How The 1970-1977 AMC Hornet Saved Jeep

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  • Опубліковано 5 вер 2024
  • When AMC debuted the all-new Hornet for the 1970 model year, it was considered a successful new car launch. The 1970-1977 Hornet was not only a successful car for AMC but it was the car that ultimately saved Jeep.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 550

  • @brucerathbonerathbone1683
    @brucerathbonerathbone1683 3 роки тому +12

    I happened upon a 1974 hornet quite by accident in 1983, my brother in law had bought it at auction and after getting it home decided that he didn't like it, and sold it to me for $500 , it was during a real bad recession and I had just snagged a job and needed a car , well that hornet served me very well and I drove that car for 9 years, easy to fix great gas mileage, quite reliable, was ( when I look back on it ) the best car I ever owned.

  • @jetg2059
    @jetg2059 2 роки тому +4

    the AMC javelin AMX was one of my favorite cars when I was a teenager in the 70s

  • @martentrudeau6948
    @martentrudeau6948 3 роки тому +9

    The history of AMC was about building small economical cars and the Hornet was a great example of this.

  • @__hjg__2123
    @__hjg__2123 4 роки тому +8

    the first car I ever bought (not my dad's hand-me-down) was a pristine 1973 AMC Hornet (Silver with plaid interior, racing stripe, 258-6cyl, auto and a/c!)... I loved that car........ Selling it was a mistake.. That bug badge on the hood and the flush door handles---so great.

  • @opencurtin
    @opencurtin 3 роки тому +4

    The 1970 Hornet is probably one of the most beautiful and understated cars ever produced..

  • @knitterscheidt
    @knitterscheidt 4 роки тому +6

    AMC made a great value for the money car, built on the legacy of Nash and Rambler, their straight 6s were very popular and just absolutely dead on reliable.

  • @mikeperry6794
    @mikeperry6794 4 роки тому +9

    These straight six Hornets run forever.

  • @MrDan708
    @MrDan708 4 роки тому +5

    I had a '75 Gremlin in high school; it was basically a sawed-off Hornet.

  • @donaldwilson2620
    @donaldwilson2620 4 роки тому +97

    I actually liked the Hornet based Eagle 4x4 wagons from the 80's. The Eagle and early Subaru 4wd wagons were really the first "crossover" vehicles before the term became commonplace. These definitely have more character than today's Honda CR-V or Toyota RAV4.

    • @garbage854
      @garbage854 4 роки тому +3

      Cool 😀

    • @C.S.Sensei
      @C.S.Sensei 4 роки тому +5

      Very rare too.

    • @KC9UDX
      @KC9UDX 4 роки тому +3

      Rare? Not rare. Not at all. Getting harder to find though.

    • @TSi99999
      @TSi99999 4 роки тому +7

      Cool l remember one from my neighborhood as a kid in Florida. Good looking cars, so ahead of their time!

    • @KC9UDX
      @KC9UDX 4 роки тому +4

      I have two. I've had two others.

  • @shocktrooper8443
    @shocktrooper8443 2 роки тому +2

    My late Dad sold AMCs, Olds and Cadillacs in the 70s. My first car was a gently used '74 Hornet 2 door Coup with 258 eng. I loved that little car. It was clearly not as fast and cool as a Javelin or a Trans AM, but it was quick off the line, good on gas and very reliable. The front, split bench seatbacks folded flush with the rear seat....the ultimate "makeout car"! Many victories! ;-}

  • @audieconrad8995
    @audieconrad8995 4 роки тому +51

    As a lifetime AMC enthusiast this episode was extremely well done. My first car was a factory ordered '76 Hornet X hatchback with a 304 V8 and 3:15's. Not exactly a screamer but a good runner for the day... nobody got more with less.

    • @manoman0
      @manoman0 4 роки тому +2

      I remember a neighbour with an AMC Matador. It was like a car from another planet. Big, wide, sleek, elegant. It was surrounded by british compact cars. Now you can imagine the wow-factor of that car.
      To this day it shaped my love for AMC cars.

    • @toddtravis2596
      @toddtravis2596 4 роки тому

      @@manoman0 my grandpa has a Matador. Loved that car. 💪🏾🧡🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

    • @manoman0
      @manoman0 4 роки тому

      @@toddtravis2596 Loved your grandpa as well? Where's the Matador now? Does your family still own it?

    • @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474
      @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474 2 роки тому +1

      My first car was a 75 Hornet D/L. Bought it in '87 for $350.00, drove it for 4 years. Had the 258 six, which had nice power off the line, 0-50 in 8 seconds. Not real quick at high speeds, but speed limit was 55☺

    • @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474
      @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474 2 роки тому

      @@toddtravis2596 My Grandpa as well. He had a 78 Matador Barcelona sedan with the 304 motor. I always looked up to and respected my Grandparents, and Grandpa's advice on cars was the last word for me. Grandpa had originally been a Nash guy, than Rambler. He had an Ambassador before the Matador, but I don't remember that car much, was just a small child

  • @VitoVeccia
    @VitoVeccia 4 роки тому +116

    I still have my dad's 1975 hornet....and the original title for the car.

    • @garbage854
      @garbage854 4 роки тому +5

      Awesome :)

    • @Al-thecarhistorian
      @Al-thecarhistorian 4 роки тому +6

      Don’t let it go! I had a ‘75 Sportabout. The best styled, balanced and useful car I ever owned.

    • @classic287
      @classic287 4 роки тому +5

      I sold my 75 Hornet 2 years ago. The engine was like brand new, but it was very hard to start, and it had power brakes but they didn't stop the car quick enough.
      I replaced everything to do with the brakes, to no avail. I think the gas tank had a hole on top, making it hard to start because the hole would release the pressure
      and the gas would run from the line back to the tank.

    • @story1951
      @story1951 4 роки тому +6

      I owned a 1976 Hornet Hatchback with 304 V8. My friends and I took it on two road trips that year. We put 33,000 miles on it the first year. I remember waking up in the middle of the night in the Arizona with my friend doing 90 MPH through the desert. He has told me often how much he liked this car and he owned a Firebird at the time. I am from Milwaukee and it was a sad day when the AMC plants closed down. Glad to see that there are still people who admire this car.

    • @VitoVeccia
      @VitoVeccia 4 роки тому +3

      @Bad411 do you want proof?

  • @spaghettiowsboober6548
    @spaghettiowsboober6548 4 роки тому +4

    My first car was a 1978 AMC Concorde, the successor to the Hornet. I bought it from my parents. It was extremely reliable. I put on way more miles than my parents did and eventually sold it cheap to my then girlfriend's sister with about 110,000 miles on it. (the car, not the sister.) It only died after she wrecked it a few months later. Who knows how much life it still had? The build quality seemed to be much better than the Big 3 of that era.

  • @trackman174
    @trackman174 4 роки тому +16

    AMC was a major contributor of innovative products. Pacer Gremlin and Eagle are good examples along with the Hornet. The demise of AMC was a loss to the American car consumer and to the industry.

  • @MyBenjamin66
    @MyBenjamin66 4 роки тому +38

    My Dad owned a 71 and a 76 hornet sportabout wagons back in the 1970's. The 71 had the 232 and the 76 had the 258 straight 6 engines. Both Automatics and both bulletproof in reliability.

    • @jimbosc
      @jimbosc 4 роки тому +3

      I had a 304 1974 Sportabout - was not the model of reliability - more nickel and dime stuff - the main engine and transmission held together but about everything else had problems. I remember being able to push my fingers under the windshield to touch the hood.........my 1968 Cougar would NOT do that.

    • @SteezeCartel
      @SteezeCartel 4 роки тому +2

      @shaun king No that was a heavily customized version of the Ford Country Squire wagon

    • @BELCAN57
      @BELCAN57 4 роки тому +3

      The 258 had 7 main bearings.

    • @erichanson3961
      @erichanson3961 4 роки тому +2

      @@BELCAN57 All of the 6s in that family did (199, 232, 258)

    • @erichanson3961
      @erichanson3961 4 роки тому +1

      @@BELCAN57 All of that family did (199, 232, 258)

  • @johncollins7423
    @johncollins7423 4 роки тому +3

    In high school, I had a '72 Hornet. The original 304 V-8 gave out 6 months after I got it, so my dad & I dropped a 360 out of a wrecked Ambassador. That thing was a hairy little BEAST with that 360 in it. Hardly ever lost a light-to-light race once the 360 went in. A great little car...

  • @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474
    @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474 2 роки тому +4

    My first car was a '75 Hornet D/L with the 258 six. Comfortable, easy to work on, nice power off the line/fun to drive, decent on gas. Not real quick at higher speeds, but speed limit was 55, so didn't matter. Laying rubber at a stop sign was driving fun back then, not driving 100 on the freeway like now

  • @LearnAboutFlow
    @LearnAboutFlow 4 роки тому +26

    As many car historians have said, AMC was ahead of the curve with the Eagle as American buyers didn't warm to AWD until much later, starting with the (expensive) Audi Quattro. In the 1990s, Subaru almost left the US until it decided AWD was their true niche as it couldn't compete with Honda/Toyota/Nissan on FWD. Today, it is almost a requirement for a car, much less an SUV, to offer AWD/4WD as an option.
    If American buyers had seen AWD as a true benefit, AMC could have remained independent by being the "Subaru" of the 1980s.

    • @KC9UDX
      @KC9UDX 4 роки тому +3

      AMC was always ahead of the curve. Imagine that: a cash-strapped company out-doing the other spendy three.

    • @CamaroAmx
      @CamaroAmx 4 роки тому +3

      There is a rumor that Audi stole the AWD design from AMC. In the late 70s AMC was buying 4 cylinder engines from VW/Audi. VW/Audi engineers were sent to AMC to help them integrate the engines into existing AMC vehicles. It is believed that those VW engineers saw some of AMC’s designs for several AWD systems that later highly resembled the Quattro AWD setup that Audi later came out with. A little Corprate espionage possibly?
      Subaru later used an old AMC/Eagle slogan for years, “The Beauty of All Wheel Drive”.

    • @KC9UDX
      @KC9UDX 4 роки тому +5

      @@CamaroAmx Chrysler kept Subaru in business by killing Eagle. I wish I had a dollar for every time I've been at a gas station and some nostalgic Subaru owner told me they wish they never got rid of their Engle.

    • @LearnAboutFlow
      @LearnAboutFlow 4 роки тому +2

      @@CamaroAmx Did not know any of that, thanks!

  • @josephsacco6231
    @josephsacco6231 4 роки тому +13

    I owned a 1974 Hornet , it ran great. I put about over 300,000 miles on it . It was a 4 door , great family car .:-)

  • @RoadRunnergarage8570
    @RoadRunnergarage8570 4 роки тому +59

    If you think about it..
    The Hornets legacy lived on for 18 years...

    • @CamaroAmx
      @CamaroAmx 4 роки тому +8

      Thomas Barnard that’s ok. The AMC/Eagle Premier’s (released right before the buyout) legacy is still going on, over 30 years later. The premier was one of the earliest cab forward designed car, something Chrysler, through their purchase of AMC, used for years in the 90s. Plus the premier’s platform became the Chrysler LH platform which nearly every Chrysler car was built on into the early 2000s. Plus since the LH platform was also designed to also be RWD (designated as LX), its still being used to this day under the current Charger, challenger and 300C (with updates). And even the plant that the LX cars are built in is an old AMC factory.

    • @UberLummox
      @UberLummox 4 роки тому

      Maybe even longer. I think the Hornet used at least some of the '68-'70 Javelin platform.
      Could be wrong.

    • @markw208
      @markw208 Рік тому

      And again today, with the new Hornet

  • @JamesMyers230
    @JamesMyers230 4 роки тому +6

    My brother's first car was a 1975 Hornet. He wasn't really into cars and didn't care what he drove but I thought it was a sharp looking car.

  • @mattw8332
    @mattw8332 4 роки тому +138

    I find AMC cars more interesting than the other three main American marques.

    • @joeprete7424
      @joeprete7424 4 роки тому +15

      Me too!

    • @jakekaywell5972
      @jakekaywell5972 4 роки тому +13

      I find that to be the case with all the Independent marques, my personal favorite being Studebaker. The Big Three are just so incredibly dull compared to them. That said, I do like most imports too. I'm not a jingoist, after all.

    • @lonewolfmcquade8879
      @lonewolfmcquade8879 4 роки тому +15

      Definitely they had a very unique style especially the Amx & Javelin

    • @pzivg43
      @pzivg43 4 роки тому +7

      I do as well my favorite being Kaiser-Frazer.

    • @paxhumana2015
      @paxhumana2015 4 роки тому +6

      I find all vehicles interesting. I would also like to see just what modern updates to the engines, transmissions, and other parts of the AMC cars could do to make them the snarling road beasts that they were meant to be in their lives. Could you imagine a 1,000, or more, horsepower AMC Javelin, Hornet, Concorde, Hornet Sport Wagon, Hornet Hatchback, Eagle, Sprint, Matador, AMX, Rebel, Machine, Ambassador, Rambler, or Marlin, as well as an equal amount of torque, quad carburators, Brembo, or other top of the line brakes, turbochargers, superchargers, and other modern goodies?

  • @jeddroston9690
    @jeddroston9690 4 роки тому +3

    the 2 AMC vehicles i have owned in the past were the 1972 AMC Javelin SST with a 401 4bbl v8 ,& 1971 AMC Hornet Sportabout wagon with the 258 inline 6.....both great cars!!

  • @paulshaffer9674
    @paulshaffer9674 3 роки тому +3

    Had a 73 Sportabout. It was my favorite car. Wish I still had it.

  • @EdHelms1
    @EdHelms1 4 роки тому +3

    My first car in the mid ‘80s was a ‘76 Green Hornet Sportabout. I don’t think I really appreciated that car until much later. It was the perfect car for a high school kid, very practical and could haul a bunch of friends but not fast enough to get you into trouble.

  • @patdthomas
    @patdthomas 4 роки тому +37

    The last of the independent American car companies was a tenacious little sucker, wasn't it?

    • @KC9UDX
      @KC9UDX 4 роки тому +3

      Still is. Twenty years out of production, the XJ Cherokee is still one of the most popular cars on the road.

    • @CamaroAmx
      @CamaroAmx 4 роки тому +10

      And AMC’s last car platform is still being made. The LH platform is a slightly tweaked version of a platform that AMC started using shortly before the buyout. The LH platform was used for years as the basis for the Chrysler “cloud” cars in the 90s (breeze, cirrus, Sebring, stratus, intrepid). And since the design is able to use FWD (LH) or RWD (LX), it’s still around (with updating) today as the Charger, Challenger and 300C. They are even built in the last factory AMC built, Brampton-Ontario.
      The AMC straight 6/4 lasted until 2006. The AMC Model 20 rear is still used as the Dana 44 (with some changes). Even AMC door handles lasted until 2006 on Wranglers (they were originally designed for AMC’s cars in the 60s).

    • @KC9UDX
      @KC9UDX 4 роки тому

      @@CamaroAmx Bramalea 😊

  • @nlpnt
    @nlpnt 4 роки тому +8

    From 1971-75 the Hornet Sportabout was the only domestic compact wagon, at a time when the subcompacts were all two-doors and the midsize wagons barely smaller than the record-huge full sizes. In 1971 over half of all Hornets built were wagons and it was the top seller for the rest of the run.

  • @colibri1
    @colibri1 4 роки тому +5

    I loved these in the seventies. You used to see them everywhere. I think AMC may have been the first to feature "designer editions" of cars with its Gucci Hornet, a few years before Lincoln was offering its designer editions of the Mark series. AMC was also famous in the seventies for contracting with Levi's to produce Levi's editions of its models featuring denim seat upholstery complete with Levi's tags like on Levi's jeans.

  • @oldbones2058
    @oldbones2058 4 роки тому +64

    One of if not my favorite channels; so many memories brought back.

  • @Balrog-tf3bg
    @Balrog-tf3bg 2 роки тому +4

    Especially with compacts, amc by far had the best quality ones of the era. Just feel AMC was extremely high quality and well thought out for their limited budget

  • @dadgarage7966
    @dadgarage7966 4 роки тому +2

    I was shuttled around in bare bones '73 metallic blue four door with an inline six in the late 70s-early-80s. It had a beautiful zinc hornet gas cap that an adult forgot to put back after filling up and was lost forever.

  • @classic287
    @classic287 4 роки тому +3

    I had a 70 Hornet, 71 Gremlin, 74 Matador and a 75 Hornet. And a beautiful 1967 Ambassador DPL ...

  • @donboch9993
    @donboch9993 4 роки тому +7

    In 1978 it became a AMC Concord. I had one with auto transmission with a 304 V8 with buck seats. i had one the best car I ever owned.

  • @sleepyhollow783
    @sleepyhollow783 4 роки тому +19

    AMC, in my automotive heart for ever.

  • @johnd8892
    @johnd8892 4 роки тому +2

    We saw lot of right hand drive Ramblers in Australia too despite earlier advice in comments here, but called Rambler not AMC. Likely the most common US sourced car in Australia in the 1960s. Assembled at the Port Melbourne factory of Australian Motor Industries alongside Toyotas, Mercedes Benz and Triumphs amongst others, with some local content such as Australian developed right hand drive dashboards. Stopped when Toyota liked the results of their cars so much they took over the company around 1972. So Ramblers assembled to Toyota standards. Larger Rambler V8s and later Rebels used as Police cars in Sydney New South Wales in the mid 1960s , whereas Victoria Police went for Studebakers at the same time. The upmarket good looking Hornet 6 was the last produced and found some buyers willing to pay a premium for something similar but different than the Australian Falcons and GM Holdens. A few Javelins and AMXs assembled too, but about 50% dearer than the local competition from Falcon GT HO with the 351 V8 or 350 V8 GM Holden Monaro , so only small numbers made here.
    Ramblers here, were thought of as luxury cars for people a bit richer than average. Search Rambler Australia here to find more.

  • @colinoshaughnessy7422
    @colinoshaughnessy7422 4 роки тому +4

    I had the 1977 AMX, I loved that car. It was great handling and could move.

  • @bartricky5894
    @bartricky5894 4 роки тому +5

    Great story.. I bought a new '74 Hornet hatchback 258ci. because of the fuel embargo. It was strong enough to tow U-hauls across country and served me well for many years.
    Nice to know it saved Jeep as I now drive Jeeps.

  • @tsmumbles
    @tsmumbles Рік тому +1

    My first car was a ‘71 hornet. The 232 was indestructible provided points, plugs and condenser were changed regularly. I loved that car. The fully reclining bucket seats were pretty awesome too!

  • @nomebear
    @nomebear 2 роки тому +1

    We owned five of the 60's and 70's AMC's. They were solid performers, reliable, and the bodies held up.

  • @enolastraight577
    @enolastraight577 4 роки тому +28

    The AMC Eagle beat the Audi Quattro in bringing All Wheel Drive to the market.

    • @OldsVistaCruiser
      @OldsVistaCruiser 4 роки тому +8

      It was also the first crossover, more than 20 years ahead of its time.

    • @CamaroAmx
      @CamaroAmx 4 роки тому +3

      And the Quattro system is suspiciously similar to a version AMC designed around the same time VW/Audi was helping AMC integrate their 4 cylinder engines into AMC cars years before the Quattro came out . A little corporate espionage?

    • @anthonyfalzon57
      @anthonyfalzon57 4 роки тому +4

      Yes, however AMC (R.I.P) named it 4 wheel drive. AMC was a fantastic auto company, but missed the mark in naming items.

    • @skaldlouiscyphre2453
      @skaldlouiscyphre2453 3 роки тому

      But the Audi Quattro brought AWD to WRC.

  • @alvincash3230
    @alvincash3230 2 роки тому +1

    Well, thank you Hornet. I am still driving my 2001 Cherokee.
    I never owned an AMC. But many of my family and friends did. I always thought they were very cool little cars.
    The AMC car I admired most was the Eagle. It was an idea ahead of its time.

  • @chryslerelectronicleanburn1676
    @chryslerelectronicleanburn1676 4 роки тому +3

    My life experiences with this car I could write a book about. All good!

  • @Wildersport
    @Wildersport 3 роки тому +1

    My mom had a 76 Hornet Wagon that I drove through High School. While it was technically bland, it was roomy for a very nimble car, never gave us a minute of trouble, for an economy mid size car it handled amazingly well, and was really comfortable. I would love to lay my hands on a like new Eagle wagon with a 4.2L swapped to a Mopar Performance multi point fuel injection.

  • @CamaroAmx
    @CamaroAmx 4 роки тому +5

    Hard to really say. Jeep was always a solid money maker for AMC.
    It’s always been a shame that AMC got bought by Chrysler. AMC was on an upswing in sales and profitability by 1987. AMC had several vehicles and platforms that would sell very well in the pipeline. The Jeep Grand Cherokee was basically done by the time Chrysler got Jeep. That sold very well. The Eagle premier had an early version of what Chrysler would later call the LH platform and had cab forward styling. The cab forward design became a signature design element for Chrysler cars in the 90s and they sold very well. The LH platform is still technically in use today. The LX platform is the rwd version of the LH platform (as the LH platform was designed to be rwd or fwd with LH for fwd versions and LX for rwd versions).
    Chrysler got a lot more then Jeep when they bought AMC. They got a new platform that, with some tweaking, would be used for the next 30 years, they got a team system that allowed vehicles to go from concept to production faster then ever, they learned a lot of money stretching ideas that in turn made Chrysler the most profitable car company in the world during the 90s, and they got an influx of new talent that would help design future popular cars for years (they were apart of team viper, helped design the 94 Ram, Viper, neon, PT Cruiser, Prowler and many others). And they got a brand new state of the art factory that they still use today (the Brampton, Ontario plant that currently builds the Charger, Challenger and 300). Plus they got always money making Jeep and their lucrative government contracts.

  • @thebestisyettocome4114
    @thebestisyettocome4114 Місяць тому +1

    Had new 1973 AMC Hornet. 1979 AMC Concord DL. 1986 AMC Eagle 4x4 Wagon. All three cars was fantastic. If made today id buy again.

  • @normantor
    @normantor 4 роки тому +2

    I had a 77 Hornet with the 258 and a three speed on the floor. I bought it for 500 dollars in 1993. Think it had 40K miles on it. It lasted for seven years. So simple....It just would not die. Just slowly rusted away....... 2 Door Sedan in baby blue

  • @nonservitium
    @nonservitium 4 роки тому +12

    I owned a hornet coupe. I loved it.

  • @Bricklinsv1970
    @Bricklinsv1970 4 роки тому +22

    I would love to see AMC come back! Those Engines are bullet proof!

    • @stereolababy
      @stereolababy 4 роки тому +1

      really man?? cmon

    • @VitoVeccia
      @VitoVeccia 4 роки тому +5

      Well, if you think about it...the inline 6 platform was designed in 1966. That same platform continued with the 4.0 liter, that lasted into the next century.

    • @audieconrad8995
      @audieconrad8995 4 роки тому +3

      @@VitoVeccia correct. Not to mention their (especially) gen2 and gen3 V8's.

    • @xyrzmxyzptlk1186
      @xyrzmxyzptlk1186 4 роки тому

      wastegate - Exactly. If anyone considered those engines durable it’s only because they were underperforming, utilitarian A to B engines, like in a tractor or something. In the racing world only AMX’s, some top end Javelins, and maybe that “ The Machine” monstrosity came close to the other manufacturers top end performance contenders. The rest of AMC’s output was pretty mundane stuff. 🚜

    • @Bricklinsv1970
      @Bricklinsv1970 4 роки тому +1

      @@xyrzmxyzptlk1186 That's why USPS and other commercial businesses use them because there unreliable.

  • @mpetersen6
    @mpetersen6 2 роки тому +1

    In summer of 74 I ordered a Hornet Hatchback, X package, 258 w/3 speed, PS, disc brakes, limited slip rear end w/3.08 gear ratio, front sway bar, white w/orange stripe, no radio and Levi interior. $3200 out the door. Drove it from the dealer to the auto parts store and bought better shocks. Then I drove it to the store selling car stereos and bought a Craig tape deck that you could remove from the mount. Tape decks were getting jacked all the time.

  • @davidkrueger3584
    @davidkrueger3584 4 роки тому +1

    When l was a senior in H.S. and for 2 years after that l owned a 74 A.M.C. Hornet Sportabout wagon. I loved that car. 258-6cyl. auto. School bus yellow with a black stripe down the side and black int. I eventually sold it and bought a 73 Ford F-100 to use working construction. I miss that car.

  • @johndifrancisco3642
    @johndifrancisco3642 4 роки тому +5

    Personally I think they could have made it big by sticking with the Javelin and that type of car. Great history lesson and thank you for making it.

  • @jwelchon2416
    @jwelchon2416 4 роки тому +2

    AMC dealers rarely got anything decent on trade-in's. But when when the Jeep craze hit, all of a sudden AMC dealers started getting high end cars on their used car lots. People were trading in expensive cars for CJ's and XJ's. I had a V8 Gremlin and enjoyed it very much!!

  • @raserx63
    @raserx63 4 роки тому +2

    1981, senior year of H.S. ....Starting procedure for my 1970 Hornet when it stalled at a stoplight:
    Jump out
    Pop hood
    Remove air cleaner
    Place screwdriver in carb to hold flap open
    Get back in car
    With left hand , reach across steering wheel and pull the gear selector to the left , past the “P”
    Turn key to start and release the gear selector
    Get back out , remove screwdriver and replace air cleaner assembly.
    Close hood and GO!

    • @markanthony3275
      @markanthony3275 4 роки тому +1

      That's when youth still had spirit and could DO SOMETHING for themselves. I didn't have an AMC till later, but I did have a rotten 56 F-100 pickup...with apple crates for seats LOL.

    • @frankvankalmthout8998
      @frankvankalmthout8998 3 роки тому

      Yep, I remember the screwdriver in the carburetor procedure. We had to start my mum's 1970 Hornet light blue 4 dr sedan that way every morning. As a teenager, I hated the car. it was so not cool!

  • @lonewolfmcquade8879
    @lonewolfmcquade8879 4 роки тому +7

    Always loved the AMX 69&73 Javelin with the 401. A nice set of rims traction bar's 4 speed beautiful. They remind me of the Falcon XB Mad Max Interceptor.

    • @uhfnutbar1
      @uhfnutbar1 4 роки тому +3

      I had one :)

    • @lonewolfmcquade8879
      @lonewolfmcquade8879 4 роки тому +1

      @@uhfnutbar1 that's awesome I always had a soft spot for Amx and Javelin very underrated cars. I had a 73 Trans am 455 love that car.

  • @TheBeingReal
    @TheBeingReal 4 роки тому +2

    The Jeep brand would have never disappeared. Ford or GM would have been all over that.
    Jeep/AMC was actually way ahead of the game with regards to AWD. Their plan in the late 70’s was to make every vehicle AWD. The Jeep Quadratrac was miles ahead of everyone else for AWD.
    The Jeep Cherokee release was delayed by Chrysler and caused Jeep to miss being first to market with the SUV, the GM S-10 series beat it out.
    For those that remember, the Jeep J-10/ Honcho pickup was a great truck too.
    AMC just didn’t have a big enough dealer market to sell enough cars. They made some great ones.

  • @jefferysmith3930
    @jefferysmith3930 4 роки тому +5

    Great story. I never like these back in the day, but today I admire its clean lines.

  • @arevee9429
    @arevee9429 4 роки тому +8

    Loved these cars. I'll take mine as a 1971 wagon with 304 V8, thanks. Pity Ramber / AMC folded. For a time, they made good, humble cars. And yes, I'm a "boomer".

    • @KDoyle4
      @KDoyle4 4 роки тому +1

      AMC did not "fold", they were bought out. At the time Chrysler bought AMC it was showing a profit.

    • @KDoyle4
      @KDoyle4 4 роки тому

      @Gert van der Horst Perhaps that was Lee's aim, but the 1993--2004 Chrysler LH platform cars, known in Chrysler advertising as "Cab Forward design", came from AMC / Renault Eagle Premier design.

  • @johnnyblade9272
    @johnnyblade9272 4 роки тому +13

    This is one of my favorite channels on UA-cam. I get to reminisce about cars in my past just like the Hornet and Gremlin which I owned one of each when I was younger...💯

  • @eveevelittleevil7422
    @eveevelittleevil7422 4 роки тому +2

    My aunt had a beautiful emerald green Hornet 4dr that I loved, it was very sweet, total granny special..

  • @phyllisnicholson7233
    @phyllisnicholson7233 4 роки тому +1

    Had a 1975 Hornet X hatchback with 258 and three speed manual with electric overdrive. Got great milage on highway. Also didn't need a tent when camping, with rear seat down had a little over six feet to sleep.

  • @stephaniebooth6169
    @stephaniebooth6169 4 роки тому +5

    I loved the the Hornet to me it was like a small Javelin. Lots of fun to drive.

  • @bombdiggitydave3881
    @bombdiggitydave3881 Рік тому +1

    Good times , golden memories. Thank you 👍🇺🇸

  • @777jones
    @777jones 4 роки тому +4

    AMC built honest and durable cars.

  • @davidtroxell837
    @davidtroxell837 7 місяців тому

    Thanks for good documentary on Hornet. -around '69/'70 AMC sold Kelvinator, bought Jeep & formed AM General.
    AM General enjoyed postal and military vehicle production contracts. -from heavy trucks to mail delivery vans. By '77 they made a public announcement that they'd sold more Jeeps than cars & actually turned a profit. This motovated their morph into Jeep Eagle

  • @scottwins2
    @scottwins2 4 роки тому +3

    I as a Missionary drove these cars for 2 yrs, we called them Romney's Rockets

    • @matthewdevine113
      @matthewdevine113 4 роки тому

      Romney’s Rockets😂 That’s hilarious

    • @jeddroston9690
      @jeddroston9690 4 роки тому

      George Romney was CEO of AMC in the early ,mid 60s....ymmv

  • @rickycollins4633
    @rickycollins4633 4 роки тому +2

    One of the easiest cars to work on. So forgiving. I wish they were back.

  • @C.S.Sensei
    @C.S.Sensei 4 роки тому +3

    AMC made some cool cars. I've Always like the AMX, Javelins, Hornet 2dr coupe & Gremlin X..

    • @bigt5699
      @bigt5699 4 роки тому +3

      The AMX and JAVELIN WERE GREAT MUSCLE CARS

  • @nonservitium
    @nonservitium 4 роки тому +1

    I loved my 74 hatch back...man, i wish i still had it

  • @Over_the_Hill_RV_Rookies
    @Over_the_Hill_RV_Rookies Рік тому

    Our first NEW family car that I was old enough to drive was a 1970 AMC Hornet with the 232 engine. It was a great looking car that had a lot of pep! As a 16 year old it was an acceptable substitute for the muscle car I wanted 10:49 my father to buy. We looked at the Mustang & Road Runner, but my wise father chose something much more sensible. Many fond memories driving that car over the years. Many years later I purchase my first Jeep Grand Cherokee and owned three different ones over 30 years. Love Jeeps. I never knew that our Hornet provided me with the opportunity to drive Jeeps. Thanks. Great video!

  • @99thDimension
    @99thDimension 4 роки тому +2

    AMC had killer good looks.

  • @genekelly8467
    @genekelly8467 4 роки тому +2

    I had a Concord (232 with 4 speed manual). Great car, easy to fix and mechanically simple. Drove it 170,000 miles.

  • @danr4197
    @danr4197 4 роки тому +1

    AMC was AWESOME with the BEST Jeeps ever made! The AMC Eagle. Concord, and Spirit are GORGEOUS cars to this day! AMC should of NEVER gone out of business. Just IMAGINE what they would be making today!

  • @CoryAtRandom
    @CoryAtRandom 4 роки тому +3

    I always want to rush out and buy the cars you highlight on the show 🤣

  • @rightlanehog3151
    @rightlanehog3151 4 роки тому +3

    The Sportabout wagon hits the spot.

  • @kestrelle5345
    @kestrelle5345 Рік тому

    The 1970 Hornet was my first vehicle. I used it for years and then gave it to my mother. She had her mechanic look it over. He said the car was built like a tank and would run forever.

  • @tonychavez2083
    @tonychavez2083 4 роки тому +2

    Thank you for anything “AMC” 🇺🇸🇺🇸👍👍

  • @glenbard657
    @glenbard657 Рік тому

    When I worked for the Illinois Department of Transportation, we had an old AMC Concorde in our motor pool. Prior to us getting it, it had been assigned to the Director of Highways (Harold Monroney). By the time we got it, it was a tired old vehicle with over 180,000 miles on it. I remember driving it once. The fuel pick up hesitated whenever you went around a corner and the windshield wipers were really noisy. The air conditioner would freeze you out, but it also put out a fog of cold air.

  • @matthewronson5218
    @matthewronson5218 4 роки тому +4

    I viewed AMC as being the Canary in the Coal Mine back in the mid-late 1970's era. My view was what was going on with AMCs struggles was what awaited other U.S. manufacturers if they and the government with their onerous mandates did not come to their senses.
    I did not view that the emission, mileage and safety mandates 'just-so-happened' to occur at the worst possible time, the "energy crisis" and perpetuated myth of 'we're running out of energy'. It was a planned implosion of U.S. Auto manufacturing that left the Japanese (and others) in a prime position to explode onto the scene.
    The common myth, parroted by 'experts' and old school Master Mechanics to this day say "The U.S. just can't make small cars" as if somehow (never defined as to why) they are just incompetent and have no idea how to engineer a smaller, dependable auto.
    The "they just can't make 'em well" is a shallow and dismissive concept that squelches any further thought on the subject. The fact of the matter is the U.S. can not afford to make small, well engineered cars. The profit margins of small cars are insufficient to justify their production. The only profitable vehicles were trucks, SUVs and luxury/sports cars.
    Fast forward to today, where U.S. manufactures like Ford discontinue auto production except for the Mustang and concentrate on their trucks & SUV lines. CAFE standards will be implemented that will eliminate even these options in the not so distant future, as things are going now. It is a planned implosion in apparent slow motion.

  • @jasonfrodoman1316
    @jasonfrodoman1316 4 роки тому +1

    I had a 75 Hornet hatchback 304. Sport package with buckets console shift and decal striping, rally wheels. I loved that little car. Perfect at the time for a kid in college. Kinda big brother to my previous Vega GT.

  • @BELCAN57
    @BELCAN57 4 роки тому +9

    Wish I still had my 1978 Concord D/L

  • @Raven-ec2rh
    @Raven-ec2rh 4 роки тому +1

    I worked for AMC from 1975 until Chrysler took over. They were good cars but kind of homely. My AMC was a 1970 Rebel Machine, man I loved that car and with factory gear upgrades it was just a smidge below 14 seconds flat in the quarter on 60 series street tires. My dad had the Hornet AMX in red, very good very slow.

  • @Dsdcain
    @Dsdcain 4 роки тому +9

    I've always wanted an AMC Eagle 4 wheel drive. I thought they were pretty cool when I was a teen in the early 80s. By the time I could afford a new car in 87 they weren't making the ones I liked any more. Don't really see many examples left where I live.

    • @donaldwilson2620
      @donaldwilson2620 4 роки тому +3

      I also like the AMC Eagles as well. The AMC Eagle and the Subaru 4wd wagons from the same era were really the first "crossover" vehicles. Compare to today's Toyota RAV4 or Honda CR-V, the Eagle wagon definitely has more character.

  • @michaeldavis5775
    @michaeldavis5775 2 роки тому +1

    The Matador also helped save American Motors and Jeep. The Police Dept in my town used Matadors with the 401 cubic inch motor fir a few years. It was actually a pretty good price car at that time.

  • @poppyneese1811
    @poppyneese1811 2 роки тому +1

    Being from West Virginia we’re always for the underdog, loved these old Hornets, Javelins looked a little to in the future, we had a neighbor that had one and it looked like a spaceship inside and out compared to my grandfather’s 62 Falcon and they kept it for years must have been a pretty good car. They was kind of like British Leyland destined to die🥲

  • @jodycornelius8258
    @jodycornelius8258 4 роки тому +1

    They do drive like a dream. 304ci pretty 💪 engine for its day.

  • @MrJoeltrain
    @MrJoeltrain 2 роки тому +1

    Thank goodness they survived. I wish they were bought by gm though. My aunt had a 71 woody wagon. No hubcaps and lots of rust. The exhaust leaks made it sound awesome. I'd have to say that behind the javelin the hornet was their best. Bucket list an AMX or sc360 for me please!!

  • @marcseclecticstuff9497
    @marcseclecticstuff9497 10 місяців тому +1

    I had a '77 Hornet hatchback, by buddy had a '74 Sportabout. The biggest issue with them wasn't the powertrain, it was the body. They rusted out faster than just about any other car on the market, even worse than the Japanese cars did at the time. It was especially bad in the front fenders. I purchased my '77 in 1983 for $100 so it was about 6 years old at the time. It ran great but there were already rust holes in the fenders large enough to put my fist through! Doors were rotting out at the bottom, rear quarters were rotting out too. This was in the Chicago area so they saw a lot of road salt but still, fist sized rust holes at 6 years means it probably started to rust thru the body at 3 or 4 years old. AMC was generally viewed at the time as cheap cars that folks with limited means bought (like me!). As we moved into the 80's folks were becoming much more materialistic and image was becoming important so most didn't want to be caught dead seen riding in an AMC which helped to seal their fate.

  • @trythinking6676
    @trythinking6676 3 роки тому +2

    Owned a 76 amc hornet. Bullet proff car

  • @cincycowboypete
    @cincycowboypete 4 роки тому +2

    Great video! I ordered a brand new 77 Hornet Hatchback with a 304, Posi-traction, Cruise Control and a few other goodies. I STILL HAVE IT, LOVE IT AND DRIVE IT! People are amazed when they see it, because most of idea what it is, or what an AMC is. The one mistake that you made was that you could not order the AMX in 77, I know because I heard it was coming but would not be available till 78. I have the 1977 and the 1978 Hornet Brochures and it is only shown in the 1978 edition. Great Job Done!.

  • @Sean0526a
    @Sean0526a 3 роки тому +1

    I loved my 1972 Hornet.

  • @garydunn3037
    @garydunn3037 3 роки тому

    Your cars over in the US were far better looking than most of the cars on offer at the
    time over here in the UK. I love the look of the AMC Hornet fastback, its really stylish.

  • @cva1122
    @cva1122 3 роки тому +1

    Interesting how you tied the Hornet into the existence of today's Jeep. You are not only an automotive historian but an automotive interpreter.

  • @MrMenefrego1
    @MrMenefrego1 4 роки тому +2

    *The younger generation will never fully comprehend the reasoning behind U.S. Automobile Manufacturers propensity to have several different, yet similar Makes, which gave it's customers more alternatives. It was a common practice Back in the Day. (Today's Car Market offer copies of copies, very little originality) This practice allowed it's, primarily American consumers a variety of makes and models to chose from. These customers, who had fierce, "Brand Loyalty", (which is LONG GONE now!) were like children in a candy store! I overheard a 20-something kid make the comment, "No wonder GM and Ford had to discontinue some of it's makes, they were competing with themselves!" lol Nope, they just don't get it. Back in the late-'60's to early '70's my father was an AMC salesman in Illinois... the only car that he ever brought home which really caught everyone's eyes was the AMC 'Rebel'; it was his 'Demo' (or, 'Demonstrator') it was an AMC special edition dubbed, "The Machine", Holy lug nuts, Batman, was that ever a fast and powerful BEAST! Lot's-O-HP & Torque! It even had an All-American, Red, White and Blue paint scheme. The powerful beast, which was great for my father, he could easily handle the fierce animal... My mother, on the other hand... (lol) Mom and I were driving to the store together one cold winter day when I was about 5-6. The streets were ice covered, and I asked her to "Punch-it!", and punch-it she did! Poor mom, she just couldn't handle the power, or the ice lol, and we ended up flipping it! I remember hanging, as the fancy newfangled seat belts kept us strapped to our seats. The beast spun around for a while, when it stopped I tried to get out of the car so I could right her! lol. My ingenious plan didn't work too well.* 👀

  • @MaliciousSRT
    @MaliciousSRT 4 роки тому +3

    Jeep would *not* have vanished, it would have ended up with Ford, Chrysler or most likely GM just like it did a few years later. In that regard I am glad Iacocca made his move and snagged it before the other two.

  • @IowaBudgetRCBashers
    @IowaBudgetRCBashers Рік тому +1

    Gonna be starting on my sons 76 hornet hatch back.. just picked up a rebuildable 304 , still looking for a 4 speed for it. Should be a fun first car for him

  • @henrystowe6217
    @henrystowe6217 4 роки тому +2

    My parents had a 73 Sportabout with the 360 V8. It could light up the back tires.

  • @aaroncone6778
    @aaroncone6778 4 роки тому +12

    A truly great car! Good ride, good fuel economy, & good styling! Keep up the great work, & an early congratulations on the upcoming 100k 'Scribes!

  • @jledonne8n8f
    @jledonne8n8f 4 роки тому +2

    Great content, The Hornet and its sucessors were definitely critical for AMC, although I would argue it was Jeep that saved this platform by enabling the 4WD version to be developed. Had AMC not acquired Jeep in 1970, there would be no Eagle to carry it into the late 1980s.

  • @-fuk57
    @-fuk57 4 роки тому +4

    These videos deserve more audience and Likes.

  • @larryg.9187
    @larryg.9187 7 місяців тому +1

    ... Of all things, in Jan '24, I was lucky enough to buy a 1973 AMC Hornet Sportabout Gucci X ... Running, driving, 258 I6, automatic, tilt steering wheel, sport steering wheel, fancy wheels, Gucci interior seats and headliner, independent & reclining front seats, a locking storage area, and roof rack ... Could use a paint job ... The body is rust and dent free ... Who could predict I'd buy a fifty year old car in 2024 ? 🇺🇸