whirlcool
Well-known member
After my 70' Cougar died, I ended up with a 74' Gremlin. Pure BOL. Not even an AM radio. 232 Cu in Six. It did have a heater though. It was a cheap car that was needed for cheap transport. Pea soup green with a black interior.
I knew a couple of people who had Gremlins. We used to joke about where our Gremlins would leave us stranded. Mine was somewhat reliable. If it was going to have a problem, it'd let me know ahead of time. By 1977 the tops of the front fenders had rusted through, a month later the passenger side floorboard did the same.
The car met it's end while I was driving on a long stretch of freeway near downtown MSP where there isn't any shoulder to pull off onto. The red Oil warning light came on. I checked the oil not an hour before and there was oil in it. So rather than stop in a lane on the freeway during rush hour, I headed for an exit. By the time the car made it to the very first parking spot, the engine was smoking and the "Temp" warning light was also on. I checked the engine, and sure enough it had oil in it. It must have been the oil pump that died. So off to the junk yard it went, with 84K miles on it. And for some reason the junkyard seemed very happy to take it in.
Now around 1969 or so I do remember that AMC had that Rambler American that was a special edition.Red, White & Blue inside and out, racing stripes and their 390 engine in it. Those didn't last too long. They were snapped up pretty quickly.
A friend of mine had a 69' AMC AMX. Only 2500 of those were built that year. His was a day glow lime green color called "Big Bad Green". He had the car in the early 90s. He did a lot of restoration to it. It also had a 390 in it. The thing that got him was something about the front end having a "Sagging trunion". I've never heard of that part before but he said it's a common problem with AMC cars and parts are scarce to find. He eventually sold it to acquire a down payment on a house.
I knew a couple of people who had Gremlins. We used to joke about where our Gremlins would leave us stranded. Mine was somewhat reliable. If it was going to have a problem, it'd let me know ahead of time. By 1977 the tops of the front fenders had rusted through, a month later the passenger side floorboard did the same.
The car met it's end while I was driving on a long stretch of freeway near downtown MSP where there isn't any shoulder to pull off onto. The red Oil warning light came on. I checked the oil not an hour before and there was oil in it. So rather than stop in a lane on the freeway during rush hour, I headed for an exit. By the time the car made it to the very first parking spot, the engine was smoking and the "Temp" warning light was also on. I checked the engine, and sure enough it had oil in it. It must have been the oil pump that died. So off to the junk yard it went, with 84K miles on it. And for some reason the junkyard seemed very happy to take it in.
Now around 1969 or so I do remember that AMC had that Rambler American that was a special edition.Red, White & Blue inside and out, racing stripes and their 390 engine in it. Those didn't last too long. They were snapped up pretty quickly.
A friend of mine had a 69' AMC AMX. Only 2500 of those were built that year. His was a day glow lime green color called "Big Bad Green". He had the car in the early 90s. He did a lot of restoration to it. It also had a 390 in it. The thing that got him was something about the front end having a "Sagging trunion". I've never heard of that part before but he said it's a common problem with AMC cars and parts are scarce to find. He eventually sold it to acquire a down payment on a house.