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J. Clarke[_4_] J. Clarke[_4_] is offline
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Default What is this old car, with rounded shell, inch thick wood interior?

In article jvcbdctuaks93ea6b2cbfkpc160iu2rbnd@
4ax.com, says...

On Fri, 24 Mar 2017 17:40:09 -0500, Leon lcb11211@swbelldotnet
wrote:

On 3/24/2017 8:14 AM,
wrote:

Yep - the bullet holes were put there by the owner.
and he saved one for himself.

haha

apparently and believe or not they are sought after

in good condition they even get a pretty good price

That's because one in good condition has always been exceedingly rare,
even when they were new (owned a '71 Gremlin - the most appropriately
named car in history).

I worked for a short time for an AMC dealer back in '72, and they were
actually pretty good cars when compared to products from GM. Ford, and
Chrysler at the same time. One big problem with the gremy and hornet
was the latch pins breaking out of the doorposts after the hinge pins
wore out or sagged.. They had pretty well solved the rocker arm oiling
issue on the 232 by that time. The 258 was a better motor for the car
- and the 340 was AWSOME. There was a dealer in Mesa Arizona that put
the 401 AMX engine in the Grem. - Randall Motors XR401.
There were quite a few 360s transplanted into Grems too -
They were HAIRY!!!!


My brother had "The Machine" when we were teenagers.
It was geared so low that I could accidently take off in 3rd gear
when being a careful designated driver - feathering the clutch
because I wasn't accustomed to the car .. half way through
the intersection I would realize that I didn't need to shift quite
yet. :-)


I had a 72 Vega GT. I'll wait for the laughing to stop. ;!)

From a stop I could spin the tires starting in second gear.

Not with the stock aluminum 4 cyl unless you are running real skinny
tires at high pressure. Even a Cosworth would be stresses to get much
rubber in second with decent tires.
Now something like a 1.0 liter Chevy Sprint or Pontiac Firefly with a
35+ lb flywheel COULD break 'em loose if you dumped the clutch at
about half throttle - just the inertia of the flywheel produced
significantly more instantaneous torque than the engine - - - But they
didn't spin for long.


What was annoying was a small block V-8 with
powerglide and a high ratio rear end. My
mothers Olds would burn rubber at the drop of a
hat--if there was even the slightest bit of
moisture on the road it was difficult to get it
to start moving. Finally caught up with me one
rainy afternoon--went to cross an intersection,
nothing in sight as far as I could see in either
direction, and there I was a quarter of the way
across spinning the wheel like all getout and
not moving at all when some guy hit me. Of
course the cop thought I had run the stop sign
and there was no convincing him otherwise.