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Wikipedia

American Motors Corporation

American Motors Corporation (AMC; commonly referred to as American Motors) was an American automobile manufacturing company formed by the merger of Nash-Kelvinator Corporation and Hudson Motor Car Company on May 1, 1954. At the time, it was the largest corporate merger in U.S. history.[3]

American Motors Corporation
Logo from 1970 until 1987
IndustryAutomotive
PredecessorHudson Motor Car Company
Thomas B. Jeffery Company
Nash-Kelvinator Corporation
Kaiser Jeep
Kaiser Motors
Willys Overland
FoundedMay 1, 1954; 69 years ago (1954-05-01)[1]
FounderGeorge W. Mason
DefunctJune 20, 1988; 34 years ago (1988-06-20)
FateAMC was renamed Jeep Eagle Corporation then merged into Chrysler in 1990.[2]
SuccessorChrysler
Eagle (brand)
Jeep Eagle Corporation
HeadquartersAmerican Center, 27777 Franklin Rd, Southfield, Michigan, 48034, U.S.
Key people
Products
  • Automobiles
  • Military vehicles
  • Buses and delivery vehicles
  • Sport utility vehicles
  • Major home appliances
  • Commercial refrigeration
  • Lawn care products
Brands
Subsidiaries

American Motors' most similar competitors were those automakers that held similar annual sales levels such as Studebaker, Packard, Kaiser Motors, and Willys-Overland. Their largest competitors were the Big ThreeFord, General Motors, and Chrysler.

American Motors' production line included small cars - the Rambler American, which began as the Nash Rambler in 1950, Hornet, Gremlin, and Pacer; intermediate and full-sized cars, including the Ambassador, Rambler Classic, Rebel, and Matador; muscle cars, including the Marlin, AMX, and Javelin; and early four-wheel drive variants of the Eagle and the Jeep Wagoneer, the first true crossovers in the U.S. market.

Regarded as "a small company deft enough to exploit special market segments left untended by the giants",[4] American Motors was widely known for the design work of chief stylist Dick Teague, who "had to make do with a much tighter budget than his counterparts at Detroit's Big Three", but "had a knack for making the most of his employer's investment".[5]

After periods of intermittent independent success, Renault acquired a major interest in American Motors in 1979, and the company was ultimately acquired by Chrysler in 1987.

1954 formation

 
American Motors logo used from 1954 until 1967

In January 1954, Nash-Kelvinator Corporation began the acquisition of the Hudson Motor Car Company (in what was called a merger). The new corporation would be called the American Motors Corporation. An earlier corporation with the same name, co-founded by Louis Chevrolet, had existed in Plainfield, New Jersey from 1916 through 1922 before merging into the Bessemer–American Motors Corporation.

The Nash-Kelvinator/Hudson deal was a straight stock transfer (three shares of Hudson listed at 11⅛, for two shares of American Motors and one share of Nash-Kelvinator listed at 17⅜, for one share of American Motors) and finalized in the spring of 1954, forming the fourth-biggest auto company in the U.S. with assets of US$355 million and more than $100 million in working capital.[6] The new company retained Hudson CEO A.E. Barit as a consultant and he took a seat on the board of directors. Nash's George W. Mason became president and CEO.

 
American Motors dealership sign

Mason, the architect of the merger, believed that the survival of the U.S.'s remaining independent automakers was dependent on their joining in one multiple-brand company capable of challenging the Big Three as an equal. The "frantic 1953–54 Ford/GM price war" had a devastating impact on the remaining "independent" automakers.[7] The reasons for the merger between Nash and Hudson included helping cut costs and strengthen their sales organizations to meet the intense competition expected from autos' Big Three.[8]

One quick result from the merger was the doubling up with Nash on purchasing and production, allowing Hudson to cut prices an average of $155 on the Wasp line, and up to $204 on the more expensive Hornet models.[9] After the merger, AMC had its first profitable quarter during the second three months of 1955, earning $1,592,307, compared to a loss of $3,848,667 during the same period in the previous year.[10] Mason also entered into informal discussions with James J. Nance of Packard to outline his strategic vision. Interim plans were made for American Motors to buy Packard Ultramatic automatic transmissions and Packard V8 engines for certain American Motors products.

In July 1954, Packard acquired Studebaker.[11] The new Studebaker-Packard Corporation (S-P) made the new 320 cu in (5.2 L) Packard V8 engine and Packard's Ultramatic automatic transmission available to American Motors for its 1955 Nash Ambassador and Hudson Hornet models. When Mason died in 1954, George W. Romney succeeded him. Ironically, Romney had once been offered Nance's job.[12] In 1948, Romney received offers from Packard for the post of chief operating officer and from Nash for the number two position in the company. Although the Packard offer would have paid more, Romney decided to work under Mason because he thought Nash had a brighter future. Studebaker-Packard president James Nance refused to consider merging with American Motors unless he could take the top position (Mason and Nance were former competitors as heads of the Kelvinator and Hotpoint, respectively), and a week after Mason's death, Romney announced "there are no mergers under way either directly or indirectly."[13] Romney agreed with Mason's commitment to buy S-P products. Mason and Nance had agreed that in return S-P would endeavor to purchase parts from American Motors, but S-P did not do so. As the Packard engines and transmissions were comparatively expensive, American Motors began development of its own V8.[14] American Motors also spent US$40 million developing its Double Safe Single Unit monocoque, which debuted in the 1956 model year.[15][16] In mid-1956, the 352 cu in (5.8 L) Packard V8 and TwinUltramatic transmission were phased out and replaced by American Motors's new V8 and by GM Hydra-Matic and Borg-Warner transmissions.

Product development in the 1950s

Product consolidation

American Motors combined the Nash and Hudson product lines under a common manufacturing strategy in 1955, with the production of Nashes and Hudsons consolidated at the Nash plant in Kenosha.[14] The Detroit Hudson plant was converted to military contract production and eventually sold. The separate Nash and Hudson dealer networks were retained. The Hudsons were redesigned to bring them in harmony with Nash's body styles.

The fast-selling Nash Rambler model was sold as both a Nash and a Hudson in 1955 and 1956. These badge-engineered Ramblers, along with similar Metropolitans, were identical save for hubcaps, nameplates, and other minor trim details.

The pre-existing full-size Nash product line was continued with the Nash Statesman restyled as the "new" Hudson Wasp and the Nash Ambassador restyled as the Hudson Hornet. Although the cars shared the same body shell, they were at least as different from one another as Chevrolet and Pontiac. Hudsons and Nashes each used their own engines as they had previously: the Hudson Hornet continued to offer the 308 cu in (5.0 L) I6 that had powered the (NASCAR) champion during the early 1950s; the Wasp now used the former engine of the Hudson Jet.

The Nash Ambassador and Statesman continued with overhead- valve and L-head sixes respectively. Hudson and Nash cars had different front suspensions. Trunk lids were interchangeable but other body panels, rear window glass, dash panels, and braking systems were different. The Hudson Hornet and Wasp, and their Nash counterparts, had improved ride and visibility, and also better fuel economy owing to the lighter unitized Nash body.

 
1959 Rambler American Club Sedan

The larger Nash and Hudson range did not sell well and AMC lost money each year. Dismayed with the results Romney decided in 1956 that the future of the company lay with the compact Rambler line. Romney halted production on the new large cars and focused entirely on the new Rambler Six and V8 introducing them in 1956, despite being scheduled for a 1957 release. Sales of the new Ramblers were poor and sales of the Hudson and Nash models were almost non-existent, resulting in a $31.7 million operating loss for 1956. Sales improved in 1957 but the year still saw an $11.8 million loss for the company. In response Romney launched a massive PR blitz, traveling 70,000 miles nationwide in 12 months. Romney spoke at union halls, dinners, churches, fairgrounds, as well as radio and TV stations, and anywhere where he could get the word out about Rambler. Rambler sales took off in 1958, up by 58.7% and 425 new dealers were signed up. 1958 became AMC's first year of profitability since its formation, to $28 million. The Nash and Hudson brands were dropped and Rambler became a marque in its own right and the mainstay of the company.[17] The popular British-built Metropolitan subcompact continued as a standalone brand until it was discontinued in 1961. The prototype 1958 Nash Ambassador/Hudson Hornet, built on a stretched Rambler platform, was renamed at the last minute as "Ambassador by Rambler". To round out the model line American Motors reintroduced the old 1955, 100 in (2,540 mm) wheelbase Nash Rambler as the new Rambler American with only a few modifications. This gave Rambler a compact lineup that included the 100 in (2,540 mm) wheelbase American, 108 in (2,743 mm) wheelbase Rambler Six and Rebel V8, as well as the 117 in (2,972 mm) wheelbase Ambassador.

The "dinosaur-fighter"

 
1958 Rambler Custom 4-Door Sedan

Sales of Ramblers soared in the late 1950s in part because of American Motors' focus on the compact car and its marketing efforts. These included sponsoring the hugely popular Walt Disney anthology television series and as an exhibitor at the Disneyland theme park in Anaheim, California. George Romney himself pitched the Rambler product in television commercials.

While the "Big Three" introduced ever-larger cars, American Motors followed a "dinosaur-fighter" strategy. George W. Romney's leadership focused the company on the compact car, a fuel-efficient vehicle 20 years before there was a real need for them.[18] This gave Romney a high profile in the media. Two core strategic factors came into play: (1) the use of shared components in American Motors products and (2) a refusal to participate in the Big Three's restyling race. This cost-control policy helped Rambler develop a reputation for building solid economy cars. Company officials were confident in the changing market and in 1959 announced a $10 million (US$92,956,621 in 2016 dollars[19]) expansion of its Kenosha complex (to increase annual straight-time capacity from 300,000 to 440,000 cars).[20] A letter to shareholders in 1959 claimed that the introduction of new compact cars by American Motors' large domestic competitors (for the 1960 model year) "signals the end of big-car domination in the U.S." and that American Motors predicts small-car sales in the U.S. may reach 3 million units by 1963.[20]

American Motors was also beginning to experiment with non-gasoline-powered automobiles. On April 1, 1959, American Motors and Sonotone Corporation announced a joint research effort to consider producing an electric car that was to be powered by a "self-charging" battery.[21] Sonotone had the technology for making sintered plate nickel–cadmium batteries that can be recharged very rapidly and are lighter than a typical automobile lead–acid battery.[22]

In 1959, American Motors hired designer Dick Teague, who had previously worked for General Motors, Packard, and Chrysler; after Edmund E. Anderson left the company in 1961, Teague was named principal designer and in 1964, vice president.

Changing focus in the 1960s

Innovation

 
1964 Rambler American 440-H
 
1964 Rambler Classic 770

In an effort to stay competitive, American Motors produced a wide range of products during the 1960s and added innovations long before the "Big Three" introduced them.

For example, the Rambler Classic was equipped with a standard tandem master cylinder in 1962 that provided stopping ability even if there was a failure in the brake system.[23] Only Cadillac also included this safety feature six years before U.S. safety regulations required it on all cars.

Rambler also was an early pioneer in offering an automatic shift indicator sequence (P R N D2 D1 L, where if one selected "D2", the car started in second gear, while "1" started in first gear) on its "Flash-O-Matic" transmission which is similar to today's "PRNDSL" shift pattern, made mandatory for the 1968 model year cars,[24] which required a neutral position between reverse and drive,[25] while General Motors still offered a shift selector that had reverse immediately next to low gear (PNDSLR) well into the 1960s.

Unique in the domestic automotive industry, American Motors offered adjustable front seat backrests from their Nash-origin,[26] and in 1964, the Classic and Ambassador were equipped with standard dual reclining front seats nearly a decade before the Big Three offered them as options. Bendix disc brakes were made standard on the Marlin and optional on other models in 1965.[27][28] This made the Marlin one of the first modern American cars with standard disc brakes, while the Big Three did not offer them until the early 1970s on most of their models to meet Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards.[29]

In the early part of the decade, sales were strong, thanks in no small part to the company's history of building small cars, which came into vogue in 1961.[30] In both 1960 and 1961, Ramblers ranked in third place among domestic automobile sales,[31] up from third on the strength of small-car sales, even in the face of a lot of new competition.[30] Romney's strategic focus was very successful as reflected in the firm's healthy profits year after year. The company became completely debt-free. The financial success allowed the company to reach an agreement on August 26, 1961, with the United Auto Workers for a profit sharing plan that was new in the automobile industry. Its new three-year labor contract also included generous annual improvement pay increases, as well as automatic cost-of-living raises.[32] However, in 1962, Romney resigned to run for Governor of Michigan. His replacement was Roy Abernethy, American Motors' successful sales executive.

By 1964, Studebaker production in the United States had ended, and its Canadian operations ceased in 1966. The "Big Three", plus the smaller American Motors, Kaiser Jeep, International Harvester, Avanti, and Checker companies were the remaining North American auto manufacturers.

 
1965 Rambler Marlin

Abernethy believed that American Motors's reputation of building reliable economical cars could be translated into a new strategy that could follow AMC buyers as they traded up into larger, more expensive vehicles. American Motors, in reality, had produced large cars throughout most of its history. The Rambler Ambassadors were every bit as large as a full-sized Ford or Chevy. There was only an absence of largest-sized cars from the American Motors lineup in 1963 and 1964[33] The first cars bearing his signature were the 1965 models.[34] The 1965 models were a major makeover of the new platform that had just been introduced in 1963. These were a longer Ambassador series and new convertibles for the larger models. During mid-year a fastback, called the Marlin, was added.[35] It competed directly with cars like the Dodge Charger, but AMC's "family-sized" fastback emphasized personal-luxury.[36]

Tough choices

The continuing quest "in the business world's toughest race – the grinding contest against the Big Three automobile makers" also meant annual styling changes requiring large expenditures.[37] American Motors's management total confidence "that the new 1965 models would stem a bother some decline" actually began falling behind in share of sales.[38]

Moreover, a new line of redesigned cars in the full and mid-sized markets was launched in the fall of 1966.[39] The cars won acclaim for their fluid styling, and Abernethy's ideas did work as Ambassador sales increased significantly. The dated designs of the Rambler Americans, however, hurt its sales which offset gains from Ambassador sales. There were quality control problems with the introduction of the new full-sized cars, as well as persistent rumors of the company's demise because of its precarious cash flow. Consumer Reports' negative ratings for American Motors' safety did not help.

During this time, AMC's international sales were expanding. From only 18,000 cars five years ago, the 1965 model year AMC sold 74,420 cars in Canada, Europe, and Latin America. AMC remained the biggest U.S. seller of autos in both France and Germany.[40]

Abernethy also called for the de-emphasis of the Rambler brand, because he believed the public associated it too strongly with economy cars, and that it was hindering the sale of American Motors' other models at a time when mid and luxury car sales were very strong. As a result, he ordered that for 1966, the Ambassador and Marlin were to be badged purely as a product of American Motors.[41] The strategy shift at first seemed to be working because sales of the redesigned 1965 and 1966 Ambassadors improved, even as AMC's overall production decreased from the record level achieved in 1963.[42] However, corporate earnings per share were a meager 27 cents per share, the lowest since AMC made its famous compact car comeback in 1958.[43] Investors received a message of the changing fortune of the automaker when the company's 1966 annual financial report was delivered in a plain brown wrapper, instead of the previous year's glossy cover.[44]

 
American Motors logo used from 1967 until 1970

A completely new design was also slated for the larger 1967 models. This strategy added $60 million in retooling costs, which was a major stretch for the company. The new models shared fewer parts with each other and were more expensive to build. Abernethy continued his objective to position the new Rebel and Ambassador designs on an equal basis with competitive economy models marketed by the Big Three.

 
1967 Ambassador 990

American Motors did not have their own electric car program as did the Big Three, and after some negotiation, a contract was drawn in 1967 with Gulton Industries to develop a new battery based on lithium and a speed controller designed by Victor Wouk.[45] A nickel-cadmium battery powered 1969 Rambler station wagon demonstrated the power systems that according to the scientist was a "wonderful car".[45] This was also the start of other "plug-in"-type experimental American Motors vehicles developed with Gulton – the Amitron city concept car and later the similar Electron.

Although the new models were well-received by the motor industry media, the last quarter sales for AMC ended September 30, 1966 (AMC was not on a calendar fiscal year) were disappointing. The company recorded a balance sheet loss of $12,648,000 for the year before Tax Credits and deferred Tax Assets.[46][47] By this time the board had lost confidence in Abernethy due to his huge spending which had unstabilized the company and each year under his leadership the company had suffered huge financial losses. As a result, Abernethy was forced into taking an "early retirement" from American Motors on January 9, 1967. Abernethy was replaced by Roy D. Chapin Jr. (son of Hudson Motors founder Roy D. Chapin).[48] Chapin quickly instituted changes to American Motors's offerings and tried to regain market share by focusing on younger demographic markets.[49] Chapin's first decision was to cut the price of the Rambler to within US$200 of the basic Volkswagen Beetle. Innovative marketing ideas included making air conditioning standard on all 1968 Ambassador models (available as a delete option). This made American Motors the first U.S. automaker to make air conditioning standard equipment on a line of cars, preceding even luxury makes such as Lincoln, Imperial, and Cadillac.

 
1969 American Motors AMX

The company introduced exciting entries for the decade's muscle car boom, most notably the AMX, while the Javelin served as the company's entrant into the sporty pony car market created by the Plymouth Barracuda and the Ford Mustang. Additional operating cash was derived in 1968 through the sale of Kelvinator Appliance, once one of the firm's core operating units. The Kelvinator divestiture left American Motors a downsized company solely manufacturing automobiles.

The Rambler marque was discontinued in 1968, leaving only the Rambler American as the last product to bear the name, until 1969. The Rambler brand continued to be used only for export markets, with Mexico being the last market to use it in 1983. From 1970, American Motors was the brand used for all American Motors passenger cars, and all vehicles from that date bore the American Motors name and the new corporate logo. However, the names "American Motors" and "AMC" were used interchangeably in corporate literature well into the 1980s. The branding issue was further complicated when the company's Eagle all-wheel drive passenger cars were marketed as the American Eagle in the 1980s.

1970s product developments

Jeep

In the late 1960s, Kaiser Industries Corporation decided to leave the automotive industry and sought a buyer for its money-losing Kaiser Jeep division. American Motors' vice president for manufacturing, Gerald C. Meyers, headed the team sent to evaluate Kaiser's Jeep factories. Although opposed by AMC's top management, Chapin made a major decision in February 1970 to purchase Kaiser Jeep for $70 million. Although it was a gamble, Chapin believed that Jeep vehicles would complement American Motors' passenger car business. The Jeep market was also a market in which the Big Three had no presence, and therefore there was no competition. American Motors gained the iconic Jeep brand of light trucks and SUVs, as well as Kaiser-Jeep's government contracts – notably the M151 line of military Jeeps and the DJ-Series postal Jeeps. American Motors also expanded its international network. The military and special products business was reconstituted as American Motors General Products Division, later reorganized as AM General.

Hornet and Gremlin

In 1970, American Motors consolidated all passenger cars under one distinct brand identity and debuted the Hornet range of compact cars. The Hornet and the later Gremlin shared platforms. The Gremlin, the first North American-built subcompact, sold more than 670,000 units from 1970 through 1978. The Hornet became American Motors' best-selling passenger car since the Rambler Classic, with more than 860,000 units sold by the time production ended in 1977. The Hornet platform continued to be built under a variety of models through 1987.

For a time, both the Hornet and Gremlin could be ordered with Levi's denim interiors.[50]

Matador

The new facelifted, mid-sized AMC Matador replaced the Rebel in 1971, using an advertising campaign that asked, "What's a Matador?"[51] In 1972, American Motors won the tender for Los Angeles Police Department cruisers, and Matadors were used by the department from 1972 until 1975, replacing the Plymouth Satellite. American Motors supplied Mark VII Limited owner Jack Webb with two Matadors, a sedan and a wagon, for use in his popular television series Adam-12, increasing the cars' public profile. Matadors saw fleet use as taxis, government, as well as police, and fire vehicles in some states.

In 1973, American Motors signed a licensing agreement with Curtiss-Wright to build Wankel engines for cars and Jeeps.[52]

Starting in 1974, the Matador sedan and station wagon were mildly refreshed, with new boxier front and rear ends, making it full-sized. This second-generation model was made virtually unchanged until 1978.

Ambassador

From 1970, the Rebel and Ambassador were identical from the A-pillar back. The Ambassador continued as American Motors' upmarket model with more choices of creature comforts and with air conditioning as standard. From the A-pillar forward the Ambassador was redesigned and stretched 7 inches (178 mm) to become the biggest ever, just as the 1973 Arab Oil Embargo sparked gasoline rationing across the nation. The additional length was due to a new front-end design and stronger energy-absorbing bumpers required of all automobiles sold in the U.S.[53] Sales of all large cars fell due to economic problems and rising gasoline prices. The Ambassador became a full-sized car in 1974 and was discontinued after the 1974 model year, leaving only the Matador as American Motors' full-size offering. Nash and American Motors made Ambassadors from 1927 through 1974, the longest use of the same model name for any American Motors product and, at the time, the longest continuously used nameplate in the industry.

Matador Coupe

In 1974, the first-generation Matador two-door hardtop, known as the "flying brick" due to its poor aerodynamics in NASCAR competition, was replaced at great cost with a sleek, smoothly shaped, and radically styled two-door coupe. The model received praise for its design, including "Best Styled Car of 1974" by Car and Driver magazine,[54] customer satisfaction,[55] and sold almost 100,000 coupes over a five-year period.[56] The Matador Coupe shared few components with the Matador sedan and station wagon other than suspension, drive train, some trim, and interior parts.

Metropolitan Buses

In 1974, American Motors's AM General subsidiary began building urban transit buses in cooperation with Flyer Industries of Winnipeg, Manitoba. A total of 5,431 Metropolitan buses, including 219 electric trolley buses, were built before production ceased in 1979.[57] Production of diesel buses had ceased in 1978,[58] with only trolley bus production taking place in 1979.

Pacer

The AMC Pacer, an innovative all-new model introduced in March 1975 and marketed as "the first wide small car", was a subcompact designed to provide the comfort of a full-sized car. Its pre-production development coincided with tightened U.S. Federal passenger emissions and auto safety regulations.

With the Arab Oil Embargo of 1973, General Motors aborted the Wankel rotary engine around which the Pacer had been designed, as its fuel consumption exceeded that of conventional engines with similar power. Therefore, American Motors's existing 258 and 232 cu in (4.2 and 3.8 L) AMC Straight-6 engines were used in the Pacer instead. The fuel economy was better than a rotary engine, but still relatively low in light of the new focus on energy efficiency. Also, as the Pacer shared few components other than the drivetrain with other American Motors cars, it was expensive to make and the cost increased when sales fell steeply after the first two years.[original research?]

Development and production costs for the Pacer and Matador Coupe drained capital which might otherwise have been invested in updating the more popular Hornet and Gremlin lines so that toward the end of the 1970s the company faced the growing energy crisis with aged products that were uncompetitive in hotly contested markets. However, "AMC used cars, as far back as 1967, had the advantage of good warranty coverage … so most owners were conscious of low-cost car maintenance … AMC units became some of the very best buys on the used car market" by 1975.[59]

The 1977 Gremlin had redesigned headlights, grille, rear hatch, and fascia. For economy in the fuel crisis, American Motors offered the car with a more fuel-efficient Volkswagen-designed Audi 4-cylinder engine 2.0 L (122 cu in). The engine was expensive for American Motors to build and the Gremlin retained the less costly but also less economical 232 cu in (3.8 L) as standard equipment.

The AMX nameplate was revived in 1977. It was a sporty appearance package on the Hornet hatchback featuring upgrades, as well as the 258 cu in (4.2 L) inline six as standard with a choice of three-speed automatic or four-speed manual transmissions.[60] The 304 cu in (5.0 L) V8 engine was optional with the automatic transmission.

As all Matadors now received standard equipment that was formerly optional (e.g. power steering, automatic transmission), the "Brougham" package was dropped. Optional on the Matador coupe was a landau vinyl roof with opera windows, and top-line Barcelonas offered new two-tone paint.

Concord

For 1978, the Hornet platform was redesigned with an adaptation of the new Gremlin front-end design and renamed AMC Concord. American Motors targeted it at the emerging "premium compact" market segment, paying particular attention to ride and handling, standard equipment, trim, and interior luxury.[61]

Gremlins borrowed the Concord instrument panel, as well as a Hornet AMX-inspired GT sports appearance package and a new striping treatment for X models.

The AMC Pacer hood was modified to clear a V8 engine, and a Sports package replaced the former X package. With falling sales of Matador Coupes, sedans, and wagons, their 304 cu in (5.0 L) V8 engine was dropped, leaving only the 258 cu in (4.2 L) Inline-6 (standard on coupes and sedans) and the 360 cu in (5.9 L) V8 (optional on coupes and sedans, standard on wagons). The two-tone Barcelona luxury package was offered on Matador sedans, and two-tone red paint was introduced as an additional Barcelona option. Matador production ceased at the end of the model year with total sales of 10,576 units. The Matador was no longer attractive as automakers struggled to overcome economic woes, including continuing fuel price increases and double-digit domestic inflation.[62]

Spirit

In 1979, the Spirit sedan replaced the Gremlin. A new fastback version of the car, the Spirit Liftback, proved successful.

In December, Pacer production ceased after a small run of 1980 models was built to use up parts stock.

Concords received a new front-end treatment, and in their final season, hatchbacks became available in DL trim. On May 1, 1979, American Motors marked the 25th anniversary of the Nash-Hudson merger with "Silver Anniversary" editions of the AMC Concord and Jeep CJ in two-tone silver (Jeeps then accounted for around 50 percent of the company's sales and most of their profits), and introduced the LeCar, a U.S. version of the small, fuel-efficient Renault 5, in dealer showrooms.[63]

Concord and Spirit models were dropped after 1983.

Financial developments, Renault partnership

Late 1970s

 
1978 AMC Concord
 
AMC Spirit liftback
 
1981 AMC Concord
 
Jeep Grand Wagoneer

In February 1977, Time magazine reported that although American Motors had lost $73.8 million in the previous two fiscal years, U.S. banks had agreed to a year's extension for a $72.5 million credit that had expired in January, that stockholders had received no dividends since 1974, and that Pacer sales did not match expectations. However, Time noted record Jeep sales and a backlog of orders for AM General's buses.[64]

In July 1977, it was announced that the General Services Administration of the Federal U.S government had awarded AMC a three year contract worth $15 miIlion dollars to lease 5,838 cars. Since the beginning of the fiscal year on October 1, 1976, the GSA had purchased 8,700 cars from AMC for $30-million.[65]

On October 21, 1977, Roy Chapin Jr. retired and Gerald C. Meyers became Chairman and CEO.[66]

On March 31, 1978, American Motors and Renault announced a sweeping agreement for the joint manufacture and distribution of cars and trucks that would achieve benefits for both.[67] A month later, American Motors announced that it would halt the production of standard urban transit buses after about 4,300 were sold by its AM General subsidiary over a period of three years.[68] In May 1978, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ordered the recall of all American Motors's 1976 cars (except those conforming to California emissions regulations) – some 270,000 vehicles— plus 40,000 1975 and 1976 Jeeps and mini trucks, for correction of a fault in the pollution control system. Total cost was estimated at up to $3 million—more than AMC had earned the previous quarter.[69]

American Motors lost an estimated $65 million on its conventional (non-Jeep) cars for the fiscal year that ended September 30, 1978, but strong Jeep sales helped the company to an overall $36.7 million profit on sales of $2.6 billion. However, American Motors faced costly engineering work to bring their Jeeps into compliance with a federal directive for all 4-wheel-drive vehicles to average 15 mpg‑US (16 L/100 km; 18 mpg‑imp) by 1981.[70]

A year later, with its share of the American market at 1.83%, the company struck a deal with Renault, the nationally owned French automaker. American Motors would receive a $150 million cash injection, $50 million in credits, and also the rights to start building the Renault 5 in 1982[71] (a deal for Renault products to be sold through the American Motors-Jeep dealer network had already been made in 1979).[72] In return, Renault acquired a 22.5% interest in American Motors.[71] This was not the first time the two companies had worked together. Lacking its own prestige model line in the early 1960s, Renault assembled CKD kits and marketed Rambler cars in France.[73]

In 1979, American Motors announced a record $83.9 million profit on sales of $3.1 billion (US$11,574,186,153 in 2021 dollars[19]) for the fiscal year ending in September—this despite an economic downturn, soaring energy prices, rising American unemployment, automobile plants shutting down, and an American market trend towards imported cars.[74]

1980s

In 1980, all American Motors cars received a new rust-proofing process called Ziebart Factory Rust Protection. This included aluminized trim screws, plastic inner fender liners, galvanized steel in every exterior body panel, and a deep-dip (up to the window line) bath in epoxy-based primer. American Motors backed up the rust protection program with a 5-year "No Rust Thru" component to its comprehensive "Buyer Protection Plan".

A drop in Jeep sales caused by the declining economy and soaring energy prices began to constrict American Motors' cash flow. At the same time, pressure increased on the company's non-Jeep product lines. The face-lifts and rebranding of American Motors' once-innovative and successful cars were not enough in a competitive landscape that had changed dramatically. No longer was the threat limited to the Big Three automakers (General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler). The Japanese manufacturers (Honda, Toyota, and Nissan) used streamlined production methods such as outsourcing and Just In Time (JIT) supply-chain management. They had new, highly efficient assembly plants in the United States. And now they targeted the heart of American Motors' passenger product line: small cars.

While Americans turned to the new imports in increasing numbers, American Motors continued its struggle at the inefficient and aging Kenosha, Wisconsin, facilities—the oldest continuously operating automobile plant in the world, where components and unfinished bodies still had to be transported across the city.

In early 1980, the banks refused American Motors further credit. Lacking both capital and resources for the new, truly modern products it needed to offer, the company turned to Renault for a $90 million loan (US$295,989,499 in 2021 dollars[19]).[75] By September that year, American Motors's U.S. market share had fallen to 1.7%, and in November sales dropped 19.1%. American Motors warned stockholders that the company could be bankrupted if they did not approve a plan for Renault to acquire as much as 59% of the company.[76] On December 16, 1980, American Motors shareholders "overwhelmingly approved making the French Government-owned Renault" their company's principal owner.[77] Jean-Marc Lepeu, former corporate treasurer at Renault, became vice president for finance at American Motors. In September 1981, Jose Dedeurwaerder, a Renault veteran of 23 years, mainly in manufacturing, became American Motors' executive vice president for manufacturing.[78]

In January 1982, the company's former president W. Paul Tippett Jr. replaced Gerald C. Meyers as chairman and CEO, and Dedeurwaerder moved up to be president.[79] By this time Renault owned 46% of American Motors. Dedeurwaerder brought a broad perspective at this critical time: he is credited with streamlining many of American Motors' arcane management techniques. He also instituted important improvements in plant layouts, as well as in cost and quality control.[80]

Renault, having increased its stake in the company several times to keep it solvent, eventually owned 49% in 1983. This development is viewed by some as ending American Motors' run as a truly American car company.

New ownership and new management heralded a new product venture for American Motors: a line of modern front-wheel drive cars, designed by Renault, to be produced at Kenosha.

1980s product developments

AMC Eagle

 
1981 AMC Eagle Wagon

In August 1979, for the 1980 model year, American Motors introduced four-wheel-drive versions of the Spirit and Concord, calling the collective line the AMC Eagle. Eagles rapidly became one of the company's best-known products and are considered one of the first "crossover SUVs".[81][82] Eagles used the 2-wheel drive body shells mounted on an all-new platform developed by American Motors in the late 1970s. Featuring an innovative full-time four-wheel-drive system, it sold best in snow-prone areas. Sales started strongly but declined over time. While the two-wheel drive Spirit and Concord were both discontinued after 1983 as the company concentrated on its new Renault Alliance, the Eagle survived for five years longer, albeit only in station wagon form, into the 1988 model year. This meant the four-wheel-drive Eagle was the lone representative of the American Motors brand from 1984 until the 1988 model year. All the company's remaining output was branded Renault or Jeep. The last AMC Eagle was built on December 14, 1987.

Renault Alliance, Encore and GTA

 
The Renault Alliance, based on the Renault 9, was built by American Motors Corporation from 1983 until 1987.

The Renault Alliance was the first joint product of the American Motors-Renault partnership. Introduced in 1983, the Alliance was a front-wheel-drive Renault 9 compact car slightly restyled for the American market by Dick Teague, mostly to comply with American safety standards, and produced by American Motors at Kenosha. The car was badged as a Renault and some cars also carried American Motors badges. It was available as a sedan with two or four doors and later as a convertible. The hatchback, introduced in 1984 and badged as the Renault Encore, was basically the same as the European Renault 11 model. For the final 1987 model year, a higher-performance version of the Alliance 2-door sedan and the convertible was sold as the Renault GTA.[83] This version had a Renault two-liter engine that was exclusive to it and not shared with the European Renault 9 and 11 models.

The new model, introduced at a time of increased interest in small cars, won several awards, including Motor Trend Car of the Year. Motor Trend declared: "The Alliance may well be the best-assembled first-year car we've ever seen. Way to go Renault!" The Alliance was listed as number one on Car and Driver's list of ten best cars for 1983.[84] The positive reception and sales of 200,000 Alliances by 1984 was hindered by the availability of only two body styles. The Alliance was a European-designed car and not fully suited to U.S. market demands. The distribution network was also not well supported, which led to the lower quality delivered by dealerships with "disastrous consequences" for the image of the automobiles, as well as high warranty costs because of quality failings which greatly impacted sales from 1985 to the end of production in 1987.[85]

The Encore models were renamed Alliance Hatchback in 1987. Alliance and GTA production ended in June of that year, while the Renault 9 and 11 models continued through the 1988 model year in Europe, being replaced by the all-new Renault 19.

Jeeps

 
Jeep Cherokee Laredo
 
Jeep Comanche Pioneer

More beneficial to American Motors' future was the introduction of an all-new line of compact Jeep Cherokee and Wagoneer models in the autumn of 1983 for the 1984 model year. Renault's François Castaing, head of AMC's product development team, designed the new Jeep platform with styling by Dick Teague. Renault was interested in selling the Cherokee in Europe, but to meet European expectations the vehicle needed to be lighter and more fuel-efficient. The new XJ was only 3,100 lbs, helped by its unibody construction and lighter seats taken from the Renault 9 and 11 and new Renault Alliance.

"The new XJ Jeep ... was 1,200 pounds lighter, 31 inches shorter, six inches narrower, and four inches lower than the Cherokee SJ it replaced, and yet — thanks to unibody construction — the XJ kept 90 percent of its predecessor's interior volume." And, not only was fuel economy much improved, but "articulation is also better, as is ground clearance, as well as approach, departure, and break-over angles. These, along with its smaller profile, make the XJ better both off-road and on."[86]

AMC's initial forecasts of 40,000 Cherokee and Wagoneer sales were shattered with sales amounting to 75,000 in their first year. The three leading off-roading magazines, Petersen's 4-Wheel & Off-Road, Four Wheeler, and Off-Road each named the new Jeep Cherokee as the "4x4 of the year."[87] The popularity of these downsized Jeeps pioneered a new market segment for what later became defined as the sport utility vehicle (SUV). They initially used the American Motors 150 C.I.D. (2.5 L or 150 cu in) OHV four-cylinder engine with a carburetor, and a General Motors-built 2.8 L (171 cu in) carbureted V6 was optional. In 1986, throttle-body injection replaced the carburetor on the 2.5 L I4 engines. A Renault 2.1 L (128 cu in) Turbo-Diesel I4 diesel was also offered. Starting with the 1987 models, a 4.0 L (244 cu in) I6 engine, derived from the older 258 cu in (4.23 L) I6 with a new head design and an electronic fuel injection system, replaced the outsourced V6. American Motors' "new" engine was designed with help from Renault and incorporated Renault-Bendix (Renix) parts for fuel and ignition management. The 4.0 developed an outstanding reputation for reliability and toughness. Retained by Chrysler after the buyout, the design continued to be improved and refined until its discontinuation at the end of the 2006 model year. The 4.0 engine saw extensive application in XJ Cherokees and Wagoneers, Grand Cherokees, and Wranglers, and many of those engines saw (or are seeing) extremely long lives, quite a few exceeding 300,000 mi (480,000 km). The XJ Cherokee itself was built by Chrysler until the end of the 2001 model year in the U.S. and until 2005 in China.

Three other designs continued to be used after the Chrysler buyout: the Grand Wagoneer full-size luxury SUV, the full-sized J-series pickups (built on the same chassis as the earlier SJ model Wagoneers and Cherokees that dated from 1963 with the AMC 360 cu in (5.9 L) V8), and the Jeep Comanche (MJ) compact pickup, which debuted in 1986. Unlike most sport-utility vehicles that are based on adapted pickup truck designs, the Cherokee XJ SUV came first and the Comanche was designed as a later pickup truck version.

Production of the full-sized pickups ceased after 1987. The Grand Wagoneer and 360 V8 engine were dropped after 1991 (the last American-made vehicle whose engine used a carburetor for fuel delivery), and the Comanche bowed after 1992.

1985 and the final buyout

Marketplace and management changes

There were significant changes in 1985 as the market moved away from American Motors' small models. With fuel relatively cheap again, buyers turned to larger and more powerful automobiles, and American Motors was unprepared for this development. Even the venerable Jeep CJ-5 was dropped after a 60 Minutes TV news magazine staged exposé of rollover tendencies under extreme conditions. American Motors also confronted an angry workforce. Labor was taking revenge, and reports circulated about the sabotage of vehicles on the assembly lines because of the failure to receive promised wage increases[citation needed]. There were rumors that the aging Kenosha plant was to be shut down. At the same time, Chrysler was having trouble meeting the demand for its M-body rear-drive models (Dodge Diplomat, Plymouth Gran Fury and Chrysler Fifth Avenue). Because they were assembled using the old "gate and buck system" and the tooling could be easily moved, Chrysler could supply the components and control the quality, while American Motors assembled the car. Therefore, Lee Iacocca and Joe Cappy reached an agreement to use some of American Motors' idle plant capacity in Kenosha.[88]

At the beginning of 1985, Renault's chairman in France, Bernard Hanon, was fired in a shake-up triggered by huge losses. Renault had lost its number one position in Europe, a position it had held from 1980 until 1983. The company had been losing money since 1981 and had fallen to sixth place, behind Ford, Fiat, Volkswagen, Peugeot, and General Motors. Strikes plagued Renault at the end of 1984 and the French government introduced price controls that severely cut the profit margins on cars sold in France, Renault's most important market. In addition to Renault's domestic losses, the company had already invested $545 million in AMC. Hanon was replaced by Georges Besse, ex-president of Produits Chimiques Ugine Kuhlmann in France.

In April 1985, AMC Chairman W. Paul Tippett resigned to become president of a textile company. In December 1985, Jose J. Dedeurwaerder, who had been president since 1982 and CEO since September 1984, became chairman of the executive committee while continuing as president and chief executive officer. Joe Cappy was moved up from executive vice president to chief operating officer and Tippet's position was filled by an ex-Renault vice president, Pierre Semerena.[89]

Semerena made his managerial reputation as a no-nonsense cost cutter. The new management responded with tactical moves by selling the lawn care Wheel Horse Products Division and signing an agreement to build Jeeps in the People's Republic of China. The Pentagon had problems with AM General, a significant defense contractor, being managed by a partially French-government-owned firm. The U.S. government would not allow a foreign government to own a significant portion of an important defense supplier.[90] As a result, the profitable AM General Division was sold to LTV Corporation.[91] Another milestone was the departure of Dick Teague; American Motors' design vice president for 26 years, he was responsible for many Jeep and AMC designs, including the Rambler American, Javelin, Hornet, Gremlin, Pacer, and Matador coupe.

Problems at Renault and assassination

In France, Renault continued to experience financial trouble. The investment in American Motors (including the construction of a new Canadian assembly plant in Brampton, Ontario) forced cuts at home, resulting in the closure of several French plants and mass layoffs. Renault was down to just three alternatives regarding its American holdings: (1) it could declare American Motors officially bankrupt, thereby losing its investment, (2) it could come up with more money, but Renault management perceived American Motors as a bottomless pit, or (3) American Motors could be put up for sale and the French company could get back part of its investment. At the same time, Renault's new chairman, Georges Besse, continued to champion the French firm's future in the North American market, pointing to the company's completion of the newest and most advanced automotive assembly plant in North America, then known as Bramalea Assembly, as well as the recent introduction of the thoroughly modern, fuel-injected 4.0 L and 2.5 L engines. In addition, Jeep vehicles were riding an unprecedented surge in demand. It seemed to Besse and others that American Motors was on course for profitability.

However, on November 17, 1986, Besse, who had a high profile among French capitalists, was assassinated by a member of a French clandestine far-left extremist group, Action Directe.[92] AMC's plans to reinvigorate sales with higher-priced Renaults continued for a little longer, with the plan being a three-pronged lineup beginning with the mid-sized Medallion, the larger Premier above it, and the sporty Renault Alpine providing a halo car.[93] The Medallion and the Premier both did go on sale, but the Alpine never made its planned mid-1987 rollout.

Chrysler purchases American Motors stock

Under pressure from Renault executives following Besse's death, Renault's new president, Raymond Levy, set out to repair employee relations and divest the company of its investment in American Motors. Renault owned 46.1% of American Motors' outstanding shares of stock. In 1986, American Motors lost $91.3 million.[94]

The earlier agreement between Chrysler and American Motors in 1985, under which American Motors would produce M-body chassis rear-drive large cars for five years from mid-1986 through 1990, fed the rumor that Chrysler was about to buy AMC. According to the head of manufacturing for Chrysler at the time, Stephan Sharf, the existing relationship with American Motors producing a car for a competitor facilitated the negotiations.[88]

 
The Jeep Grand Cherokee was the driving force behind Chrysler's buyout of American Motors; Lee Iacocca wanted the design. Chrysler completed development and released it to the public in late 1992, and continues to use the nameplate today.

On March 9, 1987, Chrysler agreed to buy Renault's share in American Motors, plus all the remaining shares, for about $1.5 billion ($3,577,768,014 in 2021 dollars[19]).[94][95][96][97][98][99] Chrysler made no secret that they were only interested in AMC for Jeep, AMC's new assembly plant in Canada, and AMC's network of 1,300 dealerships nationwide. Chrysler president Lee Iacocca was quoted in the March 10, 1987 LA Times as saying:

For Chrysler, the attractions are Jeep, the best-known automotive brand name in the world; a new . . . assembly plant at Bramalea, Canada, and a third distribution system giving us access to a larger market.[100]

With the sale complete, American Motors became the Jeep-Eagle division of Chrysler.[101][102]

The sale came at a time when the automotive press was enthusiastic about the proposed 1988 lineup of Renault, Eagle, and Jeep vehicles, as well as reports that the financial outlook for the small automaker was improving. American Motors' quarterly results for all of 1987 were positive, Chrysler purchased American Motors at a time the company appeared to be in a very good financial position with its new product line.[94]

It was the Jeep brand that Chrysler CEO Lee Iacocca really wanted – in particular the ZJ Grand Cherokee, then under development by Jeep engineers, which ultimately proved highly profitable for Chrysler (the nameplate remains in production today). However, the buyout included other attractive deal sweeteners for Chrysler. Among them was the world-class, brand-new manufacturing plant in Bramalea, Ontario, which offered Iacocca an unprecedented opportunity to increase his company's production capacity at a fire-sale price. American Motors had designed and built the plant in anticipation of building the Renault 25-based Eagle Premier. Additional profitable acquisitions were the American Motors dealer network (the addition of which strengthened Chrysler's retail distribution – many American Motors dealers switched to selling Chrysler products), and American Motors' underrated organization and management talent – which Chrysler quickly assimilated (numerous leading Chrysler engineers and executives were ex-American Motors).[103] American Motors was renamed Jeep Eagle Corporation (a Chrysler subsidiary) on August 25, 1988, and was fully merged as of March 29, 1990.[2]

Leadership

1954: George W. Mason

The 1954 merger of Nash-Kelvinator Corporation and Hudson Motor Car Company that established American Motors was led by Nash-Kelvinator president George W. Mason to reap benefits from the strengths of the two firms to battle the much larger "Big Three" automakers (General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler). The merger was originally intended to be a three-way merger, with Packard being the number three. Mason had first discussed the possibility of a merger with Packard president James J. Nance in the late 1940s. Nance insisted that if Packard were to join, then he would have to be the CEO of the new company. Mason fully intended to lead the new company, thus the deal did not go through.[104] Packard acquired Studebaker two months after Nash acquired Hudson.[105]

Mason became CEO and president of the new company and Hudson's president A.E. Barit retired to become an American Motors board member. Mason selected long-time Nash associate and future governor of Michigan, George W. Romney, as vice president. Roy Abernethy, ex-vice president of sales for Willys, was hired to be vice president of sales.

1954–1962: George W. Romney

Following Mason's sudden death on October 8, 1954, Romney took over, reorganizing the company and focusing American Motors' future on a new small car line.[106] Mason's death also allowed Romney to put an end to any further discussions for a merger between American Motors and Studebaker-Packard.

By the end of 1957, the legacy Nash and Hudson brands were completely phased out, and replaced with the Rambler and Metropolitan brands. The company struggled at first, but under Romney, Rambler's sales took off. A Rambler won the 1959 Mobil Economy Run, and by 1960, was the third-most-popular brand of automobile in the United States, behind Ford and Chevrolet.[107][108]

1962–1967: Roy Abernethy

George Romney left American Motors in 1962 to run for governor in Michigan and was replaced as CEO by Roy Abernethy. After two model years (1963 and 1964) of only producing compact cars, Abernethy shifted the focus of American Motors back to larger and more profitable cars such as the Ambassador line from the perceived negative of the Rambler's economy car image. Ambassador sales jumped from 18,647 in 1964 to over 64,000 in 1965. In 1966, they went to more than 71,000.[109] However, the huge costs of developing the new cars and engines meant American Motors now had problems in securing working capital to keep the company going. American Motors sales dropped 20% in the first half of 1966, and the firm reported a fiscal six-month loss of $4.2 million on sales of $479 million. Consequently, Robert B. Evans invested more than $2 million because American Motors's stock was selling for only 60% of the company's net worth; thus, he became its largest stockholder and was named its chairman on June 6, 1966, replacing Richard E. Cross, who continued as a director and chairman of the executive committee.[110] In the quarter ending September 30, 1966, American Motors recorded a loss of $12,648,000 before tax credits and deferred tax assets. In the face of deteriorating financial and market positions, Abernethy "retired" as CEO in 1967, and Evans "resigned" as chairman.

1967–1977: Roy D. Chapin Jr.

Abernethy was replaced by the son of Hudson co-founder Roy D. Chapin, Roy D. Chapin Jr.[111] and Evans was replaced by William V. Luneberg. American Motors' public explanation for the removals was that the two had "stepped aside according to a plan to give a younger team an opportunity to move the company forward".[112]

Chapin took charge to revitalize the company, and designer Dick Teague economized by developing several vehicles from common stampings. While prices and costs were cut, new and more sporty automobiles were introduced, and from 1968, American Motors became known for the Javelin and AMX muscle cars.

American Motors purchased Kaiser's Jeep utility-vehicle operations in 1970 to complement its existing passenger-car business. Beginning in the early 1970s, the company moved towards all-new compact car designs based on the Hornet, including the Hornet itself and the Gremlin. Other new models in the 1970s included the Matador and Pacer.

1977–1982: Gerald C. Meyers

A major management transition at American Motors started on May 24, 1977, then Meyers was named president and chief operating officer, succeeding the retiring William Luneburg. Upon the retirement of Chapin on October 21, 1977, Gerald C. Meyers, former president and COO, became chairman and CEO.[113][66] At the time, Meyers was 49 years old, and became the youngest top executive in the automobile industry.[114] "The company was looking for a lot more than a steady hand on the tiller — it was looking for a savior", but Meyers disagreed and argued that the company could survive and remain a factor in the automobile industry by abandoning its policy of head-on competition and instead focusing on and revamping its four-wheel drive vehicles, a market segment left untended by the large automakers, and by acquiring advanced technology.[115]

Sagging sales and tight finances resulted in the elimination of the Matador line in the 1979 model year and the Pacer line in 1980, leaving American Motors to focus almost exclusively on its Hornet platform-based cars and the Jeep line. Hornet derivatives of the late 1970s included the Spirit and Concord, while the innovative four-wheel drive AMC Eagle introduced in 1979 was one of the first true crossovers.

From 1980, American Motors partnered with France's Renault to help finance their manufacturing operations, obtain much-needed capital, and source subcompact vehicles.

1982–1984: W. Paul Tippett Jr.

At age 53, Meyers retired from the company in February 1982, by which time Renault controlled 46% of American Motors.[116] He was with the automaker 20 years, and was noted for orchestrating the linkup between American Motors and Renault starting in 1979.[117] Meyers was succeeded as chairman by former American Motors president W. Paul Tippett Jr.[118] At the time, Tippett was a member of American Motors management for only three years.[117] Jose J. Dedeurwaerder, a Renault manager, became the new president of American Motors.

After the 1983 model year, American Motors focused entirely on four-wheel drive autos; the company stopped producing two-wheel drive cars. American Motors facilities were used to produce the Renault-branded Alliance and Encore compact and subcompact cars. In September 1984, Paul Tippet left American Motors as CEO and was replaced by Jose J. Dedeurwaerder.[119][120]

1984–1986: Jose J. Dedeurwaerder

In 1985, Chrysler entered an agreement with American Motors to produce Dodge Diplomats and Plymouth Furys, as well as Dodge Omnis and Plymouth Horizons in American Motors' Kenosha, Wisconsin, plant. At the time, American Motors had excess manufacturing capacity.

1986–1987: Joe Cappy

In 1987, after further new-vehicle development that included the Medallion (a rebadged Renault 21) and Giorgetto Giugiaro's Italian-designed new full-sized front-wheel drive sedan that became the Eagle Premier,[121][122] Renault sold its 47% ownership stake in American Motors to Chrysler, which made a public offer to purchase all the remaining outstanding shares of American Motors stock. American Motors was acquired by Chrysler in August 1987. The primary task of Chrysler management was to integrate the two companies as quickly as possible. American Motors' final CEO, Joe Cappy, was tasked with achieving this by Chrysler president Gerald Greenwald.[123]

Renault left the U.S. market completely as a brand in 1987, thus the Renault Medallion was sold through the newly formed Jeep-Eagle division of Chrysler as an Eagle, not a Renault. The Jeep-Eagle division was formed from the American Motors Jeep Renault dealer network. The Jeep and Eagle vehicles were marketed primarily by former American Motors dealers. The American Motors badge was last used on the Eagle Sports Wagon through the 1988 model year, then eliminated entirely, and the Eagle car brand was phased out by 1998.

Business legacy

American Motors was forced to constantly innovate for 33 years until Chrysler absorbed it in 1987. The lessons learned from this experience were integrated into the company that bought American Motors. The organization, strategies, as well as several key executives, allowed Chrysler to gain an edge on the competition. Even today, the lessons gained from the American Motors experience continue to provide benefits to other firms in the industry. There are a number of legacies from American Motors's business strategies.

American Motors had the ability to formulate strategies that were often evaluated by industry critics as "strokes of brilliance".[124] According to Roy D. Chapin Jr., American Motors realized they were up against the giants of the industry, so to compete successfully they had to be able to move quickly and with ingenuity.[124] An essential strategy practiced by American Motors was to rely on outside vendors to supply components in which they had differential advantages. This approach was finally accepted within the U.S. auto industry, but only after each of the Big Three experienced the failure of attempting to be self-sufficient.

The smallest domestic automaker did not have "the massive R&D budgets of General Motors, Ford, and foreign competitors … thus American Motors placed R&D emphasis on bolstering the product life cycle of its prime products (particularly Jeeps)."[125] In 1985, American Motors originated product lifecycle management (PLM) as a strategic business approach according to Sidney Hill Jr., executive editor for Manufacturing Business Technology,[126] in an effort to better compete against its much larger rivals by ramping up its product development process.[127]

Another example of American Motors' agility was the ability of management to squeeze money out of reluctant bankers, even in the face of bankruptcy. These core abilities helped save the company from collapse, and after each obstacle, give it the wherewithal to keep it operating. Ironically, American Motors was never stronger than just before its demise.[124]

American Motors' managers anticipated important trends in the automotive industry.[128] It preached fuel efficiency in the 1950s, long before most auto buyers demanded it. Led by American Motors' Rambler and several European cars, the small car innovation reduced the Big Three's market share from 93% in 1957 to 82% in 1959.[129] The company inherited foreign manufacturing and sales partnerships from Nash and continued developing business relations, decades before most of the international consolidations among automobile makers took place. American Motors was the first U.S. automaker to establish an ownership agreement with a foreign automaker, Renault.

Although small in size, American Motors was able to introduce numerous industry innovations. Starting in 1957, American Motors was the only U.S. manufacturer to totally immerse all automobile bodies in primer paint for protection against rust, until competitors adopted the practice in 1964.[130] Even one of American Motors's most expensive new product investments (the Pacer) established many features that were later adopted by the auto industry worldwide.[131] These included aerodynamic body design, space-efficient interiors, aircraft-style doors, and a large greenhouse for visibility. American Motors was also effective in other areas such as marketing by introducing low-rate financing. American Motors' four-wheel-drive vehicles established the foundation for the modern SUV market segments, and "classic" Jeep models continue to be the benchmark in this field. Roy D. Chapin drew on his experiences as a hunter and fisherman and marketed the Jeep brand successfully to people with like interests. The brand developed a cult appeal that continues.[132]

The purchase of American Motors was instrumental in reviving Chrysler. According to Robert Lutz, former president of Chrysler, the American Motors acquisition was a big and risky undertaking.[133] The purchase was part of Chrysler's strategic "retreat-cum-diversification" plan that he states did not have the right focus. Initially, the goal was to obtain the world-renowned Jeep brand. However, Lutz discovered that the decision to buy American Motors turned out to be a gold mine for Chrysler.[134] At that time, Chrysler's management was attempting to find a model to improve structure and operations, "something that would help get our minds unstuck and thinking beyond the old paradigms that we were so familiar with".[135] In this transformation, "Chrysler's acquisition of AMC was one of the all-time great moments in corporate serendipity" according to Lutz " that most definitely played a key role in demonstrating how to accomplish change".[135]

According to Lutz (1993), while American Motors had its share of problems, it was far from being a bunch of "brain-dead losers". He describes the "troops" at American Motors as more like the Wake Island Marines in battle, "with almost no resources, and fighting a vastly superior enemy, they were able to roll out an impressive succession of new products".[136] After first reacting with anger to the purchase, Chrysler managers soon anticipated the benefits. To further solidify the organizational competencies held by American Motors, Lee Iacocca agreed to retain former American Motors units, such as engineering, completely intact. In addition, American Motors' lead engineer, François Castaing, was made head of all engineering at Chrysler. In an unthinkable strategic move, Castaing completely dismantled the entrenched Chrysler groups. In their place, American Motors's "platform team" was implemented. These were close-knit cross-functional groups responsible for the whole vehicle, as contrasted with Chrysler's highly functional structure. In this capacity, Castaing's strategy was to eliminate the corporate administrative overhead bureaucracy. This move shifted corporate culture and agitated veteran executives who believed that Chrysler's reputation as "the engineering company" was being destroyed. Yet, according to the popular press, by the 1980s Chrysler's reputation was totally shot, and in Lutz's view, only dramatic action was going to change that.[136] In summary, Chrysler's purchase of American Motors laid the critical foundation to help re-establish a strategy for its revival in the 1990s.

Top managers at Chrysler after the AMC buyout appeared to have made errors similar to those by American Motors. For example, Chrysler invested heavily in new untested models while not keeping up its profitable high-volume lines.

The American Motors influence also continued at General Motors. GM recruited a new executive team to turn itself from near bankruptcy in the early 2000s. Among the new strategists at GM was Lutz, who brought an understanding of the importance of passion in product design. Lutz implemented a new thinking at GM that incorporated the systems and structures that originated from American Motors's lean and focused operations.[137]

Renault implemented the lessons it learned from its investment in American Motors. The French firm took a parallel approach as it did with its initial ownership of American Motors and applied it to resurrect the money-losing Nissan automaker in Japan.[138]

In 2009, in a deal brokered by the Obama administration, Italian automaker Fiat initiated a white knight takeover of Chrysler to save the struggling automaker from liquidation. The deal was immediately compared to the American Motors-Renault deal; some commentators noted the irony in that Chrysler now faced the same fate that American Motors faced 30 years earlier, while others expressed skepticism of whether the Italian firm could save Chrysler, given how the Renault deal failed. However, there were key differences between the two:

  • Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne became CEO of Chrysler as part of the deal and immediately began globally integrating Fiat and Chrysler's assets and product lines.
  • The Fiat-Chrysler merger did not face the political opposition the American Motors-Renault deal did since Fiat is led by a family group with significant equity and the US government supported the merger.
  • While American Motors proved to be a continuous money-loser for Renault, Chrysler returned to profitability fairly quickly and has since become an important source of revenue and profits for Fiat, which has been struggling to maintain volume and profitability amid the European debt crisis.

The two firms would later fully merge to create Fiat Chrysler Automobiles in 2014, and would further merge with the French firm PSA Group, owners of the Citroën and Peugeot brands, to form Stellantis in 2021.[139]

Legacy of products

Passenger automobiles

 
Eagle Premier

Chrysler revived the "Spirit" name that was discontinued by AMC after 1983 for use on one of its A platform cars, (the Dodge Spirit) from 1989 until 1995. The planned Renault Medallion was sold as the Eagle Medallion in 1988 and 1989. The planned all-new 1988 Renault Premier, a joint development effort between American Motors and Renault, and for which the Brampton Assembly plant (Brampton, Ontario—originally called the Bramalea Plant) was built, was sold by Chrysler as the 1988–1992 Eagle Premier, with a rebadged Dodge Monaco variant available from 1990 through 1992. The full-sized Premier's platform was far more advanced than anything Chrysler was building at the time. After some re-engineering and a re-designation to Chrysler code LH, the Eagle Premier went on to form the backbone of Chrysler's passenger car lineup during the 1990s as the Chrysler Concorde (a revived model name that was briefly used by Plymouth in 1951 and 1952), Chrysler New Yorker, Chrysler LHS, Dodge Intrepid, and Eagle Vision.[140] Plymouth almost received their own rendition of the LH platform, which was to be called the Accolade, but Chrysler decided to nix this idea not long before LH production started. The Chrysler 300M was likewise a Premier/LH-derived car and was initially to have been the next-generation Eagle Vision until the Eagle brand was dropped after 1998. The LH Platform was subsequently re-engineered, using Mercedes-Benz components, into the Chrysler LX Platform, which remains in production today underpinning the Chrysler 300, Dodge Charger, and Dodge Challenger.

Jeep vehicles

 
Jeep Comanche

Chrysler marketed the SJ Jeep Grand Wagoneer until 1991, leaving it almost entirely unaltered from the final American Motors rendition before the buyout. The Jeep Comanche pickup truck remained until 1992, while the Cherokee remained until 2001 in the United States. The XJ Cherokee was produced in China through 2006 as the Cherokee 2500[141] (2.5L) and Cherokee 4000 (4.0L). Although it was not introduced until 1993, the Jeep Grand Cherokee was initially an American Motors-developed vehicle.

Traces of American Motors remained within. American Motors' Toledo, Ohio, plants continued to manufacture the Jeep Wrangler and Liberty, as well as parts and components for Chrysler, Dodge, and Jeep vehicles (although Toledo Machining and Forge were closed in 2005). American Motors' main plant in Wisconsin, albeit heavily downsized, operated as the Kenosha Engine Plant, producing engines for several Chrysler Group products, including the Wrangler. The plant was closed as part of the post-bailout restructuring of Chrysler in October 2010. The 4.0 litres (242 cu in) engine was used until the 2006 model year by DaimlerChrysler in the Jeep Wrangler. American Motors' technologically advanced Bramalea Assembly and Stamping Plants in Brampton, Ontario, later produced the LX-cars – the Chrysler 300, Dodge Challenger, Dodge Charger, and the now discontinued Dodge Magnum.

In terms of American Motors-related parts, some were used as late as 2006, when the Jeep Wrangler (the last new product introduced by American Motors before the Chrysler deal) was still using the AMC Straight-6 engine in some models, as well as the recessed "paddle" door handles that were used since the 1968 model year by American Motors. Both were retired when the Wrangler was completely redesigned for the 2007 model year.

AM General, sold by American Motors in 1983, is still in business building the American Motors-designed Humvee for American and allied militaries. AM General also built the now-discontinued civilian variant, the H1, and manufactured a Chevrolet Tahoe-derived companion, the H2, under contract to GM, who acquired the rights to the civilian Hummer brand in 1999. GM was forced to phase out the Hummer brand in early 2010 as a part of its bankruptcy restructuring after offering it for sale, but failing to find a suitable buyer.

Although Chrysler introduced new logos for its brands in the 1990s and again in 2010 after the Fiat Group took control of the company, Jeep still uses the American Motors-era logo introduced shortly after American Motors' purchase of the brand in 1970. Until the Chrysler purchase, Jeep's logo also featured the American Motors emblem.

International legacy

Beginning in 1960, American Motors' executive vice president of international operations Roy D. Chapin Jr. embarked on a strong international campaign to set up importation and local assembly operations of American Motors vehicles around the world. In five years, Chapin increased foreign sales to 73,489 cars which at the same time grew AMC's share of the U.S. export market from 2.5 percent to 14.3 percent. Chapin successfully established or re-established vehicle assembly operations in Argentina, Australia, Belgium (via Renault of France), Chile, Costa Rica, Germany, Iran, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Philippines, South Africa, and Venezuela. He also strengthened international export operations with exports to the United Kingdom, Denmark,[142] Finland, Iceland, and Norway[143] in Europe, and to countries in the Middle East, the Caribbean, and South America. The Rambler Classic would even become the basis of Argentina's future national car, the Torino. After becoming CEO in 1967, Chapin organized the acquisition of Kaiser Jeep from Kaiser Industries in 1970, with American Motors thereby inheriting all existing international Jeep operations. These helped sustain American Motors during the 1970s and 1980s.

While the Rambler marque had been dropped in the United States after the 1969 model year, all export markets retained the Rambler name, with the longest to retain it being Mexico until 1983.[144][145]

  Argentina

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Ambassador, Classic (from 1964), Jeep
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Ambassador, Classic (1962–1963)[146]

  Australia

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Rambler Six, Rambler V8, Ambassador (1961–1963), Classic, American, Rebel (sedan and wagon), Matador (sedan and wagon), Javelin (1968–1972), AMX (1969 model only), Hornet (sedan), Matador Coupe X (1974 model only, assembled in 1976), Jeep (1980–1984)[147]
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Classic (hardtop), Ambassador (1970 only)

  Canada

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Rambler Six (1957 only), Classic, American, Ambassador (until 1968), Rebel, Hornet, Gremlin, Concord, Jeep, Eagle, Spirit
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Rambler Six, Rambler V8, Metropolitan (from U.K), Ambassador (after 1968), Matador, Javelin, AMX

  Chile

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Classic
  • American Motors vehicles imported: N/A

  Costa Rica

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Classic (from 1965), American (from 1965), Ambassador (from 1965), Rebel, Matador, Javelin, Hornet, Sportabout, Jeep
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Rambler Six, Rambler V8, Ambassador (until 1965), Classic (until 1965), American (until 1965)

  Egypt

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Jeep (from 1978)
  • American Motors vehicles imported: N/A

  Finland

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: N/A
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Classic, American, Ambassador, Rebel, Javelin, Hornet, Matador, Jeep[148]

  France

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Classic, Rebel (1967 only)
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Jeep (by Renault 1980–1986), Javelin, Pacer (by private importer-distributors)

  Germany

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Javelin (by Karmann)
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Ambassador (from 1969), Rebel (from 1969), AMX (from 1969), Jeep (from 1977), Eagle[149][150]

  India

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Jeep
  • American Motors vehicles imported: N/A

  Iran

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: American, Jeep
  • American Motors vehicles imported: N/A

  Japan

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Jeep[151]
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Eagle (1985–1989), Jeep Cherokee (XJ)[152]

  Mexico

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Rambler Six, Rambler V8, Ambassador (1959 only), American, Classic, Rebel (sedan), Matador, Javelin, AMX, Hornet, Matador Coupe X, Gremlin, Pacer, Spirit, Jeep
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Rambler Six (1957–1958), Rambler V8 (1957–1958)

  New Zealand

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Rambler Six, Rambler V8, Classic, Rebel (sedan), Jeep
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Metropolitan, Rebel (wagon), Rebel (hardtop), Ambassador (1970 only)

  Norway

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: N/A
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Ambassador, Classic, American, Rebel

  People's Republic of China

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Jeep (from 1984)[153]
  • American Motors vehicles imported: N/A

  Peru

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Classic, American, Rebel
  • American Motors vehicles imported: N/A

  Philippines

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Classic, American, Javelin
  • American Motors vehicles imported: N/A

  Switzerland

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: N/A
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Gremlin, Javelin, Pacer, Jeep[154][155]

  South Africa

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: American, Hornet[156]
  • American Motors vehicles imported: N/A

  South Korea

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Jeep (1974–1981)
  • American Motors vehicles imported: N/A

  Spain

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Jeep
  • American Motors vehicles imported: N/A

  Venezuela

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Classic, Javelin, Hornet, Jeep
  • American Motors vehicles imported: N/A

  United Kingdom

  • American Motors vehicles assembled: Metropolitan (by Austin)
  • American Motors vehicles imported: Rambler Six, Rambler V8, Classic, Rebel, Ambassador, Matador, Javelin, Pacer (locally converted to RHD), Gremlin (locally converted to RHD)

Legacy of divisions and facilities

Former brands and divisions

During its history, American Motors bought or created, then later sold and divested itself of several specialized divisions, some of which continue to exist today:

Kelvinator, the subdivision of Nash-Kelvinator, was sold by American Motors in 1968 to White Consolidated Industries and subsequently became part of Electrolux.[157] The Kelvinator Company is still in business.

Jeep is a brand under Stellantis. It was a brand of the Fiat Chrysler Automobiles until January 16, 2021. Many Jeep models retained the mechanical specifications and styling cues that were developed by American Motors well into the 1990s or even into the first decade of the 2000s.

AM General is now owned by KPS Capital Partners. It was organized as an LLC in August 2004.

Wheel Horse Products Division is now owned by the Toro Company.

Beijing Jeep was established by American Motors in 1984 to produce Jeeps for the burgeoning Chinese market; the joint venture was inherited by Chrysler and is currently owned by Mercedes-Benz Group, which renamed it Beijing Benz. American Motors' trials with the venture were the subject of a book on the venture, "Beijing Jeep", by James Mann.

Facilities

American Motors World Headquarters (1954–1975)[158] was located at 14250 Plymouth Road in Detroit and was widely known as the Plymouth Road Office Center (PROC). In 1975, American Motors moved its headquarters from the facility on Plymouth Road to a newly constructed building on Northwestern Highway in Southfield, Michigan, known as the American Center.

The initial building had been built during 1926–27 by the Electric Refrigeration Corporation (subsequently Nash-Kelvinator) with design by Amedeo Leoni, industrial layout by Wallace McKenzie, and tower enclosure and industrial units by William E. Kapp, of SHG. The original 600,000 sq ft (56,000 m2) three-story factory and four-story administration building had been headquarters to Nash-Kelvinator from 1937 until 1954 as well as a factory for refrigerators, electric ranges, and commercial refrigeration—as well as airplane propellers for the U.S. military effort during World War II.

During World War II, the U.S. War Department contracted with Nash-Kelvinator to produce 900 Sikorsky R-6 model helicopters. As part of that contract, a 4.5 acres (1.8 ha) site north of the factory was used as the smallest airport in the world[citation needed] as a flight testing base. Nash-Kelvinator produced about 50 R-6s a month during the war. When the contract was terminated at the end of the war, a total of 262 helicopters had been constructed.

During Chrysler's occupancy of the complex, it was known as Jeep and (Dodge) Truck Engineering (JTE), including facilities for body-on-frame work as well as testing facilities and labs. The buildings included 1,500,000 square feet (140,000 m2), approximately one-third devoted to engineering and computer functions.[159]

As of 2007, Chrysler still employed over 1,600 people at the complex, moving those operations in mid-2009 to the Chrysler Technology Center. PROC was made available for sale by Chrysler in early 2010.[160] It was bought by a local man who gutted the building for scrap and left it in a dilapidated state before losing it to foreclosure.[161] The abandoned building was in possession of the city of Detroit and officials were considering if the industrial site would be more marketable if the building was torn down.[162][163] In 2018, the Wayne County Commission approved a land swap that included a new jail complex for the county as well as a potential revival for the old American Motors building.[164]

  • American Center – American Motors' corporate headquarters in Southfield, Michigan, is still standing,[165] still open, and still called "American Center". The original "American Center" signage at the top of the building remained until 2005, although the American Motors logo has been removed. The signage has since been changed to Charter One. The 25-story building is rented to several different organizations and companies as office space. After the Chrysler acquisition, Chrysler Financial occupied as much as 175,000 square feet (16,300 m2) of the building.[166]
  • Toledo South Assembly Plants – Torn down by Chrysler in 2007. Until it was demolished, still visible on most of the signage on the outside of the factories were areas where Chrysler painted over the American Motors logo.
  • Toledo Forge[167] – Torn down by Chrysler in 2007.
  • Brampton (formerly Bramalea) Assembly and Satellite Stamping Plants[168][169] – Still in use by Chrysler. American Motors designed this US$260 million (US$678,148,623 in 2021 dollars[19]), 2,500,000-square-foot (230,000 m2) plant, which was operational by 1986.[170] This plant was designed and built by American Motors for the specific purpose of building the Eagle Premier. Like the older Brampton plant, this factory was also part of American Motors (Canada) Ltd., and with the Chrysler buyout in 1987, it became part of Chrysler Canada Limited. The plant currently builds the LX series of vehicles, including the Chrysler 300 and the Dodge Charger. It also produces a slightly modified version of the LX series (renamed the LC series) supporting the Dodge Challenger nameplate.
  • Kenosha "Main" Plant – Portions of the Kenosha Main Plant (later Chrysler's Kenosha Engine plant with some new additions) at 52nd Street and 30th Avenue continued to be run by Chrysler as an engine-production factory. This plant closed in October 2010[171] as part of Chrysler LLC's Chapter 11 bankruptcy procedure which resulted from the automotive industry crisis.[172] Demolition of the plant began in early December 2012.[173]
  • Canadian Fabricated Products Ltd. – An American Motors division (part of American Motors of Canada) in Stratford, Ontario; established in 1971 and sold post-buyout by Chrysler in 1994; produced automotive interior trim.[174]
  • Guelph Products – An American Motors division (also part of American Motors of Canada) in Guelph, Ontario; opened in 1987, and subsequently sold by Chrysler in early 1993; the operation supplied molded plastic components to the Brampton Assembly Plant.[174]
  • Coleman Products Corporation – An American Motors subsidiary in Coleman, Wisconsin. Manufactured automotive wiring harnesses for American Motors and other automakers.
  • Evart Products Co. – An American Motors subsidiary in Evart, Michigan. The plant was established in 1953 with 25 workers and eventually expanded to over 1,200, becoming Osceola County's largest employer.[175] This factory manufactured injection molded plastic parts (notably, grilles) for American Motors (supplying 90% of in-house needs[176]), as well as for other automakers. In 1966, Products Wire Harness was built. After Chrysler's purchase of American Motors, Collins & Aikman took over the factory.[175]
  • Mercury Plastics Co. – Mercury Plastics operated a plant at 34501 Harper Ave., Mt. Clemens, Michigan. The company was acquired in 1973 for 611,111 shares of American Motors stock.[177] The company produced plastic parts for American Motors, as well as for uses in other industries.
  • Windsor Plastics Co. – Windsor Plastics, 601 North Congress Avenue, Evansville, Indiana, was acquired in 1970. The division produced plastic parts for American Motors and other industries. The company was sold to Guardian Industries in 1982, and underwent a name change to Guardian Automotive Trim, Inc. It is still in operation today. The original factory in Evansville continues to manufacture plastic parts for the OEM and aftermarket automotive industries. Items manufactured include grilles, bezels, and other parts.[178]
  • The American Motors Proving Grounds – The former 300 acres (1.2 km2; 0.47 sq mi) American Motors Proving Grounds in Burlington, Wisconsin, had initially been Nash's test track and subsequently became Jeep's test facilities (after American Motors acquired Kaiser Jeep in the 1970s). The grounds fell into disuse after Chrysler's takeover of American Motors in 1987 and subsequently became the engineering and test facility for MGA Research.[179] The company rents out this proving grounds to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), for "ride-and-drive" events by automakers, as well as for movies and commercials.[180]
  • Axle tooling equipment – Sold in 1985 to Dana Holding Corporation, and they named the AMC-15 axles as Dana 35.[181] Dana manufactured the AMC-20 axles for AM General's Hummer H1. The company also continues to produce the AMC-15 axle as well; however they have been upgraded from American Motors' original design with multiple variations (including front axle designs).
  • Holmes Foundry, Ltd. – American Motors' block-casting foundry was a major American Motors factory which is now obliterated. Holmes had its main office and foundry at 200 Exmouth Street, Sarnia, Ontario, Canada. Holmes was established in 1918 by J. S. Blunt, and was called Holmes Blunt Limited. In the early years, Ford Motor Company contracted the plant for a steady supply of engine casting blocks. This factory had a reputation locally as a dirty, dangerous place to work. The company had three divisions, all operating on one site at the edge of Sarnia. Beginning in 1962, American Motors contracted with Holmes Foundry to supply American Motors with cylinder block castings.[182] American Motors acquired 25% interest in the foundry in January 1966. In July 1970, American Motors acquired 100% of Holmes Foundry through an exchange of shares, making it a wholly-owned subsidiary.[183] However, it was not until October 1981 that Holmes Foundry finally became a division of American Motors of Canada. As part of its acquisition of American Motors in 1987, Chrysler Corporation took ownership of the Holmes facility and its manufacturing business but closed the operation on September 16, 1988. The industrial facilities were cleaned of their environmental contaminants in 2005, in preparation for a new highway interchange to be built on the site.[184]
  • Kenosha "Lakefront" (Kenosha, Wisconsin) Plant – The American Motors plant in downtown Kenosha along Lake Michigan was razed, and after reclamation the land was used for new development. At the company's inception in 1954, the plant covered 3,195,000 sq ft (296,800 m2) and together with the Milwaukee plant had an annual production capacity of 350,000 cars.[185]
  • Milwaukee Body (Milwaukee, Wisconsin) Plant – American Motors inherited a 1,600,000 sq ft (150,000 m2)[185] body plant in Milwaukee from Nash. The plant was the main body plant for Seaman Body Company, which did a lot of business with Nash and other makers assembling bodies of various designs. For American Motors, the plant was sometimes an internal headache. For instance, in late 1961, George Romney himself stormed through the plant and threatened to close it and eliminate its 9,000 jobs due to labor problems.[186] The plant survived until the Chrysler buyout. Chrysler later decided to dispose of the factory. Upon closure, the site was named a Superfund site. The factory was demolished and the site was rehabilitated and redeveloped.
  • Danforth Ave (Toronto, Ontario) Plant – Inherited from Nash. This plant was purchased by Nash from Ford of Canada in 1946. The first Canadian-built Nash rolled off the line in April 1950. Upon the formation of American Motors in 1954, the plant assembled 1955 Nash and Hudson Ramblers (2 and 4-door sedans), as well as Nash Canadian Statesman and Hudson Wasp (4-door sedans). In 1956, the plant continued to assemble the Nash and Hudson Rambler (4-door sedans and wagons) as well as the Nash Canadian Statesman (4-door sedan), but the Hudson Wasp was imported. That same year, American Motors (Canada) Limited was formed – taking over Nash Motors of Canada Limited and Hudson Motors of Canada Limited. In 1957, American Motors assembled the Rambler Six and Rambler Rebel V8 at the Danforth plant; but in July 1957, American Motors closed the plant and imported Ramblers into Canada until 1961. The structure remains today as the Shoppers World Danforth Lowe's store.
  • Tilbury, Ontario Assembly Plant – Another plant American Motors inherited from the 1954 merger, this one via Hudson. Specifically, it was a contract with CHATCO Steel Products, which actually owned the plant. American Motors ceased Hudson production at the Tilbury plant in 1955.
  • Brampton Assembly Plant – American Motors opened a plant in 1960 in Brampton, Ontario, Canada. It was part of American Motors of Canada. Rambler Drive, a small street just west of this plant, still exists and leads into a residential subdivision that was built in the 1960s. In 1987, with the Chrysler buyout, the division and the plant were absorbed as well, becoming part of Chrysler Canada Limited. The plant was closed in 1994 and sold to Wal-Mart for use as their Canadian warehouse. This plant/warehouse was demolished in 2004 and redeveloped in 2007 with multiple smaller commercial buildings now onsite; a new Lowes Home Improvement Warehouse now takes up the largest section of this commercial development. Note that this is a separate facility from the current Brampton (formerly Bramalea) Assembly and Satellite Stamping Plants nearby.
  • South Charleston Stamping Plant – A South Charleston, West Virginia, facility. While American Motors leased it, the plant stamped steel automotive parts. In 1978, Volkswagen of America purchased the plant[187] to supply stampings for its Westmoreland Assembly Plant, subsequently selling the plant when it closed Westmoreland in 1988[188] to Park Corporation of Cleveland, OH. In October 2006, its recent tenant, Union Stamping and Assembly, declared bankruptcy.[189]

Former subsidiaries and affiliates

  • AM General
  • Arab American Vehicles
  • Beijing Jeep
  • Shinjin Jeep Motors
  • Vehículos Automotores Mexicanos
  • American Motors Sales Corp.
  • American Motors Realty Corp.
  • American Motors Leasing Corp.
  • Evart Production Co.
  • Coleman Products Co.
  • American Motors Pan American Corp.
  • Jeep Corp.
  • McDonald Molding, Inc.
  • Mercury Plastics Co.
  • Rantoul Products, Inc.
  • American Motors (Canada) Ltd.
  • Rambler Motors (A.M.C.) Ltd. (United Kingdom)
  • American Motors Corporation de Venezuela, C.A.
  • American Motors Financial Corp.
  • Jeep Australia Pty. Ltd.
  • Jeep de Venezuela S.A.

Earlier use of the name

The era of 1900 until 1925 saw various corporations, in several U.S. states, use similar "American" names, such as American Motor Carriage Company (Ohio, 1902–1903), American Automobile Manufacturing Company (Indiana, 1911–1912), and American Motors Incorporated (New York, 1919–1920).[190] In 1916, an earlier "American Motors Corporation", apparently unrelated to the more famous later corporation of the same name, was formed in Newark, New Jersey, with Louis Chevrolet as vice president and chief engineer.[191] By 1918, it was producing cars in a plant at Plainfield, New Jersey.[192] In 1923, it merged with the Bessemer Motor Truck Company of Pennsylvania into Bessemer–American Motors Corporation, which lasted less than a year before merging with the Winther and Northway companies into Amalgamated Motors. The latter company apparently ceased soon after.

Later reuse of the trademark

A new company was formed in Palmdale, California, in 2001. Registration for the American Motors trademarks was filed in 2001 by this California-based firm.[193] The company's website specifically claimed no affiliation to the previous American Motors but used American Motors' history and logos on its website.[194] The website is now dead, and the company's claims to American Motors' trademarks expired in 2005.[193]

The new Chrysler LLC holds a live registration for the name "American Motors", which was applied for in 2005.[195] The "AMC" wordmark, complete with "A-mark" graphic logo, as was originally used in 1970[196] and through the late-1980s, was registered and published for comment by Chrysler as of 2010.[197]

American Motors passenger cars

 
1969 SC/Rambler
 
1982 Eagle SX/4
 
1957 Rambler Rebel
 
1970 The Machine
 
1976 Matador coupe
 
1971 Ambassador
 
1974 Ambassador
Subcompact

* – The Metropolitan was introduced by Nash in 1954.
** – The Gremlin was the company's first modern subcompact.

Compact
Crossover
Mid-size
Full-size

American Motors engines

 
199 six-cylinder
 
343 4-bbl V8
 
390 Go Pac V8
  • 1954–1956:
    • 184 cu in (3.0 L) Nash I6 (Rambler)
    • 196 cu in (3.2 L) Nash L head I6 (Rambler/AMC I6)
    • 252 cu in (4.1 L) Nash I6
    • 320 cu in (5.2 L) Packard built V8
    • 352 cu in (5.8 L) Packard built V8 (Used only 1956)
  • 1956–1966:
    • 196 cu in (3.2 L) Rambler I6/AMC I6 (L head and OHV version-ended 1965)
    • 199 cu in (3.3 L) Typhoon Six I6 (Starting in 1966)
    • 232 cu in (3.8 L) Typhoon Six I6 (Beginning in 1964)
    • 250 cu in (4.1 L) AMC V8 (Ending in 1961)
    • 287 cu in (4.7 L) AMC V8 (Beginning in 1963)
    • 327 cu in (5.4 L) AMC V8 (Also used by Kaiser Jeep 1965–1967)
  • 1967–1970:
    • 199 cu in (3.3 L) Typhoon Six I6
    • 232 cu in (3.8 L) Typhoon Six I6
    • 290 cu in (4.8 L) AMC V8 (Ending in 1969)
    • 304 cu in (5.0 L) AMC V8 (Beginning in 1970)
    • 343 cu in (5.6 L) AMC V8 (Ending in 1969)
    • 360 cu in (5.9 L) AMC V8 (Beginning in 1970)
    • 390 cu in (6.4 L) AMC V8
  • 1971–1980:
    • 121 cu in (2.0 L) AMC I4 1
    • 232 cu in (3.8 L) AMC I6
    • 258 cu in (4.2 L) AMC I6
    • 304 cu in (5.0 L) AMC V8
    • 360 cu in (5.9 L) AMC V8 (Ending in 1978 for automobiles and through 1991 in Jeeps)
    • 401 cu in (6.6 L) AMC V8 (Ending in 1974 as a regular production order in automobiles; was available in fleet/police use until at least 1975. In 1975, 89 units were installed in Matadors; 4 coupes and 85 sedans-wagons. Available in full-size Jeeps through 1979, also used by International Harvester in 1974 in 1200 series pickups and the Travelall during a strike at International Harvester, though IH called the engine a 400 CID.)
  • 1980–1983:
  • 1984–1986:
  • 1987:
    • 2.5 litres (150 cu in) AMC I4
    • 258 cu in (4.2 L) AMC I6
    • 4.0 litres (242 cu in) AMC I6
  • 1988–1989:
    • 2.5 litres (150 cu in) AMC I4
    • 258 cu in (4.2 L) AMC I6
    • 3.0 litres (183 cu in) PRV V6

Also: Kaiser Jeeps used the AMC 327, Buick 225 ("Dauntless V6"), Buick 350 ("Dauntless V8"), Willys 134 I4 ("Hurricane"). The downsized Jeep XJ Cherokee/Wagoneer used the Chevrolet 2.8 Litre V6 in 1983–1984.

American Motors contracted with Volkswagen to buy tooling for the Audi 2.0 L OHC I4. Major parts (block, crankshaft, head assembly) were initially purchased from Audi and shipped to the U.S. where final assembly was accomplished by American Motors at a plant purchased specifically for the production of this engine. Sales never reached numbers to justify taking over total production. American Motors made several changes to the engine. They were prevented from using the Volkswagen or Audi names in association with the American Motors assembled version by contractual agreement.

Collectibility

 
Javelin with "Go" package
 
Ambassador hardtop wagon
 
Rambler American convertible

American Motors models historically regarded by hobbyists as particularly "collectible" include the Javelin, AMX, and performance specials such as the 1957 Rambler Rebel, 1965–67 Marlin, 1969 Hurst SC/Rambler, 1970 Rebel Machine, and 1971 Hornet SC/360. These models enjoyed limited popularity when new, resulting in low production figures.[198] In January 2007, the AMC AMX was "really taking off in the muscle car market" according to the editors of Hemmings Classic Car, and it had "left its mark among AMC collectors' minds as a great alternative" to higher-priced Hemi-powered muscle cars.[199]

The early Javelin (1968–70) stands out from the Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler pony cars.[200] Car expert Jack Nerad noted in a 2007 article "several fully restored AMX models" listed for sale at "little more than half the price of a comparable Buick Gran Sport, Chevrolet Chevelle, Olds 4-4-2 or Pontiac GTO" in support of the author's opinion that the 1971–74 Javelin was "clearly an outstanding alternative muscle car for the enthusiast on a budget."[201]

According to James C. Mays, automotive historian and author of The Savvy Guide to Buying Collector Cars at Auction, the "Wow! Factor" is an important and measurable pleasure to an owner whether their car is driven or sits in a climate-controlled garage.[202] His "Wow! Factor" includes examples of a bright red 1969 AMX that according to its owner "is just a fast Rambler", but draws more people at events than the more prestigious Ferraris and Lamborghinis, as well as a "million-dollar moment" when a Rambler owner was serenaded with the "Beep Beep" song by The Playmates while fueling at a travel plaza.[202] Moreover, the author's collector car, a 1969 Ambassador station wagon, made friends as strangers came to greet and host him as if "long lost kin".[203] Mays points out the ready availability of parts for American Motors engines and his experiences in having service done on Ramblers without being charged for the work in exchange for the experience of driving a "sassy Rambler" (a 1966 American convertible) and having pictures taken with it.[204]

Other American Motors models, once somewhat ignored by the hobby, are now considered "future collectibles". Examples include the 1959 Ambassador 4-door hardtop station wagon, of which only 578 were produced, and the Jeep Scrambler CJ8, a combined pickup truck-Jeep, of which only a few thousand were produced.

Hemmings Classic Car magazine included the 1969–70 Rebel SST and the 1974–78 Matador coupe in their 2008 list of "dollar-for-pound (weight)" cars that could be bought in show-quality condition for a comparatively modest outlay.[205] The writer also noted that "most of AMC's '70s lineup" qualified for inclusion on the list.

The AMC Gremlin is described to have "a cult-like following" in today's collectible car market.[206] The Gremlin shares components with some other American Motors models, making its repair and restoration relatively inexpensive compared with other "historic cars".[206]

The AMC Pacer increased in value according to a Pacer owner who is the CEO of a major insurance provider for collector car owners.[207]

There are active Rambler and American Motors car clubs in the U.S. and elsewhere (examples in External Links).

Hot Rod magazine revival April Fool's joke

In April 2008, Hot Rod magazine released an article claiming that American Motors was in the process of being revived. The vehicles in the works were to be the AMX, Matador, Ambassador, Pacer, and Gremlin. Illustrated with drawings of the concept cars entering production and accompanied by plentiful information, it was a popular article, although it was later revealed to be an April Fools' joke.[208]

See also

References

  1. ^ Georgano, Nick (1996). The American automobile: a centenary. Smithmark. p. 180. ISBN 978-0-7651-9631-6. The day Hudson and Nash boards of directors agreed to the merger
  2. ^ a b "Corporate Entity Details: American Motors Corporation". Michigan Department of Licensing & Regulatory Affairs (LARA). American Motors Corporation (incorporated in Maryland as Nash-Kelvinator Corporation January 4, 1937, renamed American Motors April 30, 1954, and Jeep Eagle Corporation August 25, 1988) was formally merged as of March 29, 1990, with its final annual report filed in 1989
  3. ^ Flory, J. Kelly (2008). American Cars, 1946–1959: Every Model, Year by Year. McFarland. p. 545. ISBN 978-0-7864-5230-9.
  4. ^ "Turnaround at American Motors". Fortune. Vol. 100. 1979. pp. 66–80.
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Bibliography

  • Lutz, Robert A. (1999). Guts: The Seven Laws of Business That Made Chrysler the World's Hottest Car Company. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-35765-0.
  • Mays, James C. (2006). The Savvy Guide to Buying Collector Cars at Auction. Indy-Tech Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7906-1322-2.

Further reading

  • Conde, John A. (1987). The American Motors Family Album. American Motors Corporation. OCLC 3185581.
  • Derdak, Thomas, ed. (1988). International Directory of Company History, Volume 1. St. James Press. ISBN 978-0-912289-10-6.
  • Foster, Patrick (2004). AMC Cars: 1954–1987, An Illustrated History. Motorbooks International. ISBN 978-1-58388-112-5.
  • Foster, Patrick (1993). The Last Independent. Motorbooks International. ISBN 978-0-87341-240-7.
  • Foster, Patrick (1996). The Metropolitan Story. Krause Publications. ISBN 978-0-87341-459-3.
  • Foster, Patrick (1998). The Nash Styling Sketchbook. Olde Milford Press. ISBN 978-0-9662019-0-1.
  • Gunnell, John, ed. (1987). The Standard Catalog of American Cars 1946–1975. Krause Publications. ISBN 978-0-87341-096-0.
  • Gunnell, John, ed. (1993). The Standard Catalog of American Motors 1902–1987. Krause Publications. ISBN 978-0-87341-232-2.
  • Mann, Jim (1997). Beijing Jeep: A Case Study of Western Business in China. Perseus Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8133-3327-4.
  • Mays, James C. (2001). Rambler Canada: The Little Company That Could. Syam Publications. ISBN 978-0-9685864-7-1.
  • Mitchell, Larry (1994). AMC Buyers Guide. Motorbooks International. ISBN 978-0-87938-891-1.
  • Swygert, Francis G. (1992). The Compact Chronicles – A Complete History of American Motors Corporation 1954–1987 (With Restoration Information). FARNA Systems Publishing.
  • Swygert, Francis G. American Motors Cars Magazine (formerly published as "American Independent Magazine"). FARNA Systems Publishing.
  • Zinn, Chris L. (2002). AMX Photo Archive: From Concept to Reality. Iconographix. ISBN 978-1-58388-062-3.

External links

  • The American Motors Owners Association
  • The AMC Rambler Club
  • IMCDB: AMC vehicles in movies & TV shows
  • AMC cars at Curlie

american, motors, corporation, confused, with, american, motors, incorporated, commonly, referred, american, motors, american, automobile, manufacturing, company, formed, merger, nash, kelvinator, corporation, hudson, motor, company, 1954, time, largest, corpo. Not to be confused with American Motors Incorporated American Motors Corporation AMC commonly referred to as American Motors was an American automobile manufacturing company formed by the merger of Nash Kelvinator Corporation and Hudson Motor Car Company on May 1 1954 At the time it was the largest corporate merger in U S history 3 American Motors CorporationLogo from 1970 until 1987IndustryAutomotivePredecessorHudson Motor Car CompanyThomas B Jeffery CompanyNash Kelvinator CorporationKaiser JeepKaiser MotorsWillys OverlandFoundedMay 1 1954 69 years ago 1954 05 01 1 FounderGeorge W MasonDefunctJune 20 1988 34 years ago 1988 06 20 FateAMC was renamed Jeep Eagle Corporation then merged into Chrysler in 1990 2 SuccessorChryslerEagle brand Jeep Eagle CorporationHeadquartersAmerican Center 27777 Franklin Rd Southfield Michigan 48034 U S Key peopleGeorge W RomneyRoy AbernethyRobert B EvansRoy D Chapin Jr Dick TeagueProductsAutomobilesMilitary vehiclesBuses and delivery vehiclesSport utility vehiclesMajor home appliancesCommercial refrigerationLawn care productsBrandsAMC 1966 1987 AM General 1974 1979 Hudson 1954 1957 Jeep 1970 1987 Metropolitan 1958 1962 Nash 1954 1957 Rambler 1957 1983 SubsidiariesKelvinator 1954 1968 Vehiculos Automotores Mexicanos 1963 1980 AM General 1971 1983 Shinjin Jeep Motors 1974 1979 Wheel Horse 1974 1986 Arab American Vehicles 1977 1987 Beijing Jeep 1984 1987 American Motors most similar competitors were those automakers that held similar annual sales levels such as Studebaker Packard Kaiser Motors and Willys Overland Their largest competitors were the Big Three Ford General Motors and Chrysler American Motors production line included small cars the Rambler American which began as the Nash Rambler in 1950 Hornet Gremlin and Pacer intermediate and full sized cars including the Ambassador Rambler Classic Rebel and Matador muscle cars including the Marlin AMX and Javelin and early four wheel drive variants of the Eagle and the Jeep Wagoneer the first true crossovers in the U S market Regarded as a small company deft enough to exploit special market segments left untended by the giants 4 American Motors was widely known for the design work of chief stylist Dick Teague who had to make do with a much tighter budget than his counterparts at Detroit s Big Three but had a knack for making the most of his employer s investment 5 After periods of intermittent independent success Renault acquired a major interest in American Motors in 1979 and the company was ultimately acquired by Chrysler in 1987 Contents 1 1954 formation 2 Product development in the 1950s 2 1 Product consolidation 2 2 The dinosaur fighter 3 Changing focus in the 1960s 3 1 Innovation 3 2 Tough choices 4 1970s product developments 5 Financial developments Renault partnership 5 1 Late 1970s 5 2 1980s 6 1980s product developments 6 1 AMC Eagle 6 2 Renault Alliance Encore and GTA 6 3 Jeeps 7 1985 and the final buyout 7 1 Marketplace and management changes 7 2 Problems at Renault and assassination 7 3 Chrysler purchases American Motors stock 8 Leadership 8 1 1954 George W Mason 8 2 1954 1962 George W Romney 8 3 1962 1967 Roy Abernethy 8 4 1967 1977 Roy D Chapin Jr 8 5 1977 1982 Gerald C Meyers 8 6 1982 1984 W Paul Tippett Jr 8 7 1984 1986 Jose J Dedeurwaerder 8 8 1986 1987 Joe Cappy 9 Business legacy 10 Legacy of products 10 1 Passenger automobiles 10 2 Jeep vehicles 11 International legacy 12 Legacy of divisions and facilities 12 1 Former brands and divisions 12 2 Facilities 12 3 Former subsidiaries and affiliates 13 Earlier use of the name 14 Later reuse of the trademark 15 American Motors passenger cars 16 American Motors engines 17 Collectibility 17 1 Hot Rod magazine revival April Fool s joke 18 See also 19 References 20 Bibliography 21 Further reading 22 External links1954 formation Edit American Motors logo used from 1954 until 1967 In January 1954 Nash Kelvinator Corporation began the acquisition of the Hudson Motor Car Company in what was called a merger The new corporation would be called the American Motors Corporation An earlier corporation with the same name co founded by Louis Chevrolet had existed in Plainfield New Jersey from 1916 through 1922 before merging into the Bessemer American Motors Corporation The Nash Kelvinator Hudson deal was a straight stock transfer three shares of Hudson listed at 11 for two shares of American Motors and one share of Nash Kelvinator listed at 17 for one share of American Motors and finalized in the spring of 1954 forming the fourth biggest auto company in the U S with assets of US 355 million and more than 100 million in working capital 6 The new company retained Hudson CEO A E Barit as a consultant and he took a seat on the board of directors Nash s George W Mason became president and CEO American Motors dealership sign Mason the architect of the merger believed that the survival of the U S s remaining independent automakers was dependent on their joining in one multiple brand company capable of challenging the Big Three as an equal The frantic 1953 54 Ford GM price war had a devastating impact on the remaining independent automakers 7 The reasons for the merger between Nash and Hudson included helping cut costs and strengthen their sales organizations to meet the intense competition expected from autos Big Three 8 One quick result from the merger was the doubling up with Nash on purchasing and production allowing Hudson to cut prices an average of 155 on the Wasp line and up to 204 on the more expensive Hornet models 9 After the merger AMC had its first profitable quarter during the second three months of 1955 earning 1 592 307 compared to a loss of 3 848 667 during the same period in the previous year 10 Mason also entered into informal discussions with James J Nance of Packard to outline his strategic vision Interim plans were made for American Motors to buy Packard Ultramatic automatic transmissions and Packard V8 engines for certain American Motors products In July 1954 Packard acquired Studebaker 11 The new Studebaker Packard Corporation S P made the new 320 cu in 5 2 L Packard V8 engine and Packard s Ultramatic automatic transmission available to American Motors for its 1955 Nash Ambassador and Hudson Hornet models When Mason died in 1954 George W Romney succeeded him Ironically Romney had once been offered Nance s job 12 In 1948 Romney received offers from Packard for the post of chief operating officer and from Nash for the number two position in the company Although the Packard offer would have paid more Romney decided to work under Mason because he thought Nash had a brighter future Studebaker Packard president James Nance refused to consider merging with American Motors unless he could take the top position Mason and Nance were former competitors as heads of the Kelvinator and Hotpoint respectively and a week after Mason s death Romney announced there are no mergers under way either directly or indirectly 13 Romney agreed with Mason s commitment to buy S P products Mason and Nance had agreed that in return S P would endeavor to purchase parts from American Motors but S P did not do so As the Packard engines and transmissions were comparatively expensive American Motors began development of its own V8 14 American Motors also spent US 40 million developing its Double Safe Single Unit monocoque which debuted in the 1956 model year 15 16 In mid 1956 the 352 cu in 5 8 L Packard V8 and TwinUltramatic transmission were phased out and replaced by American Motors s new V8 and by GM Hydra Matic and Borg Warner transmissions Product development in the 1950s EditProduct consolidation Edit 1957 Nash Metropolitan American Motors combined the Nash and Hudson product lines under a common manufacturing strategy in 1955 with the production of Nashes and Hudsons consolidated at the Nash plant in Kenosha 14 The Detroit Hudson plant was converted to military contract production and eventually sold The separate Nash and Hudson dealer networks were retained The Hudsons were redesigned to bring them in harmony with Nash s body styles The fast selling Nash Rambler model was sold as both a Nash and a Hudson in 1955 and 1956 These badge engineered Ramblers along with similar Metropolitans were identical save for hubcaps nameplates and other minor trim details The pre existing full size Nash product line was continued with the Nash Statesman restyled as the new Hudson Wasp and the Nash Ambassador restyled as the Hudson Hornet Although the cars shared the same body shell they were at least as different from one another as Chevrolet and Pontiac Hudsons and Nashes each used their own engines as they had previously the Hudson Hornet continued to offer the 308 cu in 5 0 L I6 that had powered the NASCAR champion during the early 1950s the Wasp now used the former engine of the Hudson Jet The Nash Ambassador and Statesman continued with overhead valve and L head sixes respectively Hudson and Nash cars had different front suspensions Trunk lids were interchangeable but other body panels rear window glass dash panels and braking systems were different The Hudson Hornet and Wasp and their Nash counterparts had improved ride and visibility and also better fuel economy owing to the lighter unitized Nash body 1959 Rambler American Club Sedan The larger Nash and Hudson range did not sell well and AMC lost money each year Dismayed with the results Romney decided in 1956 that the future of the company lay with the compact Rambler line Romney halted production on the new large cars and focused entirely on the new Rambler Six and V8 introducing them in 1956 despite being scheduled for a 1957 release Sales of the new Ramblers were poor and sales of the Hudson and Nash models were almost non existent resulting in a 31 7 million operating loss for 1956 Sales improved in 1957 but the year still saw an 11 8 million loss for the company In response Romney launched a massive PR blitz traveling 70 000 miles nationwide in 12 months Romney spoke at union halls dinners churches fairgrounds as well as radio and TV stations and anywhere where he could get the word out about Rambler Rambler sales took off in 1958 up by 58 7 and 425 new dealers were signed up 1958 became AMC s first year of profitability since its formation to 28 million The Nash and Hudson brands were dropped and Rambler became a marque in its own right and the mainstay of the company 17 The popular British built Metropolitan subcompact continued as a standalone brand until it was discontinued in 1961 The prototype 1958 Nash Ambassador Hudson Hornet built on a stretched Rambler platform was renamed at the last minute as Ambassador by Rambler To round out the model line American Motors reintroduced the old 1955 100 in 2 540 mm wheelbase Nash Rambler as the new Rambler American with only a few modifications This gave Rambler a compact lineup that included the 100 in 2 540 mm wheelbase American 108 in 2 743 mm wheelbase Rambler Six and Rebel V8 as well as the 117 in 2 972 mm wheelbase Ambassador The dinosaur fighter Edit 1958 Rambler Custom 4 Door Sedan Sales of Ramblers soared in the late 1950s in part because of American Motors focus on the compact car and its marketing efforts These included sponsoring the hugely popular Walt Disney anthology television series and as an exhibitor at the Disneyland theme park in Anaheim California George Romney himself pitched the Rambler product in television commercials While the Big Three introduced ever larger cars American Motors followed a dinosaur fighter strategy George W Romney s leadership focused the company on the compact car a fuel efficient vehicle 20 years before there was a real need for them 18 This gave Romney a high profile in the media Two core strategic factors came into play 1 the use of shared components in American Motors products and 2 a refusal to participate in the Big Three s restyling race This cost control policy helped Rambler develop a reputation for building solid economy cars Company officials were confident in the changing market and in 1959 announced a 10 million US 92 956 621 in 2016 dollars 19 expansion of its Kenosha complex to increase annual straight time capacity from 300 000 to 440 000 cars 20 A letter to shareholders in 1959 claimed that the introduction of new compact cars by American Motors large domestic competitors for the 1960 model year signals the end of big car domination in the U S and that American Motors predicts small car sales in the U S may reach 3 million units by 1963 20 American Motors was also beginning to experiment with non gasoline powered automobiles On April 1 1959 American Motors and Sonotone Corporation announced a joint research effort to consider producing an electric car that was to be powered by a self charging battery 21 Sonotone had the technology for making sintered plate nickel cadmium batteries that can be recharged very rapidly and are lighter than a typical automobile lead acid battery 22 In 1959 American Motors hired designer Dick Teague who had previously worked for General Motors Packard and Chrysler after Edmund E Anderson left the company in 1961 Teague was named principal designer and in 1964 vice president Changing focus in the 1960s EditInnovation Edit 1964 Rambler American 440 H 1964 Rambler Classic 770 In an effort to stay competitive American Motors produced a wide range of products during the 1960s and added innovations long before the Big Three introduced them For example the Rambler Classic was equipped with a standard tandem master cylinder in 1962 that provided stopping ability even if there was a failure in the brake system 23 Only Cadillac also included this safety feature six years before U S safety regulations required it on all cars Rambler also was an early pioneer in offering an automatic shift indicator sequence P R N D2 D1 L where if one selected D2 the car started in second gear while 1 started in first gear on its Flash O Matic transmission which is similar to today s PRNDSL shift pattern made mandatory for the 1968 model year cars 24 which required a neutral position between reverse and drive 25 while General Motors still offered a shift selector that had reverse immediately next to low gear PNDSLR well into the 1960s Unique in the domestic automotive industry American Motors offered adjustable front seat backrests from their Nash origin 26 and in 1964 the Classic and Ambassador were equipped with standard dual reclining front seats nearly a decade before the Big Three offered them as options Bendix disc brakes were made standard on the Marlin and optional on other models in 1965 27 28 This made the Marlin one of the first modern American cars with standard disc brakes while the Big Three did not offer them until the early 1970s on most of their models to meet Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards 29 In the early part of the decade sales were strong thanks in no small part to the company s history of building small cars which came into vogue in 1961 30 In both 1960 and 1961 Ramblers ranked in third place among domestic automobile sales 31 up from third on the strength of small car sales even in the face of a lot of new competition 30 Romney s strategic focus was very successful as reflected in the firm s healthy profits year after year The company became completely debt free The financial success allowed the company to reach an agreement on August 26 1961 with the United Auto Workers for a profit sharing plan that was new in the automobile industry Its new three year labor contract also included generous annual improvement pay increases as well as automatic cost of living raises 32 However in 1962 Romney resigned to run for Governor of Michigan His replacement was Roy Abernethy American Motors successful sales executive By 1964 Studebaker production in the United States had ended and its Canadian operations ceased in 1966 The Big Three plus the smaller American Motors Kaiser Jeep International Harvester Avanti and Checker companies were the remaining North American auto manufacturers 1965 Rambler Marlin Abernethy believed that American Motors s reputation of building reliable economical cars could be translated into a new strategy that could follow AMC buyers as they traded up into larger more expensive vehicles American Motors in reality had produced large cars throughout most of its history The Rambler Ambassadors were every bit as large as a full sized Ford or Chevy There was only an absence of largest sized cars from the American Motors lineup in 1963 and 1964 33 The first cars bearing his signature were the 1965 models 34 The 1965 models were a major makeover of the new platform that had just been introduced in 1963 These were a longer Ambassador series and new convertibles for the larger models During mid year a fastback called the Marlin was added 35 It competed directly with cars like the Dodge Charger but AMC s family sized fastback emphasized personal luxury 36 Tough choices Edit The continuing quest in the business world s toughest race the grinding contest against the Big Three automobile makers also meant annual styling changes requiring large expenditures 37 American Motors s management total confidence that the new 1965 models would stem a bother some decline actually began falling behind in share of sales 38 Moreover a new line of redesigned cars in the full and mid sized markets was launched in the fall of 1966 39 The cars won acclaim for their fluid styling and Abernethy s ideas did work as Ambassador sales increased significantly The dated designs of the Rambler Americans however hurt its sales which offset gains from Ambassador sales There were quality control problems with the introduction of the new full sized cars as well as persistent rumors of the company s demise because of its precarious cash flow Consumer Reports negative ratings for American Motors safety did not help During this time AMC s international sales were expanding From only 18 000 cars five years ago the 1965 model year AMC sold 74 420 cars in Canada Europe and Latin America AMC remained the biggest U S seller of autos in both France and Germany 40 Abernethy also called for the de emphasis of the Rambler brand because he believed the public associated it too strongly with economy cars and that it was hindering the sale of American Motors other models at a time when mid and luxury car sales were very strong As a result he ordered that for 1966 the Ambassador and Marlin were to be badged purely as a product of American Motors 41 The strategy shift at first seemed to be working because sales of the redesigned 1965 and 1966 Ambassadors improved even as AMC s overall production decreased from the record level achieved in 1963 42 However corporate earnings per share were a meager 27 cents per share the lowest since AMC made its famous compact car comeback in 1958 43 Investors received a message of the changing fortune of the automaker when the company s 1966 annual financial report was delivered in a plain brown wrapper instead of the previous year s glossy cover 44 American Motors logo used from 1967 until 1970 A completely new design was also slated for the larger 1967 models This strategy added 60 million in retooling costs which was a major stretch for the company The new models shared fewer parts with each other and were more expensive to build Abernethy continued his objective to position the new Rebel and Ambassador designs on an equal basis with competitive economy models marketed by the Big Three 1967 Ambassador 990 American Motors did not have their own electric car program as did the Big Three and after some negotiation a contract was drawn in 1967 with Gulton Industries to develop a new battery based on lithium and a speed controller designed by Victor Wouk 45 A nickel cadmium battery powered 1969 Rambler station wagon demonstrated the power systems that according to the scientist was a wonderful car 45 This was also the start of other plug in type experimental American Motors vehicles developed with Gulton the Amitron city concept car and later the similar Electron Although the new models were well received by the motor industry media the last quarter sales for AMC ended September 30 1966 AMC was not on a calendar fiscal year were disappointing The company recorded a balance sheet loss of 12 648 000 for the year before Tax Credits and deferred Tax Assets 46 47 By this time the board had lost confidence in Abernethy due to his huge spending which had unstabilized the company and each year under his leadership the company had suffered huge financial losses As a result Abernethy was forced into taking an early retirement from American Motors on January 9 1967 Abernethy was replaced by Roy D Chapin Jr son of Hudson Motors founder Roy D Chapin 48 Chapin quickly instituted changes to American Motors s offerings and tried to regain market share by focusing on younger demographic markets 49 Chapin s first decision was to cut the price of the Rambler to within US 200 of the basic Volkswagen Beetle Innovative marketing ideas included making air conditioning standard on all 1968 Ambassador models available as a delete option This made American Motors the first U S automaker to make air conditioning standard equipment on a line of cars preceding even luxury makes such as Lincoln Imperial and Cadillac 1969 American Motors AMX The company introduced exciting entries for the decade s muscle car boom most notably the AMX while the Javelin served as the company s entrant into the sporty pony car market created by the Plymouth Barracuda and the Ford Mustang Additional operating cash was derived in 1968 through the sale of Kelvinator Appliance once one of the firm s core operating units The Kelvinator divestiture left American Motors a downsized company solely manufacturing automobiles The Rambler marque was discontinued in 1968 leaving only the Rambler American as the last product to bear the name until 1969 The Rambler brand continued to be used only for export markets with Mexico being the last market to use it in 1983 From 1970 American Motors was the brand used for all American Motors passenger cars and all vehicles from that date bore the American Motors name and the new corporate logo However the names American Motors and AMC were used interchangeably in corporate literature well into the 1980s The branding issue was further complicated when the company s Eagle all wheel drive passenger cars were marketed as the American Eagle in the 1980s 1970s product developments EditJeepIn the late 1960s Kaiser Industries Corporation decided to leave the automotive industry and sought a buyer for its money losing Kaiser Jeep division American Motors vice president for manufacturing Gerald C Meyers headed the team sent to evaluate Kaiser s Jeep factories Although opposed by AMC s top management Chapin made a major decision in February 1970 to purchase Kaiser Jeep for 70 million Although it was a gamble Chapin believed that Jeep vehicles would complement American Motors passenger car business The Jeep market was also a market in which the Big Three had no presence and therefore there was no competition American Motors gained the iconic Jeep brand of light trucks and SUVs as well as Kaiser Jeep s government contracts notably the M151 line of military Jeeps and the DJ Series postal Jeeps American Motors also expanded its international network The military and special products business was reconstituted as American Motors General Products Division later reorganized as AM General Hornet and GremlinIn 1970 American Motors consolidated all passenger cars under one distinct brand identity and debuted the Hornet range of compact cars The Hornet and the later Gremlin shared platforms The Gremlin the first North American built subcompact sold more than 670 000 units from 1970 through 1978 The Hornet became American Motors best selling passenger car since the Rambler Classic with more than 860 000 units sold by the time production ended in 1977 The Hornet platform continued to be built under a variety of models through 1987 For a time both the Hornet and Gremlin could be ordered with Levi s denim interiors 50 MatadorThe new facelifted mid sized AMC Matador replaced the Rebel in 1971 using an advertising campaign that asked What s a Matador 51 In 1972 American Motors won the tender for Los Angeles Police Department cruisers and Matadors were used by the department from 1972 until 1975 replacing the Plymouth Satellite American Motors supplied Mark VII Limited owner Jack Webb with two Matadors a sedan and a wagon for use in his popular television series Adam 12 increasing the cars public profile Matadors saw fleet use as taxis government as well as police and fire vehicles in some states In 1973 American Motors signed a licensing agreement with Curtiss Wright to build Wankel engines for cars and Jeeps 52 Starting in 1974 the Matador sedan and station wagon were mildly refreshed with new boxier front and rear ends making it full sized This second generation model was made virtually unchanged until 1978 AmbassadorFrom 1970 the Rebel and Ambassador were identical from the A pillar back The Ambassador continued as American Motors upmarket model with more choices of creature comforts and with air conditioning as standard From the A pillar forward the Ambassador was redesigned and stretched 7 inches 178 mm to become the biggest ever just as the 1973 Arab Oil Embargo sparked gasoline rationing across the nation The additional length was due to a new front end design and stronger energy absorbing bumpers required of all automobiles sold in the U S 53 Sales of all large cars fell due to economic problems and rising gasoline prices The Ambassador became a full sized car in 1974 and was discontinued after the 1974 model year leaving only the Matador as American Motors full size offering Nash and American Motors made Ambassadors from 1927 through 1974 the longest use of the same model name for any American Motors product and at the time the longest continuously used nameplate in the industry Matador CoupeIn 1974 the first generation Matador two door hardtop known as the flying brick due to its poor aerodynamics in NASCAR competition was replaced at great cost with a sleek smoothly shaped and radically styled two door coupe The model received praise for its design including Best Styled Car of 1974 by Car and Driver magazine 54 customer satisfaction 55 and sold almost 100 000 coupes over a five year period 56 The Matador Coupe shared few components with the Matador sedan and station wagon other than suspension drive train some trim and interior parts Metropolitan BusesIn 1974 American Motors s AM General subsidiary began building urban transit buses in cooperation with Flyer Industries of Winnipeg Manitoba A total of 5 431 Metropolitan buses including 219 electric trolley buses were built before production ceased in 1979 57 Production of diesel buses had ceased in 1978 58 with only trolley bus production taking place in 1979 PacerThe AMC Pacer an innovative all new model introduced in March 1975 and marketed as the first wide small car was a subcompact designed to provide the comfort of a full sized car Its pre production development coincided with tightened U S Federal passenger emissions and auto safety regulations With the Arab Oil Embargo of 1973 General Motors aborted the Wankel rotary engine around which the Pacer had been designed as its fuel consumption exceeded that of conventional engines with similar power Therefore American Motors s existing 258 and 232 cu in 4 2 and 3 8 L AMC Straight 6 engines were used in the Pacer instead The fuel economy was better than a rotary engine but still relatively low in light of the new focus on energy efficiency Also as the Pacer shared few components other than the drivetrain with other American Motors cars it was expensive to make and the cost increased when sales fell steeply after the first two years original research Development and production costs for the Pacer and Matador Coupe drained capital which might otherwise have been invested in updating the more popular Hornet and Gremlin lines so that toward the end of the 1970s the company faced the growing energy crisis with aged products that were uncompetitive in hotly contested markets However AMC used cars as far back as 1967 had the advantage of good warranty coverage so most owners were conscious of low cost car maintenance AMC units became some of the very best buys on the used car market by 1975 59 The 1977 Gremlin had redesigned headlights grille rear hatch and fascia For economy in the fuel crisis American Motors offered the car with a more fuel efficient Volkswagen designed Audi 4 cylinder engine 2 0 L 122 cu in The engine was expensive for American Motors to build and the Gremlin retained the less costly but also less economical 232 cu in 3 8 L as standard equipment The AMX nameplate was revived in 1977 It was a sporty appearance package on the Hornet hatchback featuring upgrades as well as the 258 cu in 4 2 L inline six as standard with a choice of three speed automatic or four speed manual transmissions 60 The 304 cu in 5 0 L V8 engine was optional with the automatic transmission As all Matadors now received standard equipment that was formerly optional e g power steering automatic transmission the Brougham package was dropped Optional on the Matador coupe was a landau vinyl roof with opera windows and top line Barcelonas offered new two tone paint ConcordFor 1978 the Hornet platform was redesigned with an adaptation of the new Gremlin front end design and renamed AMC Concord American Motors targeted it at the emerging premium compact market segment paying particular attention to ride and handling standard equipment trim and interior luxury 61 Gremlins borrowed the Concord instrument panel as well as a Hornet AMX inspired GT sports appearance package and a new striping treatment for X models The AMC Pacer hood was modified to clear a V8 engine and a Sports package replaced the former X package With falling sales of Matador Coupes sedans and wagons their 304 cu in 5 0 L V8 engine was dropped leaving only the 258 cu in 4 2 L Inline 6 standard on coupes and sedans and the 360 cu in 5 9 L V8 optional on coupes and sedans standard on wagons The two tone Barcelona luxury package was offered on Matador sedans and two tone red paint was introduced as an additional Barcelona option Matador production ceased at the end of the model year with total sales of 10 576 units The Matador was no longer attractive as automakers struggled to overcome economic woes including continuing fuel price increases and double digit domestic inflation 62 SpiritIn 1979 the Spirit sedan replaced the Gremlin A new fastback version of the car the Spirit Liftback proved successful In December Pacer production ceased after a small run of 1980 models was built to use up parts stock Concords received a new front end treatment and in their final season hatchbacks became available in DL trim On May 1 1979 American Motors marked the 25th anniversary of the Nash Hudson merger with Silver Anniversary editions of the AMC Concord and Jeep CJ in two tone silver Jeeps then accounted for around 50 percent of the company s sales and most of their profits and introduced the LeCar a U S version of the small fuel efficient Renault 5 in dealer showrooms 63 Concord and Spirit models were dropped after 1983 Jeep Cherokee SJ Chief S 1972 Gremlin X 1975 second generation Matador sedan 1971 Ambassador hardtop with Brougham trim 1974 Matador X Coupe AM General transit bus 1975 AMC Pacer 1976 Hornet Sportabout 1979 Concord 2 Door Sedan 1979 Spirit GTFinancial developments Renault partnership EditLate 1970s Edit 1978 AMC Concord AMC Spirit liftback 1981 AMC Concord Jeep Grand Wagoneer In February 1977 Time magazine reported that although American Motors had lost 73 8 million in the previous two fiscal years U S banks had agreed to a year s extension for a 72 5 million credit that had expired in January that stockholders had received no dividends since 1974 and that Pacer sales did not match expectations However Time noted record Jeep sales and a backlog of orders for AM General s buses 64 In July 1977 it was announced that the General Services Administration of the Federal U S government had awarded AMC a three year contract worth 15 miIlion dollars to lease 5 838 cars Since the beginning of the fiscal year on October 1 1976 the GSA had purchased 8 700 cars from AMC for 30 million 65 On October 21 1977 Roy Chapin Jr retired and Gerald C Meyers became Chairman and CEO 66 On March 31 1978 American Motors and Renault announced a sweeping agreement for the joint manufacture and distribution of cars and trucks that would achieve benefits for both 67 A month later American Motors announced that it would halt the production of standard urban transit buses after about 4 300 were sold by its AM General subsidiary over a period of three years 68 In May 1978 the U S Environmental Protection Agency ordered the recall of all American Motors s 1976 cars except those conforming to California emissions regulations some 270 000 vehicles plus 40 000 1975 and 1976 Jeeps and mini trucks for correction of a fault in the pollution control system Total cost was estimated at up to 3 million more than AMC had earned the previous quarter 69 American Motors lost an estimated 65 million on its conventional non Jeep cars for the fiscal year that ended September 30 1978 but strong Jeep sales helped the company to an overall 36 7 million profit on sales of 2 6 billion However American Motors faced costly engineering work to bring their Jeeps into compliance with a federal directive for all 4 wheel drive vehicles to average 15 mpg US 16 L 100 km 18 mpg imp by 1981 70 A year later with its share of the American market at 1 83 the company struck a deal with Renault the nationally owned French automaker American Motors would receive a 150 million cash injection 50 million in credits and also the rights to start building the Renault 5 in 1982 71 a deal for Renault products to be sold through the American Motors Jeep dealer network had already been made in 1979 72 In return Renault acquired a 22 5 interest in American Motors 71 This was not the first time the two companies had worked together Lacking its own prestige model line in the early 1960s Renault assembled CKD kits and marketed Rambler cars in France 73 In 1979 American Motors announced a record 83 9 million profit on sales of 3 1 billion US 11 574 186 153 in 2021 dollars 19 for the fiscal year ending in September this despite an economic downturn soaring energy prices rising American unemployment automobile plants shutting down and an American market trend towards imported cars 74 1980s Edit In 1980 all American Motors cars received a new rust proofing process called Ziebart Factory Rust Protection This included aluminized trim screws plastic inner fender liners galvanized steel in every exterior body panel and a deep dip up to the window line bath in epoxy based primer American Motors backed up the rust protection program with a 5 year No Rust Thru component to its comprehensive Buyer Protection Plan A drop in Jeep sales caused by the declining economy and soaring energy prices began to constrict American Motors cash flow At the same time pressure increased on the company s non Jeep product lines The face lifts and rebranding of American Motors once innovative and successful cars were not enough in a competitive landscape that had changed dramatically No longer was the threat limited to the Big Three automakers General Motors Ford and Chrysler The Japanese manufacturers Honda Toyota and Nissan used streamlined production methods such as outsourcing and Just In Time JIT supply chain management They had new highly efficient assembly plants in the United States And now they targeted the heart of American Motors passenger product line small cars While Americans turned to the new imports in increasing numbers American Motors continued its struggle at the inefficient and aging Kenosha Wisconsin facilities the oldest continuously operating automobile plant in the world where components and unfinished bodies still had to be transported across the city In early 1980 the banks refused American Motors further credit Lacking both capital and resources for the new truly modern products it needed to offer the company turned to Renault for a 90 million loan US 295 989 499 in 2021 dollars 19 75 By September that year American Motors s U S market share had fallen to 1 7 and in November sales dropped 19 1 American Motors warned stockholders that the company could be bankrupted if they did not approve a plan for Renault to acquire as much as 59 of the company 76 On December 16 1980 American Motors shareholders overwhelmingly approved making the French Government owned Renault their company s principal owner 77 Jean Marc Lepeu former corporate treasurer at Renault became vice president for finance at American Motors In September 1981 Jose Dedeurwaerder a Renault veteran of 23 years mainly in manufacturing became American Motors executive vice president for manufacturing 78 In January 1982 the company s former president W Paul Tippett Jr replaced Gerald C Meyers as chairman and CEO and Dedeurwaerder moved up to be president 79 By this time Renault owned 46 of American Motors Dedeurwaerder brought a broad perspective at this critical time he is credited with streamlining many of American Motors arcane management techniques He also instituted important improvements in plant layouts as well as in cost and quality control 80 Renault having increased its stake in the company several times to keep it solvent eventually owned 49 in 1983 This development is viewed by some as ending American Motors run as a truly American car company New ownership and new management heralded a new product venture for American Motors a line of modern front wheel drive cars designed by Renault to be produced at Kenosha 1980s product developments EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources American Motors Corporation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message AMC Eagle Edit 1981 AMC Eagle Wagon In August 1979 for the 1980 model year American Motors introduced four wheel drive versions of the Spirit and Concord calling the collective line the AMC Eagle Eagles rapidly became one of the company s best known products and are considered one of the first crossover SUVs 81 82 Eagles used the 2 wheel drive body shells mounted on an all new platform developed by American Motors in the late 1970s Featuring an innovative full time four wheel drive system it sold best in snow prone areas Sales started strongly but declined over time While the two wheel drive Spirit and Concord were both discontinued after 1983 as the company concentrated on its new Renault Alliance the Eagle survived for five years longer albeit only in station wagon form into the 1988 model year This meant the four wheel drive Eagle was the lone representative of the American Motors brand from 1984 until the 1988 model year All the company s remaining output was branded Renault or Jeep The last AMC Eagle was built on December 14 1987 Renault Alliance Encore and GTA Edit The Renault Alliance based on the Renault 9 was built by American Motors Corporation from 1983 until 1987 The Renault Alliance was the first joint product of the American Motors Renault partnership Introduced in 1983 the Alliance was a front wheel drive Renault 9 compact car slightly restyled for the American market by Dick Teague mostly to comply with American safety standards and produced by American Motors at Kenosha The car was badged as a Renault and some cars also carried American Motors badges It was available as a sedan with two or four doors and later as a convertible The hatchback introduced in 1984 and badged as the Renault Encore was basically the same as the European Renault 11 model For the final 1987 model year a higher performance version of the Alliance 2 door sedan and the convertible was sold as the Renault GTA 83 This version had a Renault two liter engine that was exclusive to it and not shared with the European Renault 9 and 11 models The new model introduced at a time of increased interest in small cars won several awards including Motor Trend Car of the Year Motor Trend declared The Alliance may well be the best assembled first year car we ve ever seen Way to go Renault The Alliance was listed as number one on Car and Driver s list of ten best cars for 1983 84 The positive reception and sales of 200 000 Alliances by 1984 was hindered by the availability of only two body styles The Alliance was a European designed car and not fully suited to U S market demands The distribution network was also not well supported which led to the lower quality delivered by dealerships with disastrous consequences for the image of the automobiles as well as high warranty costs because of quality failings which greatly impacted sales from 1985 to the end of production in 1987 85 The Encore models were renamed Alliance Hatchback in 1987 Alliance and GTA production ended in June of that year while the Renault 9 and 11 models continued through the 1988 model year in Europe being replaced by the all new Renault 19 Jeeps Edit Jeep Cherokee Laredo Jeep Comanche Pioneer More beneficial to American Motors future was the introduction of an all new line of compact Jeep Cherokee and Wagoneer models in the autumn of 1983 for the 1984 model year Renault s Francois Castaing head of AMC s product development team designed the new Jeep platform with styling by Dick Teague Renault was interested in selling the Cherokee in Europe but to meet European expectations the vehicle needed to be lighter and more fuel efficient The new XJ was only 3 100 lbs helped by its unibody construction and lighter seats taken from the Renault 9 and 11 and new Renault Alliance The new XJ Jeep was 1 200 pounds lighter 31 inches shorter six inches narrower and four inches lower than the Cherokee SJ it replaced and yet thanks to unibody construction the XJ kept 90 percent of its predecessor s interior volume And not only was fuel economy much improved but articulation is also better as is ground clearance as well as approach departure and break over angles These along with its smaller profile make the XJ better both off road and on 86 AMC s initial forecasts of 40 000 Cherokee and Wagoneer sales were shattered with sales amounting to 75 000 in their first year The three leading off roading magazines Petersen s 4 Wheel amp Off Road Four Wheeler and Off Road each named the new Jeep Cherokee as the 4x4 of the year 87 The popularity of these downsized Jeeps pioneered a new market segment for what later became defined as the sport utility vehicle SUV They initially used the American Motors 150 C I D 2 5 L or 150 cu in OHV four cylinder engine with a carburetor and a General Motors built 2 8 L 171 cu in carbureted V6 was optional In 1986 throttle body injection replaced the carburetor on the 2 5 L I4 engines A Renault 2 1 L 128 cu in Turbo Diesel I4 diesel was also offered Starting with the 1987 models a 4 0 L 244 cu in I6 engine derived from the older 258 cu in 4 23 L I6 with a new head design and an electronic fuel injection system replaced the outsourced V6 American Motors new engine was designed with help from Renault and incorporated Renault Bendix Renix parts for fuel and ignition management The 4 0 developed an outstanding reputation for reliability and toughness Retained by Chrysler after the buyout the design continued to be improved and refined until its discontinuation at the end of the 2006 model year The 4 0 engine saw extensive application in XJ Cherokees and Wagoneers Grand Cherokees and Wranglers and many of those engines saw or are seeing extremely long lives quite a few exceeding 300 000 mi 480 000 km The XJ Cherokee itself was built by Chrysler until the end of the 2001 model year in the U S and until 2005 in China Three other designs continued to be used after the Chrysler buyout the Grand Wagoneer full size luxury SUV the full sized J series pickups built on the same chassis as the earlier SJ model Wagoneers and Cherokees that dated from 1963 with the AMC 360 cu in 5 9 L V8 and the Jeep Comanche MJ compact pickup which debuted in 1986 Unlike most sport utility vehicles that are based on adapted pickup truck designs the Cherokee XJ SUV came first and the Comanche was designed as a later pickup truck version Production of the full sized pickups ceased after 1987 The Grand Wagoneer and 360 V8 engine were dropped after 1991 the last American made vehicle whose engine used a carburetor for fuel delivery and the Comanche bowed after 1992 1985 and the final buyout EditMarketplace and management changes Edit There were significant changes in 1985 as the market moved away from American Motors small models With fuel relatively cheap again buyers turned to larger and more powerful automobiles and American Motors was unprepared for this development Even the venerable Jeep CJ 5 was dropped after a 60 Minutes TV news magazine staged expose of rollover tendencies under extreme conditions American Motors also confronted an angry workforce Labor was taking revenge and reports circulated about the sabotage of vehicles on the assembly lines because of the failure to receive promised wage increases citation needed There were rumors that the aging Kenosha plant was to be shut down At the same time Chrysler was having trouble meeting the demand for its M body rear drive models Dodge Diplomat Plymouth Gran Fury and Chrysler Fifth Avenue Because they were assembled using the old gate and buck system and the tooling could be easily moved Chrysler could supply the components and control the quality while American Motors assembled the car Therefore Lee Iacocca and Joe Cappy reached an agreement to use some of American Motors idle plant capacity in Kenosha 88 At the beginning of 1985 Renault s chairman in France Bernard Hanon was fired in a shake up triggered by huge losses Renault had lost its number one position in Europe a position it had held from 1980 until 1983 The company had been losing money since 1981 and had fallen to sixth place behind Ford Fiat Volkswagen Peugeot and General Motors Strikes plagued Renault at the end of 1984 and the French government introduced price controls that severely cut the profit margins on cars sold in France Renault s most important market In addition to Renault s domestic losses the company had already invested 545 million in AMC Hanon was replaced by Georges Besse ex president of Produits Chimiques Ugine Kuhlmann in France In April 1985 AMC Chairman W Paul Tippett resigned to become president of a textile company In December 1985 Jose J Dedeurwaerder who had been president since 1982 and CEO since September 1984 became chairman of the executive committee while continuing as president and chief executive officer Joe Cappy was moved up from executive vice president to chief operating officer and Tippet s position was filled by an ex Renault vice president Pierre Semerena 89 Semerena made his managerial reputation as a no nonsense cost cutter The new management responded with tactical moves by selling the lawn care Wheel Horse Products Division and signing an agreement to build Jeeps in the People s Republic of China The Pentagon had problems with AM General a significant defense contractor being managed by a partially French government owned firm The U S government would not allow a foreign government to own a significant portion of an important defense supplier 90 As a result the profitable AM General Division was sold to LTV Corporation 91 Another milestone was the departure of Dick Teague American Motors design vice president for 26 years he was responsible for many Jeep and AMC designs including the Rambler American Javelin Hornet Gremlin Pacer and Matador coupe Problems at Renault and assassination Edit In France Renault continued to experience financial trouble The investment in American Motors including the construction of a new Canadian assembly plant in Brampton Ontario forced cuts at home resulting in the closure of several French plants and mass layoffs Renault was down to just three alternatives regarding its American holdings 1 it could declare American Motors officially bankrupt thereby losing its investment 2 it could come up with more money but Renault management perceived American Motors as a bottomless pit or 3 American Motors could be put up for sale and the French company could get back part of its investment At the same time Renault s new chairman Georges Besse continued to champion the French firm s future in the North American market pointing to the company s completion of the newest and most advanced automotive assembly plant in North America then known as Bramalea Assembly as well as the recent introduction of the thoroughly modern fuel injected 4 0 L and 2 5 L engines In addition Jeep vehicles were riding an unprecedented surge in demand It seemed to Besse and others that American Motors was on course for profitability However on November 17 1986 Besse who had a high profile among French capitalists was assassinated by a member of a French clandestine far left extremist group Action Directe 92 AMC s plans to reinvigorate sales with higher priced Renaults continued for a little longer with the plan being a three pronged lineup beginning with the mid sized Medallion the larger Premier above it and the sporty Renault Alpine providing a halo car 93 The Medallion and the Premier both did go on sale but the Alpine never made its planned mid 1987 rollout Chrysler purchases American Motors stock Edit Under pressure from Renault executives following Besse s death Renault s new president Raymond Levy set out to repair employee relations and divest the company of its investment in American Motors Renault owned 46 1 of American Motors outstanding shares of stock In 1986 American Motors lost 91 3 million 94 The earlier agreement between Chrysler and American Motors in 1985 under which American Motors would produce M body chassis rear drive large cars for five years from mid 1986 through 1990 fed the rumor that Chrysler was about to buy AMC According to the head of manufacturing for Chrysler at the time Stephan Sharf the existing relationship with American Motors producing a car for a competitor facilitated the negotiations 88 The Jeep Grand Cherokee was the driving force behind Chrysler s buyout of American Motors Lee Iacocca wanted the design Chrysler completed development and released it to the public in late 1992 and continues to use the nameplate today On March 9 1987 Chrysler agreed to buy Renault s share in American Motors plus all the remaining shares for about 1 5 billion 3 577 768 014 in 2021 dollars 19 94 95 96 97 98 99 Chrysler made no secret that they were only interested in AMC for Jeep AMC s new assembly plant in Canada and AMC s network of 1 300 dealerships nationwide Chrysler president Lee Iacocca was quoted in the March 10 1987 LA Times as saying For Chrysler the attractions are Jeep the best known automotive brand name in the world a new assembly plant at Bramalea Canada and a third distribution system giving us access to a larger market 100 With the sale complete American Motors became the Jeep Eagle division of Chrysler 101 102 The sale came at a time when the automotive press was enthusiastic about the proposed 1988 lineup of Renault Eagle and Jeep vehicles as well as reports that the financial outlook for the small automaker was improving American Motors quarterly results for all of 1987 were positive Chrysler purchased American Motors at a time the company appeared to be in a very good financial position with its new product line 94 It was the Jeep brand that Chrysler CEO Lee Iacocca really wanted in particular the ZJ Grand Cherokee then under development by Jeep engineers which ultimately proved highly profitable for Chrysler the nameplate remains in production today However the buyout included other attractive deal sweeteners for Chrysler Among them was the world class brand new manufacturing plant in Bramalea Ontario which offered Iacocca an unprecedented opportunity to increase his company s production capacity at a fire sale price American Motors had designed and built the plant in anticipation of building the Renault 25 based Eagle Premier Additional profitable acquisitions were the American Motors dealer network the addition of which strengthened Chrysler s retail distribution many American Motors dealers switched to selling Chrysler products and American Motors underrated organization and management talent which Chrysler quickly assimilated numerous leading Chrysler engineers and executives were ex American Motors 103 American Motors was renamed Jeep Eagle Corporation a Chrysler subsidiary on August 25 1988 and was fully merged as of March 29 1990 2 Leadership Edit1954 George W Mason Edit The 1954 merger of Nash Kelvinator Corporation and Hudson Motor Car Company that established American Motors was led by Nash Kelvinator president George W Mason to reap benefits from the strengths of the two firms to battle the much larger Big Three automakers General Motors Ford and Chrysler The merger was originally intended to be a three way merger with Packard being the number three Mason had first discussed the possibility of a merger with Packard president James J Nance in the late 1940s Nance insisted that if Packard were to join then he would have to be the CEO of the new company Mason fully intended to lead the new company thus the deal did not go through 104 Packard acquired Studebaker two months after Nash acquired Hudson 105 Mason became CEO and president of the new company and Hudson s president A E Barit retired to become an American Motors board member Mason selected long time Nash associate and future governor of Michigan George W Romney as vice president Roy Abernethy ex vice president of sales for Willys was hired to be vice president of sales 1954 1962 George W Romney Edit Following Mason s sudden death on October 8 1954 Romney took over reorganizing the company and focusing American Motors future on a new small car line 106 Mason s death also allowed Romney to put an end to any further discussions for a merger between American Motors and Studebaker Packard By the end of 1957 the legacy Nash and Hudson brands were completely phased out and replaced with the Rambler and Metropolitan brands The company struggled at first but under Romney Rambler s sales took off A Rambler won the 1959 Mobil Economy Run and by 1960 was the third most popular brand of automobile in the United States behind Ford and Chevrolet 107 108 1962 1967 Roy Abernethy Edit George Romney left American Motors in 1962 to run for governor in Michigan and was replaced as CEO by Roy Abernethy After two model years 1963 and 1964 of only producing compact cars Abernethy shifted the focus of American Motors back to larger and more profitable cars such as the Ambassador line from the perceived negative of the Rambler s economy car image Ambassador sales jumped from 18 647 in 1964 to over 64 000 in 1965 In 1966 they went to more than 71 000 109 However the huge costs of developing the new cars and engines meant American Motors now had problems in securing working capital to keep the company going American Motors sales dropped 20 in the first half of 1966 and the firm reported a fiscal six month loss of 4 2 million on sales of 479 million Consequently Robert B Evans invested more than 2 million because American Motors s stock was selling for only 60 of the company s net worth thus he became its largest stockholder and was named its chairman on June 6 1966 replacing Richard E Cross who continued as a director and chairman of the executive committee 110 In the quarter ending September 30 1966 American Motors recorded a loss of 12 648 000 before tax credits and deferred tax assets In the face of deteriorating financial and market positions Abernethy retired as CEO in 1967 and Evans resigned as chairman 1967 1977 Roy D Chapin Jr Edit Abernethy was replaced by the son of Hudson co founder Roy D Chapin Roy D Chapin Jr 111 and Evans was replaced by William V Luneberg American Motors public explanation for the removals was that the two had stepped aside according to a plan to give a younger team an opportunity to move the company forward 112 Chapin took charge to revitalize the company and designer Dick Teague economized by developing several vehicles from common stampings While prices and costs were cut new and more sporty automobiles were introduced and from 1968 American Motors became known for the Javelin and AMX muscle cars American Motors purchased Kaiser s Jeep utility vehicle operations in 1970 to complement its existing passenger car business Beginning in the early 1970s the company moved towards all new compact car designs based on the Hornet including the Hornet itself and the Gremlin Other new models in the 1970s included the Matador and Pacer 1977 1982 Gerald C Meyers Edit A major management transition at American Motors started on May 24 1977 then Meyers was named president and chief operating officer succeeding the retiring William Luneburg Upon the retirement of Chapin on October 21 1977 Gerald C Meyers former president and COO became chairman and CEO 113 66 At the time Meyers was 49 years old and became the youngest top executive in the automobile industry 114 The company was looking for a lot more than a steady hand on the tiller it was looking for a savior but Meyers disagreed and argued that the company could survive and remain a factor in the automobile industry by abandoning its policy of head on competition and instead focusing on and revamping its four wheel drive vehicles a market segment left untended by the large automakers and by acquiring advanced technology 115 Sagging sales and tight finances resulted in the elimination of the Matador line in the 1979 model year and the Pacer line in 1980 leaving American Motors to focus almost exclusively on its Hornet platform based cars and the Jeep line Hornet derivatives of the late 1970s included the Spirit and Concord while the innovative four wheel drive AMC Eagle introduced in 1979 was one of the first true crossovers From 1980 American Motors partnered with France s Renault to help finance their manufacturing operations obtain much needed capital and source subcompact vehicles 1982 1984 W Paul Tippett Jr Edit At age 53 Meyers retired from the company in February 1982 by which time Renault controlled 46 of American Motors 116 He was with the automaker 20 years and was noted for orchestrating the linkup between American Motors and Renault starting in 1979 117 Meyers was succeeded as chairman by former American Motors president W Paul Tippett Jr 118 At the time Tippett was a member of American Motors management for only three years 117 Jose J Dedeurwaerder a Renault manager became the new president of American Motors After the 1983 model year American Motors focused entirely on four wheel drive autos the company stopped producing two wheel drive cars American Motors facilities were used to produce the Renault branded Alliance and Encore compact and subcompact cars In September 1984 Paul Tippet left American Motors as CEO and was replaced by Jose J Dedeurwaerder 119 120 1984 1986 Jose J Dedeurwaerder Edit In 1985 Chrysler entered an agreement with American Motors to produce Dodge Diplomats and Plymouth Furys as well as Dodge Omnis and Plymouth Horizons in American Motors Kenosha Wisconsin plant At the time American Motors had excess manufacturing capacity 1986 1987 Joe Cappy Edit In 1987 after further new vehicle development that included the Medallion a rebadged Renault 21 and Giorgetto Giugiaro s Italian designed new full sized front wheel drive sedan that became the Eagle Premier 121 122 Renault sold its 47 ownership stake in American Motors to Chrysler which made a public offer to purchase all the remaining outstanding shares of American Motors stock American Motors was acquired by Chrysler in August 1987 The primary task of Chrysler management was to integrate the two companies as quickly as possible American Motors final CEO Joe Cappy was tasked with achieving this by Chrysler president Gerald Greenwald 123 Renault left the U S market completely as a brand in 1987 thus the Renault Medallion was sold through the newly formed Jeep Eagle division of Chrysler as an Eagle not a Renault The Jeep Eagle division was formed from the American Motors Jeep Renault dealer network The Jeep and Eagle vehicles were marketed primarily by former American Motors dealers The American Motors badge was last used on the Eagle Sports Wagon through the 1988 model year then eliminated entirely and the Eagle car brand was phased out by 1998 Business legacy EditAmerican Motors was forced to constantly innovate for 33 years until Chrysler absorbed it in 1987 The lessons learned from this experience were integrated into the company that bought American Motors The organization strategies as well as several key executives allowed Chrysler to gain an edge on the competition Even today the lessons gained from the American Motors experience continue to provide benefits to other firms in the industry There are a number of legacies from American Motors s business strategies American Motors had the ability to formulate strategies that were often evaluated by industry critics as strokes of brilliance 124 According to Roy D Chapin Jr American Motors realized they were up against the giants of the industry so to compete successfully they had to be able to move quickly and with ingenuity 124 An essential strategy practiced by American Motors was to rely on outside vendors to supply components in which they had differential advantages This approach was finally accepted within the U S auto industry but only after each of the Big Three experienced the failure of attempting to be self sufficient The smallest domestic automaker did not have the massive R amp D budgets of General Motors Ford and foreign competitors thus American Motors placed R amp D emphasis on bolstering the product life cycle of its prime products particularly Jeeps 125 In 1985 American Motors originated product lifecycle management PLM as a strategic business approach according to Sidney Hill Jr executive editor for Manufacturing Business Technology 126 in an effort to better compete against its much larger rivals by ramping up its product development process 127 Another example of American Motors agility was the ability of management to squeeze money out of reluctant bankers even in the face of bankruptcy These core abilities helped save the company from collapse and after each obstacle give it the wherewithal to keep it operating Ironically American Motors was never stronger than just before its demise 124 American Motors managers anticipated important trends in the automotive industry 128 It preached fuel efficiency in the 1950s long before most auto buyers demanded it Led by American Motors Rambler and several European cars the small car innovation reduced the Big Three s market share from 93 in 1957 to 82 in 1959 129 The company inherited foreign manufacturing and sales partnerships from Nash and continued developing business relations decades before most of the international consolidations among automobile makers took place American Motors was the first U S automaker to establish an ownership agreement with a foreign automaker Renault Although small in size American Motors was able to introduce numerous industry innovations Starting in 1957 American Motors was the only U S manufacturer to totally immerse all automobile bodies in primer paint for protection against rust until competitors adopted the practice in 1964 130 Even one of American Motors s most expensive new product investments the Pacer established many features that were later adopted by the auto industry worldwide 131 These included aerodynamic body design space efficient interiors aircraft style doors and a large greenhouse for visibility American Motors was also effective in other areas such as marketing by introducing low rate financing American Motors four wheel drive vehicles established the foundation for the modern SUV market segments and classic Jeep models continue to be the benchmark in this field Roy D Chapin drew on his experiences as a hunter and fisherman and marketed the Jeep brand successfully to people with like interests The brand developed a cult appeal that continues 132 The purchase of American Motors was instrumental in reviving Chrysler According to Robert Lutz former president of Chrysler the American Motors acquisition was a big and risky undertaking 133 The purchase was part of Chrysler s strategic retreat cum diversification plan that he states did not have the right focus Initially the goal was to obtain the world renowned Jeep brand However Lutz discovered that the decision to buy American Motors turned out to be a gold mine for Chrysler 134 At that time Chrysler s management was attempting to find a model to improve structure and operations something that would help get our minds unstuck and thinking beyond the old paradigms that we were so familiar with 135 In this transformation Chrysler s acquisition of AMC was one of the all time great moments in corporate serendipity according to Lutz that most definitely played a key role in demonstrating how to accomplish change 135 According to Lutz 1993 while American Motors had its share of problems it was far from being a bunch of brain dead losers He describes the troops at American Motors as more like the Wake Island Marines in battle with almost no resources and fighting a vastly superior enemy they were able to roll out an impressive succession of new products 136 After first reacting with anger to the purchase Chrysler managers soon anticipated the benefits To further solidify the organizational competencies held by American Motors Lee Iacocca agreed to retain former American Motors units such as engineering completely intact In addition American Motors lead engineer Francois Castaing was made head of all engineering at Chrysler In an unthinkable strategic move Castaing completely dismantled the entrenched Chrysler groups In their place American Motors s platform team was implemented These were close knit cross functional groups responsible for the whole vehicle as contrasted with Chrysler s highly functional structure In this capacity Castaing s strategy was to eliminate the corporate administrative overhead bureaucracy This move shifted corporate culture and agitated veteran executives who believed that Chrysler s reputation as the engineering company was being destroyed Yet according to the popular press by the 1980s Chrysler s reputation was totally shot and in Lutz s view only dramatic action was going to change that 136 In summary Chrysler s purchase of American Motors laid the critical foundation to help re establish a strategy for its revival in the 1990s Top managers at Chrysler after the AMC buyout appeared to have made errors similar to those by American Motors For example Chrysler invested heavily in new untested models while not keeping up its profitable high volume lines The American Motors influence also continued at General Motors GM recruited a new executive team to turn itself from near bankruptcy in the early 2000s Among the new strategists at GM was Lutz who brought an understanding of the importance of passion in product design Lutz implemented a new thinking at GM that incorporated the systems and structures that originated from American Motors s lean and focused operations 137 Renault implemented the lessons it learned from its investment in American Motors The French firm took a parallel approach as it did with its initial ownership of American Motors and applied it to resurrect the money losing Nissan automaker in Japan 138 In 2009 in a deal brokered by the Obama administration Italian automaker Fiat initiated a white knight takeover of Chrysler to save the struggling automaker from liquidation The deal was immediately compared to the American Motors Renault deal some commentators noted the irony in that Chrysler now faced the same fate that American Motors faced 30 years earlier while others expressed skepticism of whether the Italian firm could save Chrysler given how the Renault deal failed However there were key differences between the two Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne became CEO of Chrysler as part of the deal and immediately began globally integrating Fiat and Chrysler s assets and product lines The Fiat Chrysler merger did not face the political opposition the American Motors Renault deal did since Fiat is led by a family group with significant equity and the US government supported the merger While American Motors proved to be a continuous money loser for Renault Chrysler returned to profitability fairly quickly and has since become an important source of revenue and profits for Fiat which has been struggling to maintain volume and profitability amid the European debt crisis The two firms would later fully merge to create Fiat Chrysler Automobiles in 2014 and would further merge with the French firm PSA Group owners of the Citroen and Peugeot brands to form Stellantis in 2021 139 Legacy of products EditPassenger automobiles Edit Eagle Premier Chrysler revived the Spirit name that was discontinued by AMC after 1983 for use on one of its A platform cars the Dodge Spirit from 1989 until 1995 The planned Renault Medallion was sold as the Eagle Medallion in 1988 and 1989 The planned all new 1988 Renault Premier a joint development effort between American Motors and Renault and for which the Brampton Assembly plant Brampton Ontario originally called the Bramalea Plant was built was sold by Chrysler as the 1988 1992 Eagle Premier with a rebadged Dodge Monaco variant available from 1990 through 1992 The full sized Premier s platform was far more advanced than anything Chrysler was building at the time After some re engineering and a re designation to Chrysler code LH the Eagle Premier went on to form the backbone of Chrysler s passenger car lineup during the 1990s as the Chrysler Concorde a revived model name that was briefly used by Plymouth in 1951 and 1952 Chrysler New Yorker Chrysler LHS Dodge Intrepid and Eagle Vision 140 Plymouth almost received their own rendition of the LH platform which was to be called the Accolade but Chrysler decided to nix this idea not long before LH production started The Chrysler 300M was likewise a Premier LH derived car and was initially to have been the next generation Eagle Vision until the Eagle brand was dropped after 1998 The LH Platform was subsequently re engineered using Mercedes Benz components into the Chrysler LX Platform which remains in production today underpinning the Chrysler 300 Dodge Charger and Dodge Challenger Jeep vehicles Edit Jeep Comanche Chrysler marketed the SJ Jeep Grand Wagoneer until 1991 leaving it almost entirely unaltered from the final American Motors rendition before the buyout The Jeep Comanche pickup truck remained until 1992 while the Cherokee remained until 2001 in the United States The XJ Cherokee was produced in China through 2006 as the Cherokee 2500 141 2 5L and Cherokee 4000 4 0L Although it was not introduced until 1993 the Jeep Grand Cherokee was initially an American Motors developed vehicle Traces of American Motors remained within American Motors Toledo Ohio plants continued to manufacture the Jeep Wrangler and Liberty as well as parts and components for Chrysler Dodge and Jeep vehicles although Toledo Machining and Forge were closed in 2005 American Motors main plant in Wisconsin albeit heavily downsized operated as the Kenosha Engine Plant producing engines for several Chrysler Group products including the Wrangler The plant was closed as part of the post bailout restructuring of Chrysler in October 2010 The 4 0 litres 242 cu in engine was used until the 2006 model year by DaimlerChrysler in the Jeep Wrangler American Motors technologically advanced Bramalea Assembly and Stamping Plants in Brampton Ontario later produced the LX cars the Chrysler 300 Dodge Challenger Dodge Charger and the now discontinued Dodge Magnum In terms of American Motors related parts some were used as late as 2006 when the Jeep Wrangler the last new product introduced by American Motors before the Chrysler deal was still using the AMC Straight 6 engine in some models as well as the recessed paddle door handles that were used since the 1968 model year by American Motors Both were retired when the Wrangler was completely redesigned for the 2007 model year AM General sold by American Motors in 1983 is still in business building the American Motors designed Humvee for American and allied militaries AM General also built the now discontinued civilian variant the H1 and manufactured a Chevrolet Tahoe derived companion the H2 under contract to GM who acquired the rights to the civilian Hummer brand in 1999 GM was forced to phase out the Hummer brand in early 2010 as a part of its bankruptcy restructuring after offering it for sale but failing to find a suitable buyer Although Chrysler introduced new logos for its brands in the 1990s and again in 2010 after the Fiat Group took control of the company Jeep still uses the American Motors era logo introduced shortly after American Motors purchase of the brand in 1970 Until the Chrysler purchase Jeep s logo also featured the American Motors emblem International legacy EditBeginning in 1960 American Motors executive vice president of international operations Roy D Chapin Jr embarked on a strong international campaign to set up importation and local assembly operations of American Motors vehicles around the world In five years Chapin increased foreign sales to 73 489 cars which at the same time grew AMC s share of the U S export market from 2 5 percent to 14 3 percent Chapin successfully established or re established vehicle assembly operations in Argentina Australia Belgium via Renault of France Chile Costa Rica Germany Iran Mexico New Zealand Peru Philippines South Africa and Venezuela He also strengthened international export operations with exports to the United Kingdom Denmark 142 Finland Iceland and Norway 143 in Europe and to countries in the Middle East the Caribbean and South America The Rambler Classic would even become the basis of Argentina s future national car the Torino After becoming CEO in 1967 Chapin organized the acquisition of Kaiser Jeep from Kaiser Industries in 1970 with American Motors thereby inheriting all existing international Jeep operations These helped sustain American Motors during the 1970s and 1980s While the Rambler marque had been dropped in the United States after the 1969 model year all export markets retained the Rambler name with the longest to retain it being Mexico until 1983 144 145 Argentina American Motors vehicles assembled Ambassador Classic from 1964 Jeep American Motors vehicles imported Ambassador Classic 1962 1963 146 Australia American Motors vehicles assembled Rambler Six Rambler V8 Ambassador 1961 1963 Classic American Rebel sedan and wagon Matador sedan and wagon Javelin 1968 1972 AMX 1969 model only Hornet sedan Matador Coupe X 1974 model only assembled in 1976 Jeep 1980 1984 147 American Motors vehicles imported Classic hardtop Ambassador 1970 only Canada American Motors vehicles assembled Rambler Six 1957 only Classic American Ambassador until 1968 Rebel Hornet Gremlin Concord Jeep Eagle Spirit American Motors vehicles imported Rambler Six Rambler V8 Metropolitan from U K Ambassador after 1968 Matador Javelin AMX Chile American Motors vehicles assembled Classic American Motors vehicles imported N A Costa Rica American Motors vehicles assembled Classic from 1965 American from 1965 Ambassador from 1965 Rebel Matador Javelin Hornet Sportabout Jeep American Motors vehicles imported Rambler Six Rambler V8 Ambassador until 1965 Classic until 1965 American until 1965 Egypt American Motors vehicles assembled Jeep from 1978 American Motors vehicles imported N A Finland American Motors vehicles assembled N A American Motors vehicles imported Classic American Ambassador Rebel Javelin Hornet Matador Jeep 148 France American Motors vehicles assembled Classic Rebel 1967 only American Motors vehicles imported Jeep by Renault 1980 1986 Javelin Pacer by private importer distributors Germany American Motors vehicles assembled Javelin by Karmann American Motors vehicles imported Ambassador from 1969 Rebel from 1969 AMX from 1969 Jeep from 1977 Eagle 149 150 India American Motors vehicles assembled Jeep American Motors vehicles imported N A Iran American Motors vehicles assembled American Jeep American Motors vehicles imported N A Japan American Motors vehicles assembled Jeep 151 American Motors vehicles imported Eagle 1985 1989 Jeep Cherokee XJ 152 Mexico American Motors vehicles assembled Rambler Six Rambler V8 Ambassador 1959 only American Classic Rebel sedan Matador Javelin AMX Hornet Matador Coupe X Gremlin Pacer Spirit Jeep American Motors vehicles imported Rambler Six 1957 1958 Rambler V8 1957 1958 New Zealand American Motors vehicles assembled Rambler Six Rambler V8 Classic Rebel sedan Jeep American Motors vehicles imported Metropolitan Rebel wagon Rebel hardtop Ambassador 1970 only Norway American Motors vehicles assembled N A American Motors vehicles imported Ambassador Classic American Rebel People s Republic of China American Motors vehicles assembled Jeep from 1984 153 American Motors vehicles imported N A Peru American Motors vehicles assembled Classic American Rebel American Motors vehicles imported N A Philippines American Motors vehicles assembled Classic American Javelin American Motors vehicles imported N A Switzerland American Motors vehicles assembled N A American Motors vehicles imported Gremlin Javelin Pacer Jeep 154 155 South Africa American Motors vehicles assembled American Hornet 156 American Motors vehicles imported N A South Korea American Motors vehicles assembled Jeep 1974 1981 American Motors vehicles imported N A Spain American Motors vehicles assembled Jeep American Motors vehicles imported N A Venezuela American Motors vehicles assembled Classic Javelin Hornet Jeep American Motors vehicles imported N A United Kingdom American Motors vehicles assembled Metropolitan by Austin American Motors vehicles imported Rambler Six Rambler V8 Classic Rebel Ambassador Matador Javelin Pacer locally converted to RHD Gremlin locally converted to RHD Legacy of divisions and facilities EditFormer brands and divisions Edit During its history American Motors bought or created then later sold and divested itself of several specialized divisions some of which continue to exist today Kelvinator the subdivision of Nash Kelvinator was sold by American Motors in 1968 to White Consolidated Industries and subsequently became part of Electrolux 157 The Kelvinator Company is still in business Jeep is a brand under Stellantis It was a brand of the Fiat Chrysler Automobiles until January 16 2021 Many Jeep models retained the mechanical specifications and styling cues that were developed by American Motors well into the 1990s or even into the first decade of the 2000s AM General is now owned by KPS Capital Partners It was organized as an LLC in August 2004 Wheel Horse Products Division is now owned by the Toro Company Beijing Jeep was established by American Motors in 1984 to produce Jeeps for the burgeoning Chinese market the joint venture was inherited by Chrysler and is currently owned by Mercedes Benz Group which renamed it Beijing Benz American Motors trials with the venture were the subject of a book on the venture Beijing Jeep by James Mann Facilities Edit This section needs to be updated The reason given is Section needs info about World Headquarters building demolition and land redevelopment Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information February 2023 American Motors World Headquarters 1954 1975 158 was located at 14250 Plymouth Road in Detroit and was widely known as the Plymouth Road Office Center PROC In 1975 American Motors moved its headquarters from the facility on Plymouth Road to a newly constructed building on Northwestern Highway in Southfield Michigan known as the American Center The initial building had been built during 1926 27 by the Electric Refrigeration Corporation subsequently Nash Kelvinator with design by Amedeo Leoni industrial layout by Wallace McKenzie and tower enclosure and industrial units by William E Kapp of SHG The original 600 000 sq ft 56 000 m2 three story factory and four story administration building had been headquarters to Nash Kelvinator from 1937 until 1954 as well as a factory for refrigerators electric ranges and commercial refrigeration as well as airplane propellers for the U S military effort during World War II During World War II the U S War Department contracted with Nash Kelvinator to produce 900 Sikorsky R 6 model helicopters As part of that contract a 4 5 acres 1 8 ha site north of the factory was used as the smallest airport in the world citation needed as a flight testing base Nash Kelvinator produced about 50 R 6s a month during the war When the contract was terminated at the end of the war a total of 262 helicopters had been constructed During Chrysler s occupancy of the complex it was known as Jeep and Dodge Truck Engineering JTE including facilities for body on frame work as well as testing facilities and labs The buildings included 1 500 000 square feet 140 000 m2 approximately one third devoted to engineering and computer functions 159 As of 2007 Chrysler still employed over 1 600 people at the complex moving those operations in mid 2009 to the Chrysler Technology Center PROC was made available for sale by Chrysler in early 2010 160 It was bought by a local man who gutted the building for scrap and left it in a dilapidated state before losing it to foreclosure 161 The abandoned building was in possession of the city of Detroit and officials were considering if the industrial site would be more marketable if the building was torn down 162 163 In 2018 the Wayne County Commission approved a land swap that included a new jail complex for the county as well as a potential revival for the old American Motors building 164 American Center American Motors corporate headquarters in Southfield Michigan is still standing 165 still open and still called American Center The original American Center signage at the top of the building remained until 2005 although the American Motors logo has been removed The signage has since been changed to Charter One The 25 story building is rented to several different organizations and companies as office space After the Chrysler acquisition Chrysler Financial occupied as much as 175 000 square feet 16 300 m2 of the building 166 Toledo South Assembly Plants Torn down by Chrysler in 2007 Until it was demolished still visible on most of the signage on the outside of the factories were areas where Chrysler painted over the American Motors logo Toledo Forge 167 Torn down by Chrysler in 2007 Brampton formerly Bramalea Assembly and Satellite Stamping Plants 168 169 Still in use by Chrysler American Motors designed this US 260 million US 678 148 623 in 2021 dollars 19 2 500 000 square foot 230 000 m2 plant which was operational by 1986 170 This plant was designed and built by American Motors for the specific purpose of building the Eagle Premier Like the older Brampton plant this factory was also part of American Motors Canada Ltd and with the Chrysler buyout in 1987 it became part of Chrysler Canada Limited The plant currently builds the LX series of vehicles including the Chrysler 300 and the Dodge Charger It also produces a slightly modified version of the LX series renamed the LC series supporting the Dodge Challenger nameplate Kenosha Main Plant Portions of the Kenosha Main Plant later Chrysler s Kenosha Engine plant with some new additions at 52nd Street and 30th Avenue continued to be run by Chrysler as an engine production factory This plant closed in October 2010 171 as part of Chrysler LLC s Chapter 11 bankruptcy procedure which resulted from the automotive industry crisis 172 Demolition of the plant began in early December 2012 173 Canadian Fabricated Products Ltd An American Motors division part of American Motors of Canada in Stratford Ontario established in 1971 and sold post buyout by Chrysler in 1994 produced automotive interior trim 174 Guelph Products An American Motors division also part of American Motors of Canada in Guelph Ontario opened in 1987 and subsequently sold by Chrysler in early 1993 the operation supplied molded plastic components to the Brampton Assembly Plant 174 Coleman Products Corporation An American Motors subsidiary in Coleman Wisconsin Manufactured automotive wiring harnesses for American Motors and other automakers Evart Products Co An American Motors subsidiary in Evart Michigan The plant was established in 1953 with 25 workers and eventually expanded to over 1 200 becoming Osceola County s largest employer 175 This factory manufactured injection molded plastic parts notably grilles for American Motors supplying 90 of in house needs 176 as well as for other automakers In 1966 Products Wire Harness was built After Chrysler s purchase of American Motors Collins amp Aikman took over the factory 175 Mercury Plastics Co Mercury Plastics operated a plant at 34501 Harper Ave Mt Clemens Michigan The company was acquired in 1973 for 611 111 shares of American Motors stock 177 The company produced plastic parts for American Motors as well as for uses in other industries Windsor Plastics Co Windsor Plastics 601 North Congress Avenue Evansville Indiana was acquired in 1970 The division produced plastic parts for American Motors and other industries The company was sold to Guardian Industries in 1982 and underwent a name change to Guardian Automotive Trim Inc It is still in operation today The original factory in Evansville continues to manufacture plastic parts for the OEM and aftermarket automotive industries Items manufactured include grilles bezels and other parts 178 The American Motors Proving Grounds The former 300 acres 1 2 km2 0 47 sq mi American Motors Proving Grounds in Burlington Wisconsin had initially been Nash s test track and subsequently became Jeep s test facilities after American Motors acquired Kaiser Jeep in the 1970s The grounds fell into disuse after Chrysler s takeover of American Motors in 1987 and subsequently became the engineering and test facility for MGA Research 179 The company rents out this proving grounds to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA for ride and drive events by automakers as well as for movies and commercials 180 Axle tooling equipment Sold in 1985 to Dana Holding Corporation and they named the AMC 15 axles as Dana 35 181 Dana manufactured the AMC 20 axles for AM General s Hummer H1 The company also continues to produce the AMC 15 axle as well however they have been upgraded from American Motors original design with multiple variations including front axle designs Holmes Foundry Ltd American Motors block casting foundry was a major American Motors factory which is now obliterated Holmes had its main office and foundry at 200 Exmouth Street Sarnia Ontario Canada Holmes was established in 1918 by J S Blunt and was called Holmes Blunt Limited In the early years Ford Motor Company contracted the plant for a steady supply of engine casting blocks This factory had a reputation locally as a dirty dangerous place to work The company had three divisions all operating on one site at the edge of Sarnia Beginning in 1962 American Motors contracted with Holmes Foundry to supply American Motors with cylinder block castings 182 American Motors acquired 25 interest in the foundry in January 1966 In July 1970 American Motors acquired 100 of Holmes Foundry through an exchange of shares making it a wholly owned subsidiary 183 However it was not until October 1981 that Holmes Foundry finally became a division of American Motors of Canada As part of its acquisition of American Motors in 1987 Chrysler Corporation took ownership of the Holmes facility and its manufacturing business but closed the operation on September 16 1988 The industrial facilities were cleaned of their environmental contaminants in 2005 in preparation for a new highway interchange to be built on the site 184 Kenosha Lakefront Kenosha Wisconsin Plant The American Motors plant in downtown Kenosha along Lake Michigan was razed and after reclamation the land was used for new development At the company s inception in 1954 the plant covered 3 195 000 sq ft 296 800 m2 and together with the Milwaukee plant had an annual production capacity of 350 000 cars 185 Milwaukee Body Milwaukee Wisconsin Plant American Motors inherited a 1 600 000 sq ft 150 000 m2 185 body plant in Milwaukee from Nash The plant was the main body plant for Seaman Body Company which did a lot of business with Nash and other makers assembling bodies of various designs For American Motors the plant was sometimes an internal headache For instance in late 1961 George Romney himself stormed through the plant and threatened to close it and eliminate its 9 000 jobs due to labor problems 186 The plant survived until the Chrysler buyout Chrysler later decided to dispose of the factory Upon closure the site was named a Superfund site The factory was demolished and the site was rehabilitated and redeveloped Danforth Ave Toronto Ontario Plant Inherited from Nash This plant was purchased by Nash from Ford of Canada in 1946 The first Canadian built Nash rolled off the line in April 1950 Upon the formation of American Motors in 1954 the plant assembled 1955 Nash and Hudson Ramblers 2 and 4 door sedans as well as Nash Canadian Statesman and Hudson Wasp 4 door sedans In 1956 the plant continued to assemble the Nash and Hudson Rambler 4 door sedans and wagons as well as the Nash Canadian Statesman 4 door sedan but the Hudson Wasp was imported That same year American Motors Canada Limited was formed taking over Nash Motors of Canada Limited and Hudson Motors of Canada Limited In 1957 American Motors assembled the Rambler Six and Rambler Rebel V8 at the Danforth plant but in July 1957 American Motors closed the plant and imported Ramblers into Canada until 1961 The structure remains today as the Shoppers World Danforth Lowe s store Tilbury Ontario Assembly Plant Another plant American Motors inherited from the 1954 merger this one via Hudson Specifically it was a contract with CHATCO Steel Products which actually owned the plant American Motors ceased Hudson production at the Tilbury plant in 1955 Brampton Assembly Plant American Motors opened a plant in 1960 in Brampton Ontario Canada It was part of American Motors of Canada Rambler Drive a small street just west of this plant still exists and leads into a residential subdivision that was built in the 1960s In 1987 with the Chrysler buyout the division and the plant were absorbed as well becoming part of Chrysler Canada Limited The plant was closed in 1994 and sold to Wal Mart for use as their Canadian warehouse This plant warehouse was demolished in 2004 and redeveloped in 2007 with multiple smaller commercial buildings now onsite a new Lowes Home Improvement Warehouse now takes up the largest section of this commercial development Note that this is a separate facility from the current Brampton formerly Bramalea Assembly and Satellite Stamping Plants nearby South Charleston Stamping Plant A South Charleston West Virginia facility While American Motors leased it the plant stamped steel automotive parts In 1978 Volkswagen of America purchased the plant 187 to supply stampings for its Westmoreland Assembly Plant subsequently selling the plant when it closed Westmoreland in 1988 188 to Park Corporation of Cleveland OH In October 2006 its recent tenant Union Stamping and Assembly declared bankruptcy 189 Former subsidiaries and affiliates Edit AM General Arab American Vehicles Beijing Jeep Shinjin Jeep Motors Vehiculos Automotores Mexicanos American Motors Sales Corp American Motors Realty Corp American Motors Leasing Corp Evart Production Co Coleman Products Co American Motors Pan American Corp Jeep Corp McDonald Molding Inc Mercury Plastics Co Rantoul Products Inc American Motors Canada Ltd Rambler Motors A M C Ltd United Kingdom American Motors Corporation de Venezuela C A American Motors Financial Corp Jeep Australia Pty Ltd Jeep de Venezuela S A Earlier use of the name EditThe era of 1900 until 1925 saw various corporations in several U S states use similar American names such as American Motor Carriage Company Ohio 1902 1903 American Automobile Manufacturing Company Indiana 1911 1912 and American Motors Incorporated New York 1919 1920 190 In 1916 an earlier American Motors Corporation apparently unrelated to the more famous later corporation of the same name was formed in Newark New Jersey with Louis Chevrolet as vice president and chief engineer 191 By 1918 it was producing cars in a plant at Plainfield New Jersey 192 In 1923 it merged with the Bessemer Motor Truck Company of Pennsylvania into Bessemer American Motors Corporation which lasted less than a year before merging with the Winther and Northway companies into Amalgamated Motors The latter company apparently ceased soon after Later reuse of the trademark EditA new company was formed in Palmdale California in 2001 Registration for the American Motors trademarks was filed in 2001 by this California based firm 193 The company s website specifically claimed no affiliation to the previous American Motors but used American Motors history and logos on its website 194 The website is now dead and the company s claims to American Motors trademarks expired in 2005 193 The new Chrysler LLC holds a live registration for the name American Motors which was applied for in 2005 195 The AMC wordmark complete with A mark graphic logo as was originally used in 1970 196 and through the late 1980s was registered and published for comment by Chrysler as of 2010 197 American Motors passenger cars Edit 1969 SC Rambler 1982 Eagle SX 4 1957 Rambler Rebel 1970 The Machine 1976 Matador coupe 1971 Ambassador 1974 Ambassador Subcompact1955 1962 Metropolitan 1970 1978 AMC Gremlin 1979 1983 AMC Spirit 1981 1983 AMC Eagle SX 4 and Kammback 1983 1987 Renault Alliance based on the Renault 9 1984 1987 Renault Encore based on the Renault 11 1987 only Renault GTA based on the Renault 9 The Metropolitan was introduced by Nash in 1954 The Gremlin was the company s first modern subcompact Compact1955 1956 Nash Hudson Rambler 1956 1957 Rambler Six Rambler Rebel 1958 1969 Rambler American 1968 1970 AMC AMX 1968 1974 AMC Javelin 1970 1977 AMC Hornet 1975 1980 AMC Pacer 1978 1983 AMC ConcordCrossover1980 1988 AMC EagleMid size1958 1960 Rambler Six Rambler Rebel 1961 1966 Rambler Classic 1958 1964 Rambler Ambassador 1958 1962 also known as Ambassador by Rambler 1965 1966 Rambler AMC Marlin 1967 1970 Rambler AMC Rebel 1971 1973 AMC MatadorFull size1955 1956 Hudson Wasp 1955 1956 Nash Statesman 1955 1957 Hudson Hornet 1955 1957 Nash Ambassador 1965 1974 Rambler AMC Ambassador 1967 AMC Marlin 1974 1978 AMC Matador sedan and wagon 1988 1992 Eagle PremierAmerican Motors engines Edit 199 six cylinder 343 4 bbl V8 390 Go Pac V8 Main article List of AMC engines 1954 1956 184 cu in 3 0 L Nash I6 Rambler 196 cu in 3 2 L Nash L head I6 Rambler AMC I6 252 cu in 4 1 L Nash I6 320 cu in 5 2 L Packard built V8 352 cu in 5 8 L Packard built V8 Used only 1956 1956 1966 196 cu in 3 2 L Rambler I6 AMC I6 L head and OHV version ended 1965 199 cu in 3 3 L Typhoon Six I6 Starting in 1966 232 cu in 3 8 L Typhoon Six I6 Beginning in 1964 250 cu in 4 1 L AMC V8 Ending in 1961 287 cu in 4 7 L AMC V8 Beginning in 1963 327 cu in 5 4 L AMC V8 Also used by Kaiser Jeep 1965 1967 1967 1970 199 cu in 3 3 L Typhoon Six I6 232 cu in 3 8 L Typhoon Six I6 290 cu in 4 8 L AMC V8 Ending in 1969 304 cu in 5 0 L AMC V8 Beginning in 1970 343 cu in 5 6 L AMC V8 Ending in 1969 360 cu in 5 9 L AMC V8 Beginning in 1970 390 cu in 6 4 L AMC V8 1971 1980 121 cu in 2 0 L AMC I4 1 232 cu in 3 8 L AMC I6 258 cu in 4 2 L AMC I6 304 cu in 5 0 L AMC V8 360 cu in 5 9 L AMC V8 Ending in 1978 for automobiles and through 1991 in Jeeps 401 cu in 6 6 L AMC V8 Ending in 1974 as a regular production order in automobiles was available in fleet police use until at least 1975 In 1975 89 units were installed in Matadors 4 coupes and 85 sedans wagons Available in full size Jeeps through 1979 also used by International Harvester in 1974 in 1200 series pickups and the Travelall during a strike at International Harvester though IH called the engine a 400 CID 1980 1983 151 cu in 2 5 L Pontiac Iron Duke I4 258 cu in 4 2 L AMC I6 1984 1986 2 5 litres 150 cu in AMC I4 258 cu in 4 2 L AMC I6 1987 2 5 litres 150 cu in AMC I4 258 cu in 4 2 L AMC I6 4 0 litres 242 cu in AMC I6 1988 1989 2 5 litres 150 cu in AMC I4 258 cu in 4 2 L AMC I6 3 0 litres 183 cu in PRV V6Also Kaiser Jeeps used the AMC 327 Buick 225 Dauntless V6 Buick 350 Dauntless V8 Willys 134 I4 Hurricane The downsized Jeep XJ Cherokee Wagoneer used the Chevrolet 2 8 Litre V6 in 1983 1984 American Motors contracted with Volkswagen to buy tooling for the Audi 2 0 L OHC I4 Major parts block crankshaft head assembly were initially purchased from Audi and shipped to the U S where final assembly was accomplished by American Motors at a plant purchased specifically for the production of this engine Sales never reached numbers to justify taking over total production American Motors made several changes to the engine They were prevented from using the Volkswagen or Audi names in association with the American Motors assembled version by contractual agreement Collectibility Edit Javelin with Go package Ambassador hardtop wagon Rambler American convertible American Motors models historically regarded by hobbyists as particularly collectible include the Javelin AMX and performance specials such as the 1957 Rambler Rebel 1965 67 Marlin 1969 Hurst SC Rambler 1970 Rebel Machine and 1971 Hornet SC 360 These models enjoyed limited popularity when new resulting in low production figures 198 In January 2007 the AMC AMX was really taking off in the muscle car market according to the editors of Hemmings Classic Car and it had left its mark among AMC collectors minds as a great alternative to higher priced Hemi powered muscle cars 199 The early Javelin 1968 70 stands out from the Ford General Motors and Chrysler pony cars 200 Car expert Jack Nerad noted in a 2007 article several fully restored AMX models listed for sale at little more than half the price of a comparable Buick Gran Sport Chevrolet Chevelle Olds 4 4 2 or Pontiac GTO in support of the author s opinion that the 1971 74 Javelin was clearly an outstanding alternative muscle car for the enthusiast on a budget 201 According to James C Mays automotive historian and author of The Savvy Guide to Buying Collector Cars at Auction the Wow Factor is an important and measurable pleasure to an owner whether their car is driven or sits in a climate controlled garage 202 His Wow Factor includes examples of a bright red 1969 AMX that according to its owner is just a fast Rambler but draws more people at events than the more prestigious Ferraris and Lamborghinis as well as a million dollar moment when a Rambler owner was serenaded with the Beep Beep song by The Playmates while fueling at a travel plaza 202 Moreover the author s collector car a 1969 Ambassador station wagon made friends as strangers came to greet and host him as if long lost kin 203 Mays points out the ready availability of parts for American Motors engines and his experiences in having service done on Ramblers without being charged for the work in exchange for the experience of driving a sassy Rambler a 1966 American convertible and having pictures taken with it 204 Other American Motors models once somewhat ignored by the hobby are now considered future collectibles Examples include the 1959 Ambassador 4 door hardtop station wagon of which only 578 were produced and the Jeep Scrambler CJ8 a combined pickup truck Jeep of which only a few thousand were produced Hemmings Classic Car magazine included the 1969 70 Rebel SST and the 1974 78 Matador coupe in their 2008 list of dollar for pound weight cars that could be bought in show quality condition for a comparatively modest outlay 205 The writer also noted that most of AMC s 70s lineup qualified for inclusion on the list The AMC Gremlin is described to have a cult like following in today s collectible car market 206 The Gremlin shares components with some other American Motors models making its repair and restoration relatively inexpensive compared with other historic cars 206 The AMC Pacer increased in value according to a Pacer owner who is the CEO of a major insurance provider for collector car owners 207 There are active Rambler and American Motors car clubs in the U S and elsewhere examples in External Links Hot Rod magazine revival April Fool s joke Edit In April 2008 Hot Rod magazine released an article claiming that American Motors was in the process of being revived The vehicles in the works were to be the AMX Matador Ambassador Pacer and Gremlin Illustrated with drawings of the concept cars entering production and accompanied by plentiful information it was a popular article although it was later revealed to be an April Fools joke 208 See also EditAmitron and Electron Experimental battery powered city cars designed by American Motors AMC Jeep Transmissions AMC 20 Amco American Motors Inc of New York City active from 1917 until 1922 References Edit Georgano Nick 1996 The American automobile a centenary Smithmark p 180 ISBN 978 0 7651 9631 6 The day Hudson and Nash boards of directors agreed to the merger a b Corporate Entity Details American Motors Corporation Michigan Department of Licensing amp Regulatory Affairs LARA American Motors Corporation incorporated in Maryland as Nash Kelvinator Corporation January 4 1937 renamed American Motors April 30 1954 and Jeep Eagle Corporation August 25 1988 was formally merged as of March 29 1990 with its final annual report filed in 1989 Flory J Kelly 2008 American Cars 1946 1959 Every Model Year by Year McFarland p 545 ISBN 978 0 7864 5230 9 Turnaround at American Motors Fortune Vol 100 1979 pp 66 80 Matras John April 4 2005 Marlins and Hornets and Gremlins Oh My The Quirky Classics of A M C The New York Times Answer from the Hustlers Time January 25 1954 Archived from the original on November 16 2010 Retrieved July 12 2010 Flammang James M 1994 Chronicle of the American automobile over 100 years of auto history Publications International p 278 ISBN 978 0 7853 0778 5 Retrieved July 29 2010 Time Clock Oct 12 1953 Time October 12 1953 Archived from the original on December 22 2008 Retrieved July 12 2010 Time Clock Feb 7 1955 Time February 7 1955 Archived from the original on December 15 2008 Retrieved July 12 2010 Second Best Year Time August 1 1955 Archived from the original 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978 0 912289 10 6 Foster Patrick 2004 AMC Cars 1954 1987 An Illustrated History Motorbooks International ISBN 978 1 58388 112 5 Foster Patrick 1993 The Last Independent Motorbooks International ISBN 978 0 87341 240 7 Foster Patrick 1996 The Metropolitan Story Krause Publications ISBN 978 0 87341 459 3 Foster Patrick 1998 The Nash Styling Sketchbook Olde Milford Press ISBN 978 0 9662019 0 1 Gunnell John ed 1987 The Standard Catalog of American Cars 1946 1975 Krause Publications ISBN 978 0 87341 096 0 Gunnell John ed 1993 The Standard Catalog of American Motors 1902 1987 Krause Publications ISBN 978 0 87341 232 2 Mann Jim 1997 Beijing Jeep A Case Study of Western Business in China Perseus Publishing ISBN 978 0 8133 3327 4 Mays James C 2001 Rambler Canada The Little Company That Could Syam Publications ISBN 978 0 9685864 7 1 Mitchell Larry 1994 AMC Buyers Guide Motorbooks International ISBN 978 0 87938 891 1 Swygert Francis G 1992 The Compact Chronicles A Complete History of American Motors Corporation 1954 1987 With Restoration Information FARNA Systems Publishing Swygert Francis G American Motors Cars Magazine formerly published as American Independent Magazine FARNA Systems Publishing Zinn Chris L 2002 AMX Photo Archive From Concept to Reality Iconographix ISBN 978 1 58388 062 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to American Motors Corporation The American Motors Owners Association The AMC Rambler Club IMCDB AMC vehicles in movies amp TV shows AMC cars at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Motors Corporation amp oldid 1152694433, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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