Crawling From The Wreckage
Monday, March 2, 2026
1968 Chevrolet Impala Custom Coupe - The Look
1996 Oldsmobile Cutlass SL - Hard Pass
Friday, February 27, 2026
1969 AMC AMX- Holy Blind Spot, Batman!
In the late 1950's and into the early 1960's, American Motors, or "AMC", had carved out a nice niche for selling cars that were smaller than what The Big Three sold. However, once GM, Ford and Chrysler came out with economy cars of their own, AMC's sales began to founder. To make matters worse, AMC's cars were construed as being stodgy and unhip. They determined that the quickest and most efficient way to change their image was to go directly after the, no pun intended, booming youth market. That pursuit resulted ultimately in the two-passenger, 1968 to 1970 AMX like the 1969 in ""butternut beige" pictured above.
The AMX wasn't AMC's first salvo at younger buyers. On the left we have the goofy, "3+3", Rambler Marlin, AMC's first attempt at appealing to "kids" in 1965. Not surprisingly, it flopped. On the right is their second fore ray, what they called "Javelin" in 1968 that was better received. You wouldn't be alone in thinking it a Ford Mustang or a late '60's Mercury Cougar. Or some Australian derivative of an American car design. If I was of the age and means back then to buy a new car, I'd look at a Javelin. Then probably buy a Camaro, Firebird or Mustang.
The origin story of the AMX is fairly convoluted but it boils down to executive management demanding a two-passenger car that emulated the 1966 AMX concept car. Problem was the suits upstairs hamstrung designers and engineers with budget constraints.
The result was the 1968 1/2 AMX, which was little more than a Javelin with a 12-inch shorter wheelbase, no back seat and holy blind spot, Batman, the funkiest rear end this side of a Tatra T77. The kind-of-cool but at the same time dorky as any Rambler that came before it little car didn't appeal nearly as well to buyers as the Javelin did.
In their review of a 1968 AMX, Road &Track magazine applauded AMC embracing the sporty, two-passenger car market they predicted would become prevalent after Ford introduced the four-passenger Mustang back in 1964. Newsflash, they were wrong about the public's buy-in of two-passenger cars.
They tactfully chastised the AMX for its awkward proportions and its close resemblance to the Javelin. They downplayed any notion that AMC was attempting to compete with the Chevrolet Corvette noting that the Corvette wasn't a mainstream automobile whereas the AMX, given it shared so much with the Javelin, was supposed to be. The only thing the AMX and Corvette intrinsically had in common was they both were two-passenger cars.
R&T found the steering heavy and slow with plenty of understeer although cars with the gross-rated, 315-horsepower, 390-cu. in. V-8 could easily pull drivers out of it. The optional four-speed manual's ratios were too closely spaced and the rear brakes locked up easily. Fuel economy was abysmal but typical of the era at 11-to-13 miles-per-gallon of premium fuel. They clocked a 390 car like our butternut special here going from zero-to-sixty in 7.2-seconds. Not bad for a car with serious traction issues.
Mattered little, though. AMC sold less than twenty thousand AMX' in two-and-a-half years of production making them extremely rare. These cars do have their ribald fans, though. AMX' in decent shape like this one can command more than $25,000, ones in showroom condition go for more than $40,000.
AMC pulled the plug on the AMX after 1970 using the suffix on top-of-the-line, four-passenger, new-for-1971 Javelins they built through 1974. Harmlessly, AMC affixed "AMX", to a number of different models before Chrysler bought them, ostensibly, for their Jeep division in 1987.
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
1998 Cadillac Eldorado convertible - Not Worth It at Any Price
2026 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the 1976 Cadillac Eldorado convertible, what was at the time, supposedly, the last factory convertible sold in this country. Someone must have really missed the good old days of Eldorado convertibles because on top of this 1998 Cadillac Eldorado's $42,000 window sticker, the original owner forked over an additional $25,000 to get this literally converted to a convertible.
Problem with convertibles whether they're factory or not, they don't all look good top up, top down. or both. This conversion here actually doesn't look half-bad top up or down. Also means it doesn't look half good. At the end of the day, how a convertible looks is what it's all about because the experience of driving topless is not all it would appear to be cracked up to be.
You'd think it would be. I mean, what wouldn't there be to love? Top down, the wind in your hair, you and perhaps your passenger or passengers becoming one with mother nature's song. Doesn't that sound lovely? It does. Then reality sets in. Trust me, I currently own two-convertibles, which is ironic since I'm not a convertible girl per se, so I know a thing or ten about convertible motoring.
First off, if you live up here on the cusp of the North Pole, "convertible season" is incredibly short; shorter than "pool season" which is, on paper, Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day weekend but more like the Fourth of July through Labor Day. You drop the top on any day outside of that window and the wind chill will have you pulling over the first chance you get to put the top back up. My wife and I both have hoodies stashed in our 1991 Corvette convertible "just in case". Perfect weather can feel less so once the wind hits you.
In the height of summer, even up here, with the top down, the sun will broil you. We drove with the top down on an anniversary weekend trip to Toronto several years ago in my wife's 2004 Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder GTS and I got sun sick so bad I nearly threw up at the border. The poutine didn't help either.
On the open road, though, when the weather is perfect, even at night, driving a convertible can be a clandestine experience. Again, problem up here is those moments are few and far between. Also, most convertibles with fabric tops like ours both have and this car has, are much noisier inside than their comparable fixed roof versions. Head room is also compromised with the top up.
The biggest problem with this car, though, is not its after-market chopped top - it's the fact it's powered by Cadillac's infamous "Northstar" V-8 engine. Especially one with 95,000-miles on it and the seller asking $14,000 for it. The "low refrigerant" light is on too. Bruh, seriously? The problems with these engines are well documented which is a shame since when they're not eating their head gaskets, they're wonderfully smooth and powerful. Until they're not. The fix is expensive and I've yet to see anyone swap in a different engine into these cars and have everything work right.
Sadly, someone who doesn't know about the Cadillac Northstar will buy this and hopefully they won't soon be sorry.