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Why the 1966 AMC Marlin ignored convention
The 1966 AMC Marlin arrived in showrooms looking like it had been beamed in from a different car culture. While Detroit was busy sharpening quarter-mile times and piling on chrome, American Motors ...
Though it was rather short-lived and didn't break any sales records, the reasonably-priced upscale Marlin introduced a dramatic pillarless fastback design that attracted people to AMC's dealerships.
Humans have always drawn inspiration from nature when expressing impressive achievements, significant milestones, or luring in profit-generating buyers. The latter is common practice in the auto ...
Nash Motor Co. and Hudson Motor Car Co. merged to form American Motors Corp. in 1954. Nash’s designs predominated although AMC continued to market cars with both Nash and Hudson nameplates until 1957 ...
Q: Greg, I enjoy your AMC and Rambler columns, but what about the Rambler Marlin? How about some info on the Marlin and your recollections? Thanks, Frank Burke, Mt. Carmel, Pennsylvania A: Frank, I’m ...
Caught in the middle, but far from homeless, are the Marlin from AMC and Dodge's Charger. Neither has the compactness of the basic sportspersonal archtypes such as Mustang and Camaro, nor the posh ...
Underrated AMC cars include the 1970 AMX/3, 1971 Hornet SC/360, 1972 to 1974 Gremlin Randall 401XR, 1965 to 1967 Rambler Marlin, and 1971 Javelin AMX 401.
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