Жыл бұрын
Great video! I'm currently bringing back to life a 74 AMC Javelin.
@AllCarswithJon Жыл бұрын
Nice!
@bleeckerstblues10 ай бұрын
My dad had a 1960 Rambler Wagon - he really loved that car. He kept it into the 70s. The engine remained strong but the problem was rust, which was a common problem in that era.
@martinreed59642 жыл бұрын
having always liked Javelins, my first venture into AMC ownership is a 73 v8 Gucci sportabout...an ideal size for the crowded roads here in UK
@DavidRoe11112 жыл бұрын
I loved every one of my Ramblers. My godfather made parts for Nash Rambler down on the Jersey shore. My parents were Nash Rambler people before my father brought the Renault Dauphine back from Europe. Kenosha steel was no joke. It took a licking, and dents popped out easy. You could find parts in the remotest parts of the U.S.A. Over a few summers in the 80's friends and I attempted to drink in every bar within a block of the plant in Kenosha. It only became possible close to the end of the decade, when most of the place had shut down.
@CJColvin2 жыл бұрын
Wish both Studebaker and Packard merged together with Hudson and Nash along with Kaiser and Jeep to create AMC and man AMC would've definitely been part of the Big 4 for sure. Here are the AMC divisions in my mind, AMC Divisions Kaiser-Cheap budget brand(to compete with Ford, Chevrolet, and Plymouth) Studebaker-Mid-level/performance brand (to compete with Edsel, Pontiac, and Dodge) Nash-Mid-level luxury brand(to be with Mercury, Oldsmobile, and Desoto) Hudson-Upscale Mid-level luxury brand(to compete with Lincoln, Buick, and Chrysler) Packard-highend expensive brand(to compete with Continental, Cadillac, and Imperial) Jeep-Ultimate truck(to compete with GMC)
@kurttoy5035 Жыл бұрын
How would this new company fare against the onslaught of Asian cars like Toyota, Honda, Datsun-Nissan, Hyundai, Kia, Subaru, etc.?
@CJColvin Жыл бұрын
@kurttoy5035 I think they would do very well considering they made small cars from the get go.
@104thDIVTimberwolf2 жыл бұрын
A lot of people made fun of Pacers and Gremlins (I can't remember which comedian called the Gremlin "Detroit's way of saying you have nothing left to lose), but I've always liked them. A buddy had a Gremlin when we were in the Air Force in the late '80s and I loved that car.
@bubbapate57402 жыл бұрын
In 1974 I bought a AMC Gremlin, it was the most fun car to drive I ever owned. Had the big six, and ran very well. Stationed in the Air Force in FT. Worth Texas, I made a lot of money Saturday nights street racing.
@addiewinnie2 жыл бұрын
Great video Jon !! Enjoyed the history.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Thanks 👍
@bricra89922 жыл бұрын
The first car I bought was a used 1973 Gremlin. I paid $1500.00 for it with a straight six, bench seat and rubber floor mats with 30,000 miles on the odometer. I installed carpet, bucket seats and a custom console. Loved that little car! I then bought a 1979 Spirit GT. Loved that one too! Sorry to see the brand go away!
@airforcemax2 жыл бұрын
*¡this is an excellent post!* - 7:39 pm Pacific Standard Time on Thursday, 26 January 2023
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@twalatka9 ай бұрын
We had an AMC Hornet. Great Car. Also, loved the Javelin.
@stevenfoon21942 жыл бұрын
Good job! I feel the same, I have a new appreciation for the company and cars.
@robertlear271210 ай бұрын
My best friend in high school had a Neapolitan that his dad gave him (who drove 1960 red Corvette) We went all over in that cool little car.
@ramrodson54612 жыл бұрын
You my friend are a car nerd, I love it so I subscribed, liked and shared. Keep it up.😊
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@gerardtrigo3802 жыл бұрын
Having a long association with AMC, I have to say this is the best and most accurate history of AMC that I have seen. You only missed one item of AMC, their commitment to keeping customers. They would warranty car repairs long after cars were out of warranty. The most amazing thing I saw, was at a dealership that sold Chevrolet and Rambler cars in the mid-sixties. A very overweight person bought a new Impala. After 3 seats on the car broke because of his obese frame, Chevrolet refused to repair any more seats, citing his weight as being over the design specs for the seats. The man had paid a premium price for the Impala and was very angry. The Dealership bought back the Impala and sold him an Ambassador. Like the Impala the seats began to break with excessive frequency. AMC's response was to build a special frame for the seat in his car designed to handle his weight, apologizing to the customer for the inconvenience and the fact that his seat would no longer recline. They also gave him a code to present to the salesman whenever he made a future purchase of an AMC car, so ahat a revised frame for his new car could be made that would bear his weight. I have never seen any car company before or after that would do that for a customer.
@wenull32 жыл бұрын
AMC Eagle was an amazing car and I wish I could get my hands on one again. 1988 Eagle Wagon was my 1st car and my mom and dad had a number of them when I was growing up.
@michaelcavalier87502 жыл бұрын
Our family had a 1965 Rambler American with the OHV 232 inline 6, bought used in about 1977. It had a couple of features that we never had before, vacuum powered wipers and fully reclining seats. It blew a head gasket at about 60,000 miles, disabling the engine. This was the worst engine failure we had seen with such low mileage. I fixed it myself.
@jdave6385 Жыл бұрын
Growing up in the late 60's to late 70's; my family had 6 Ramblers, a Gremlin (my first car) and a Pacer (my little sister's first car). My Dad was a mechanic and said that AMC's were the easiest cars to work on and the most reliable cars on the road at that time. Plus he was REALLY cheap and we got them all used. Great cars, great memories...
@TexasEngineer11 ай бұрын
Your presentation was excellent, much better than the AMC line deserves. The reason for there not being much information on AMC cars is that they were junk cars. They lacked the engineering that the Big Three had and the cars did not last. My father purchased a used late 60’s Rebel and after I got out of the Army I replaced the starter in it. Junk! The stater was a GM and did not bolt in well. The bolts were hard to reach. Once you got it loose, it was a maze to get it out of the tierods and steering components. It took me two hours to snake the starter out. Obviously no engineer had forseen the need to replace a starter. I had a coworker who I carpooled with who had a Grimlin. Junk. Noisy and hard riding, but I will admit, better than a Pinto, but the Grimlin did not provide the excitment of impending exposion by someone tapping you in the rear end. My wife and I had a running joke, every time we drove passed a junk yard we would say, “Oh look, another Rambler Center”.
@sk-sg1dd2 жыл бұрын
First time viewer and awesome video. Always wondered about this company and was exactly what I wanted to know about them.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@russvoight11672 жыл бұрын
In Hayward WI, we had an American Motors dealer and were very popular. My family had several
@jhbb682 жыл бұрын
My dad bought a demo 1969 Ambassador DPL wagon in 1970. It was my first car memory, and he kept it for way too long.....until 1980. First car he bought w AC.
@dedeborya9015 Жыл бұрын
Gremlin with a shoe-horned 403 chewed up my home town and the 78-9 AMX still gives me needs.
@conorgraafpietermaritzburg3720 Жыл бұрын
We had a Jeep Wagoneer 1967 vintage, in Namibia and South Africa. It was REALLY good
@charlayned2 жыл бұрын
I had a couple AMC cars. One was a Hornet, it was orange and drove pretty nice. But my still-to-this-day favorite car that I had as a teen was a 1967 AMC Marlin. It was brown, (exactly like the one in the picture at 14:08) had both factory 8-track and air conditioning. My dad got it for me for my first car and I just fell in love with it. He later traded it off to get a Chevy K-5 Blazer so we would have 4-wheel drive for winters. I was so mad when that happened, I loved my car. He gave me a used 1972 Pinto (O.D. Green with black vinyl top) for my "new" graduation car in 1975, and I hated that car. But I loved my Marlin and the Hornet wasn't too bad either.
@jrocco362 жыл бұрын
I had a 77 Pacer. It was a Yellow Wagon. I got it very used and very cheap back in the 80's when no one wanted them. It was my first car that had AC and to this day one of the best cars I've ever owned. Many people would laugh at them calling them "Fishbowls" but ask anyone who owned one and its almost the same story of how much they loved the car. Also at that time my neighbor had a Gremlin and loved that car too. Ive known a few folks who owned other AMC cars.
@kellismith4329 Жыл бұрын
You could also cut diamonds in the back seat
@MilesBeyondThePast2 жыл бұрын
My first car was a 82 AMC Concord. it was chosen for me, maybe it chose me... anyway, I loved that car. It took me all the way through HS and into early adulthood.
@danenholm32812 жыл бұрын
My brother and me both owned amc's. I have a sc/Hurst rambler very fast he had a 70 javelin. I miss that car.
@cliffdwelling38072 жыл бұрын
Many a police department across the USA utilized the Matador model. It was even featured in Adam-12. When I was a teenager in the 70's my good buddy drove an AMC hornet that was white with a red interior. AMC cars were everywhere at that time. You couldn't swing a cat without hitting an AMC car.
@michaelszczys83162 жыл бұрын
One of the ugliest cars ever. A ' what's a Matador '
@Trapper42652 жыл бұрын
As a young boy growing up on a sharecroppers farm in central rural Arkansas in the late 60s and early 70s, my foster family had at least four Ramblers, but only two were actually running, so I have a special place in my heart for AMC's Rambler. Last weekend I was driving through Southern Wisconsin, and spotted a 1961 Rambler Classic Cross Country Wagon on dealer's lot. They were asking 30k?! My hopes of owning a Rambling Classic Cross Country Wagon were dashed. That is not a 30k classic car. Max $12k on a perfect day. I swear I think the managers at that dealership are on Crack! LOL! 🤣
@weegeemike Жыл бұрын
Correction: the Cherokee was discontinued in the US in 2001, not 2006. I'm sure it was produced longer in other countries, but I just wanted to point that out. Great video, as always!
@willgeary6086 Жыл бұрын
I know you touched on both Hudson and Nash, but I hope in the future they both get there own dedicated episodes.
@matthewelberson41402 жыл бұрын
Knew a kid in high school with a Spirit, that was a fun car. My family also had one of the first Cherokees, that's where I learned winter diving skills
@billyjoejimbob562 жыл бұрын
Brings back memories of my first used car... A nine year old Ambassador 990 sedan. Well equipped for its time, it had power steering, power brakes, the BorgWarner "Flashomatic" three-speed automatic and the largest available engine, the 327 cu.in. 4bbl carb premium fuel V8. A quick car for its time, but the trunion front and torque-tube A-frame rear suspension were seriously out of date and the handling was sloppy at best. Still, a good first car for $350. I remember the brief success AMC had selling a police package Matador sedan. BTW... your Adam 12 film clip shows a '68 or 69 Plymouth Belvidere!
@leonb26372 жыл бұрын
The trunion front suspensions were difficult to fix and the torque tube driveshaft/rear suspension set up made it difficult to fix bad u-joints. I believe the 1963 American was the last car in the USA with a flathead 6-cylinder engine.
@JeffFrmJoisey Жыл бұрын
My Dad bought a brand new 1962 Rambler American Wagon from Lakeview Motors in Woodcliff Lake NJ. It was dark blue with a white roof, metallic blue dash and light blue vinyl seats and everything else interiorwise. Shortly after getting it I went with him to get an AM radio installed at Short Stop Radio in Hackensack NJ. After that, Dad had seatbelts and a 4-Way Flasher added. I could Rambler on more but that’s enough for now.
@gregkamer37542 жыл бұрын
The very first brand new car I ever owned was a 1979 AMC Concord. I purchased it while serving in Germany and picked it at Fort Dix in New Jersey when I returned to the states in Sept of '79.
@peterson88keyz Жыл бұрын
Same here! A 1979 baby blue Concord - except mine was a hand me down from my parents. It replaced our huge gas guzzler Buick station wagon. My mom said she called the dealership a few days after they originally bought it - she thought the gas gauge was broken because the needle hadn’t moved yet.
@chrissullivan44962 жыл бұрын
The Matador !!!!
@leonardgordon17482 жыл бұрын
An excellent video summarizing the history of American Motors which was really the joint venture of a few small car companies. My uncle had a Rambler American that he used to get back and forth to work fo years. He later bought a full size Ambassador which I remember being as good as the full size cars from the Big 3. My Dad bought a Hornet and kept it for years as it again was very reliable. I remember my brother in law had one of the Sportabout wagons which was the family car version of the Hornet with a hatchback. None of these were bad cars just very bland. Thank you again 👍🏻
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the comment and the memories!
@danielsweeney67422 жыл бұрын
Jon when I was younger my parents owned an 1976 AMC Hornet Wagon. It was a pretty good car. For it’s time it got really good gas mileage. The only problem with the car was working on it. Going to the parts store you had to have the VIN so they could find the right parts.
@AllCarswithJon2 жыл бұрын
That's interesting. Because it was so uncommon they couldn't pull parts for it?
@danielsweeney67422 жыл бұрын
@@AllCarswithJon no so they could pull the right parts for it. The only thing AMC on the vehicle was the body. Everything else was from another manufacturer, Ford motor, Chrysler transmission and GM brakes. The parts store needed the VIN so they tell what year and what manufacturer was used.
@American-Motors-Corporation2 жыл бұрын
@@AllCarswithJon that wasn't a very good parts store, back here in Ohio my family members had on day of the seas since the 60s My grandmother had a 62 rambler classic she went on to own and ambassador she ultimately ended up with a 80 eagle that she bought pretty much brand new my dad had a 78 Concord to 79 Jeep Cherokee Chief he had a 72 Wagoner a 74 Jeep Cherokee, I was born in 85 but I grew up with AMC's and to this day if I need AMC parts for anything all I have to do is roll up to the counter and give them the year of the vehicle and they find it just fine I remember my father going to Nationwide Auto and when advanced opened around here which ultimately took over a portion of Nationwide and even back in the '90s when AutoZone was new around here yeah we had no problem getting those parts we didn't have to provide anybody with a VIN number and I never heard of them having to do this in the 70s... AMC at times really would use GM brakes or Chrysler brakes they generally always used Ford ignition because it was simple so yeah they did have some parts they bought off of as a manufacturers personally I think that that played a part in their demise because all those companies had to do was raise the price and it would screw AMC's bottom line! But aside from that I've never heard anyone having to use a VIN number to get parts so that must have been just that particular auto parts store!
@American-Motors-Corporation2 жыл бұрын
@@AllCarswithJon and this man is wrong by saying the only parts on it was the body because AMC made their own engines they poured and bored their own blocks!