@@klingerkun5766 of course you're right. it can't happen. on a side note though, and a big what if.. American Motors owned Jeep. But this was in the years just before the big SUV boom. If they could have just held on a few more years, maybe Chrysler would have taken the fall instead of AMC.
Yes damnit yes! I wish the rest of the country thought that. Fuck we used to better than them now we're trying to be like them. Fuck foreigners Take pride of our previous accomplishments
my late husband had a 1959 Rambler Rebel V8. Ran like the dickens. Had more get up and go than my lazy ass husband, rest his soul. He like the reclinin' seats...After I went to bed he'd get a couple of Schaefer Beer Tall Boys, go down to the widow Irene's house, and they'd both head out to the outskirts of town. After downing a couple of cans they'd recline the seats and have a good ole time. When Sheriff Bob came around with a flashlight the old goat would say that widow Irene was me!. Sheriff Bob would tell him and Irene to get the hell out of the car and they'd be standin there naked as jaybirds piss drunk.
How many of those floors are already as strong as construction paper? Leaving them unattended like that is like leaving a diamond in the streets of Detroit; the weather's not helping them unless you want one that looks ratty. Don't think of turning one of the engines on without replacing the gaskets either.
Yeah that’s why the ones up front by the fences don’t get as many weeds growing around them and get airflow underneath the frames and they don’t rust out as easily
In my humble opinion, if I wanted to still sell AMC's I would have that jungle that surrounds the dealership cut down and have the place looking nice. Clean those cars up. It looks like a junk yard. I salute them for their idea and efforts, but goodness your pride in the brand needs to be evidenced in how you care for the place and the vehicles.
Agreed, I work in a "Salvage yard" and auto shop of sorts, yet the yard work is kept up, the best we can. The grass is cut, brush is managed, and thats just the back part, where the parts cars lie. the upper area, with the shop, and the lot with the whole cars is kept impeccable, and the cars as clean as rusty old project cars can be, and the driver quality cars are kept well. The best pieces are inside a garage with concrete floors.
This place was on an episode of Fast & Loud. They went inside and the owner was sitting at a desk in rubble from the ceiling falling in. They didn't keep the heat and lights on so the building is falling apart.
Been there. They still have a lot of rare cars, not just AMC cars. Found a 67 Dart GT and a 70 Demon. Well worth the trip. You will find a Restoration project.
The reason that stuff is sitting out in the rain is that the guy's son is asking ridiculous money for that stuff so nobody will buy it. It's just going to compost for the most part.
This isn't an AMC Dealer, it's a junk yard....he stopped selling AMC in the mid 80's, the real "last" AMC dealers are the dealers that kept going in 1988. Like Brigham Gill AMC Jeep in Natick Ma. or Lahti's in Leominster MA and Dan's Jeep Chrysler in Westborough MA. Dealers that sold AMC and Jeep and then Eagle and continued selling even after the Eagle Brand Left....these were the guys that sold cars and new how to run a business. Collier's is a joke, it's just a junk yard that once sold AMC's before they bailed because they couldn't make money selling cars. They are simply Losers
Renault won Motor Trends car of the year with the Alliance. The Encore & Alliance were extremely competitive with the cars of the day. Renault was planning to roll out the Medallion which was a class leading car, it lived on as the Intrepid and even as the Charger / 300 of today. Renault sold out after Besse was assassinated by Action Directe and the company was in turmoil due to leadership issues not lack of quality offerings.
The only new car my folks EVER bought was a 79 Concord I6 4spd station wagon. It had problems, but I've got fond memories of it regardless. Beautiful car. Would love to see AMC make a comback. Cars today have no character, or soul, except for a few minor (and usually PRICEY!) odd balls.
The 1.7/1.8/2.0 OHC engine was the worst. It had a really weak head gasket. My sister's Laguna 2.0 OHC (F-type) had engine failure at 60 000 miles. It used to burn crazy amounts of oil also. It ended up with a warped cylinder head.
To my understanding, it was that or shutting AMC down immediately. Their range was massively obsolete, their cars sold poorly and there was literally no money for R&D.
AMC didn't have the clout that Chrysler had, I guess, to have loan guarantees made by the Carter government. Chrysler's belly-up would have forced a lot more (speculative, because I don't know how many employees AMC had in 1978 versus Chrysler - however, AMC was the smallest of the Big Four) layoffs and would have had such a ripple effect in suppliers. AMC, up to 1979, rose and fell with Jeep's success. When the CAFE guidelines became more stringent, Jeep couldn't be the saviour any longer. AMC didn't have the money (after the Pacer and the Matador coupe flopped) to develop a front-wheel-drive small car. Apparently Honda and PSA Peugeot Citroen were also approached in the mid-1970s by AMC to be strategic partners. By the time 1983 rolled around, Renault called all the shots. It wasn't AMC/Jeep any longer, it was Renault North America/Jeep.
Wow!!! This is like traveling back to a place and time that I thought only lived on in my memory. Back in 1987, my first car was a 1975 AMC Hornet. Had the D/L trim package, which included reclining velour upholstered front seats, vinyl top, and color keyed hubcaps. Car was loaded for a '75, with factory AM/FM and A/C, tilt wheel, and delay wipers. Under the hood was a 258 straight six with Carter 1 barrel carb. The 258 was a torque monster, would light up the tires off of the line, and hit 50 in 7 seconds. Acceleration was slow above 50, but this didn't matter. The speed limit was 55, and it pulled a hill like a bear at 70. The entrance to parking lot at my high school was at about a 12% uphill grade, so I could lay a major patch of rubber, thanks to all that torque. Compared to the anemic newer cars of that era, the Hornet was quick and powerful.
I had a '74 Hornet w/ the 258 straight 6; got it from a Wino for a large pepperoni pizza & $25, that included the title also. Used it as a pizza delivery vehicle, basically a piece of junk w/ 60,000 miles on it; but what fun we had! Leaky rear main seal & junkyard tires; it was a car built to be beat...Had a cigar box hood scoop, primer gray w/ a hole in the muffler, used to scare the shit out of people w/ it...It's semi-demise occurred 2 years after I bought it after taking a jump at a construction site & grabbing a bit too much air- tweaked the frame a bit so I sold it to some dudes in a trailer park for $100. Legendary, what that machine held up to, including racing in the dry canals during the winter, jumping curbs, pouring bleach on the tires & smoking the shit out of them through the McDonalds drive thru, doing 360's in the gravel parking lot of the cheese factory at 3AM drunk and more....!
In about 1980 I did my first (and last) carburetor "rebuild" using a kit, on my inherited '73 Sportabout X in Maxi-Blue with the 258 CI six, automatic. Afterwards, I was stunned to ACCIDENTALLY lay a patch of rubber ! Very satisfying.
@@tskraj3190 my dad had a '75 Gremlin he used as his work car in the mid to late '90s hauling water heaters and other plumbing equipment. He could fit a water heater lengthwise in it with the rear seat down. It had Plexiglass on the rear hatch he put on when the original glass broke. He used it on a camping trip from Central California to the Oregon border, too. He loved it and said it was like a small pickup truck as far it's power, having that 232 inline six engine, the base Jeep engine at the time. I had it as my first car and drove it until the wheels literally locked up at around 125,000 miles. Cars like these seemed to have such character and charm. People talk about them fondly when they're gone. I don't think about the crappy 1996 Nissan Sentra I had.
I had a 1977 Pacer in college back in 2006 paid 65.00 for it. That Pacer would start even in the coldest of condition. My Pacer had Auto PS/PB Cold A/C Alum wheels Cloth int tilt CC Rear Defrost Power Windows/Mirrors. Drove that car three years no problems just basic maintenance. AMC made good cheap dependable cars and that 4.2L straight 6 was indructable which led the famous AMC Jeep 4.0L Straight 6 which was used from 1987-2005. I took that Pacer to the car shows at my college every year not many knew what it was. I sold it to a girl in my apartment complex. She had brought a brand new 2009 Cobalt with 24 miles her car would not start and it was -5 out with the wind chill of -25. I was parked next to her. I remember her saying I bet the old Pacer wont start. I said it will got in the car pumped the carb three times she fired right off. The car had 177,850 miles. I put 20k on it many self. She asked if I would sell her the car I said give me 300.00 for it She did. She took the Cobalt back and the dealer had to buy her car back. She drove the Pacer for another 10 years or so after that. Last time I talked to her she said the car has 377,480 on it and still runs excellent. She had it repainted and restored. She told me that was the best 300 .00 she ever spent. Now its been repainted professionally and she had the int professionally restored back in 2017. She told me after that POS Gm Cobalt she will never buy a new car ever again. She told me she sticks with cars that are 20+ years old and easy to work on.The only thing that was rebuilt in the Pacer was the moter and trans she said those were the same as I sold it to her. We are still friends to this day. I helped her take that Cobalt back and bitch at the dealer 8 times for the same thing. I told them next time I have to help her bring this car back i want you the service advisor and the tech standing in front of the door so when I honk i can run this car right up your ass both of you. Then she called GM and they brought the car back. I felt bad for her. The dealer was taking advantage of this 25 year old woman and I was her friend and not putting up with it.
i owned a 1968 Rambler American and a 1974 Javelin. i wish i hadnt been so stupid to let them go. my step dad bought the American new and then totaled it. new front clip, windshield, rear glass, top and trunk lid later, she was looking spiffy again. then he found Ford and parked the American in a field for 8 years. i bought it, changed the fluids, cleaned the gas tank and she fired right up. drove it another 6 years.
In my younger days, late 1970s to early 1980s, I was a big AMC enthusiast. I owned three Javelins - 1968 with 232ci six cylinder, 1970 SST with 360 V8 and a 1971 with 304 V8, and a 1968 AMX with little 290 V8. The 68 Javelin was my daily driver through my Airforce years in the late 1970s, the AMX was my fun car in my last year in the USAF and first couple years in the Navy - reenlisted 1980. I wish I still had them, especially the hot little AMX.
The funny thing about AMC was that sometimes they were a company that was ahead of its time with some of their designs. They were one of the first to adopt unibody platforms, and the Eagle was something like the first crossover--something which Subaru would exploit with the Outback and of course what we have today. And when Chrysler took over the company, some of the designs AMC was working on (admittedly through Renault) ultimately became the LH cars of the '90's, which were revolutionary in their use of interior space.
American Pickers Frank & Mike once paid a visit to this place and even bought a car FYI the AMX Javelin is worth a ton of money just like it sit's .$$$
I fell in love with AMC when the first time I saw James bond Live and Let Die when he drives the red Hornet out through the glass of the AMC Dealer.chasing the other bad guy in a gold Matador with black hard top, it ends up flying like a plane. but the Hornet when he went over the bridge that was out and rolled a 360 in mid air to land safely on the other side I was hooked.my first car 73 Gremlin -X 258 6 cyl put 412 k on it sold it for 500, then a 78 Concord Wagon 304, then my baby 79 Amx Spirit took out the 304 and put the 401, wow what a ride.
Fake News....This guy isn’t selling Nothing !! “Hoarders disease” Was in contact years ago with him on a Matador, even threw a higher offer then what a run and drive sells for....nothing but a long conversation that went nowhere. Google maps showed the cars in the exact same spot untouched 10 years apart, with car added here and there But he’s very knowledgeable on these cars, more then anyone I’ve know in the business, I’ll give him that.
@Gappie Al Kebabi Dont drive a Chevrolet if you want to be in a comfort zone. Unless you consider cheesy dot matrix readouts, crappy hard plastics and shantytown build quality to be a 'comfort zone'.
I could be wrong but I believe American Pickers came to this place a few years back and bought a car or at least bought some parts and other historic memorabilia.
The Rusty Hubcap If you can answer is it like they show it on the TV series or is it scripted and planned out when they visit locations?? I know a few people on RUclips that are collectors and they would probably love to visit these locations.
American Pickers visited a "old goods" dealer near me in Cortland NY ("old goods" not antiques; things the dealer bought at local Friday night auctions). The American Picker convoy was 18 vehicles: the truck they have on TV; makeup RV; director's RV, writer's RVs, many International 26' box trucks, etc.; the 18 doesn't include the catering trucks or any cars. Everything is driven by OTR drivers, it's a bigger parade than the circus coming to town, *It isn't two guys driving around on the backroads, everything is preplanned months in advance. they even have a mobile HR department and lawyers they bring with them.* Real life isn't what appears on TV.
I thought they will save the Rambler American compact car through 1970 instead of 1969, but it does happen. It was the last of Rambler nameplate, while Rambler did changed it brand to AMC, starting in 1966 for the full size Ambassador, and the mid-size Classic, then changed it to Rebel for 1967. For 1965, Rambler Marlin is a 2 door fastback hardtop and it did continued for 1966 and 1967. The latter 2 model years are AMC Marlin. For 1968, AMC introduced the muscle car, Javelin with a high performance V-8 engine through 1974. For 1971, AMC did introduced the Gremlin as of ugly car through 1976.
When I was a little kid, an elderly lady's friend I knew had a Hornet. The front hood emblem had a little hornet on it, and I always was scared that it would come alive and sting me...
My son and I meet Robbie at Collier Motors and we spent 3 hours looking at the vast collection of AMC cars . We got to chat about cars and hopefully all the cars will find a new home. Robbie thanks for sharing your stories on these timeless classics!
This is no dealership it's a junkyard. This guy is not likely as willing to get rid of those cars as some would believe. It's more likely just another person who has grown attached to what's there, and "may" actually sell some of them for a ridiculous amount of money.
Do some land clearing, get those iconic examples OUT of that area so they can be revived. If you guys truly care about these cars, invest some time in making that area and the cars more respectable. Farm tech's right, it looks like a wrecking yard. What a waste.
Debbie, You may wish to consider searching for the survival of your Javelin by placing an inquiry on AMO and Rambler Club user forums describing its last known location, model year, exterior and interior colors, equipment, distinguishing features, VIN number etc..
It looks more like an AMC used car lot---some of those cars have seen some miles, not all of them kind. I agree with the others that the place (and the cars) need to be kept up much better, things need to look at least somewhat professional.
My first running car was a 1968 Rambler Rebel with a 343 2-bbl and side pipes. Fully reclining front seats that eventually reclined at their own whim, leading to the often-favored milk crate wedged behind the driver's seat to keep it upright. Quite a boat, quite a babe mobile.
Thanks for the AMC memories, really brought them back. I could write a book on all the AMC's that went thru our house growing up with cars in the early 70's. My Dad my older brother and I were gearheads. Those cars were cheap and easy to get back in the day. We had them all, Ambassadors, Madadors, a Pacer, a Gremlin, a 68 AMX 390, a Rebel Machine ,2 Javlins 1 had 401 engine. 1 Hornet. 2 Wagoneers, and lots more going back to Rambler.
@@Pacer304 I really wish Chrysler had the financial backing to bring AMC back. They were fantastic cars until Renault merged with them. We had such good luck with our Gremlin that we traded it in for a 86' AMC Renault Alliance but that car was a piece of you know what. I don't know how much that guy sells those cars for but I would love to get my hands on a Javelin!
Back when I was in high school in the mid 70's, My mother had a new 76 Pacer and my brother had a new 76 Gremlin. My mom's Pacer ate up new 60,000 mile steel belted radials every 5 to 6 thousand miles. She kept taking it back the dealership and getting a front end alignment every month, but it never did any good. On brother's Gremlin, the bolt connecting the exhaust manifold and the exhaust system would break every 3 or 4 months and the back hatch window would break if you didn't shut really carefully. I had a 1966 Olds 442 with over a 100,000 miles on it. It never had any mechanical problems, but the 400 Super Rocket sure sucked a lot of gas and it sure wasn't happy with anything less than 93+ octane. I sure wish I had kept the 442, but in 1978 while in college, I traded a guy even for his 1973 MGB.
Poor AMC-they lurched from crisis to crisis. they never had the money to modernize their car lines..still using the 232 straight six engines (designed in 1955) to the end. i had a coworker who had a Hornet-it still had vacuum operated wipers! have to admit-they kept the company running on a shoestring.
The Clock Is Ticking for America's Last AMC Dealership: www.thedrive.com/news/39807/the-clock-is-ticking-for-americas-last-amc-dealership?fbclid=IwAR29y7YclPBv9qbQHPbPSjz-uOE5SYeLIexKVgx5ABVFSZvqLfuJxHYON90
Sad to see. I grew up not far from there if they could clean the place up it would make a great museum to show a place in time of how it was not to mention most of those AMCs are all original and this place was on the show American Pickers not to long ago
One of the greatest marques of the Twentieth Century was NASH. Nashes were dependable and beautiful with unique stylings and many automative innovations: first wrap-around windshields, first American seatbelt, first dual headlights, etc. They were akin to GM's Buicks or Oldsmobiles. Then NASH lost its glamour and dignity: little 2-seat Metropolitans were also called Nashes. The early unattractive Ramblers used the name. NASH debased its currency. I owned many Ambassadors, starting with the 1937; my last was the 1957 Nash Ambassador -- then Nashes were no more. Gorgeous cars.
I had two 74 Javelin AMX ,, a 68 Javelin and a gremlin. I wish I still had them .. not because of resale value or anything it's because I truly loved those cars.
Ohhhh.... to get a Javelin in running cond. that isn't rusted through the floor....but not a 'garage princess', but a driven car. Boy, i would love to buy one of them.
Well i cant find one in south Fla. I HAD a Javelin WAYYY back in the early 80's. Brown on brown, perfect cond. (technically my second car)...except the entire right rear quarter was crushed in and rusting away. But I bought it, Leaking tranny and all! Young and stupid! Since then, after i sold it and broke even as I recall, and bought my first REAL new car, a Honda Civic HB. I have seen maybe 2 perfect Javelins on the road, thats like 30 years now. And those were definitely collector cars, only driven to keep them running. They must cost a fortune and not for sale , as they flew by me! Frankly an AMC Spirit, or a Concorde, or Javelin, the jewel! I would buy any of them. Had 2 Concordes in the family, they were solid cars, comfortable, and just always ran. The Spirit was going to be my first NEW car, and just as I was ready to buy one, AMC was out of business.
Marc B. The last one we had we did pretty good on. It was a purple '70 SST clone with a Torqueflite and a 360 and had been converted to disc brakes. Literally one of those barn finds. Bought it for $7K then just freshened it up. Carburetor, pulled the brake fluid out to put new in, did the shoes and wheel cylinders on the back, little stuff like that. Just washed it and it shined. Sold it couple months later for $14,500.
I was so lucky from about 14 to about 19 years old my runnin buddy went thru first a sst hornet it was badass 60's on the back with cragar mags. Then a sst javelin. Then we drug up a gremlin and later pulled the javelin motor and put the gremlin motor in the javelin . All this time his parents other car was a rebel station wagon. Then after the javelin he had a Rambler. Then we drug up a nice clean pacer we never could get runnin and after that a clean matador and we never could get it runnin. One thing for sure we used to go out on a country road and do spin forward then spin reverse in the hornet that torque command transmission is the baddest ass automatic transmission there ever was. And you could speed shift the Rambler coloumb shift everytime no hangup shifter!
it's really too bad that Renault took over AMC/Jeep. Chrysler Credit was doing a huge share of the AMC dealers; financing and floorplanning at that time, 1983-1987. The AMC Eagle was an excellent car in that it seemed to pioneer the shift inside, 4x4 viscous coupling and eventually, the shift on the fly system. Jeep was way ahead of the others with the smaller SUV with their smaller Cherokees / Wagoneer Ltd's...code name, XJ. If Chrysler had edged out Renault, I believe that AMC /Eagle would have survived right alongside Jeep. But then again, Chrysler got into bed with Daimler and all sorts of stupid shit happened after that. I read recently that Jeep is probably bringing back the Grand Wagoneer again...to the tune of upwards of $140,000 top end model. whew.
My second ever car was a '67 Rambler Rebel. Had reclining front bucket seats that would 'recline' at inappropriate times, but get a gal down a dark dirt road and that seat refused to drop. Probably a good thing, too.
Excellent video! Loved it. Rambler/AMC cars appealed mostly to the very patriotic independent thinking blue-collar conservatives in the 60's. These people didn't trust the big three and the name American Motors just really rung their bell.
Imagine if they'd sold a few hundred of each of the mid-engined AMX/1,2&3 and put AMC on the world stage as a contender for Ferrari, Porsche, Lamborghini, Maserati
Someday the Chinese corporations will buy the Rambler trademark patents and they'd be new-released with the sticker Made in China for US specifications ( as It happened with the revival of Deutsche's Borgward ) Deutsche
I live near this place and recently worked at the local HS CB Aycock.I hate seeing this place.This place has become world famous but to me its just a waste of cars and as the years pass the cars become unrestorable..I almost bought a Javelin back in the day(not from here) and i think what could of been with some of these cars.
AMC needs to come back and Make American vehicles that would sell less then Ford, Chevy, Dodge, and Toyota. Even a basic, reliable, vehicle is better then a complicated one.
Dealership? More like derelict junkyard. Me thinks the owners lost their minds when AMC went kaput. Are they still expecting new models to arrive? Sad and scary.
What a gold mine .clean everything up put the cars in a big building bring back the show room i see a history landmark for the common man selling a american product.
Some one should go buy that place from them and make things better all most anything would be a very notice able improvement , All they are is hoarders.
Abandoned car lot gets reperposed into a junkyard... How on earth they couldn't find a way to keep those preserved in an acceptable way is beyond me and that brush! Jeeze Where I'm from you see plenty of cars from the late 80s early to late 90s still running fine and looking good because it's all we can afford so we take care of it Not to mention junkyards actually keep the jungle off their shit.... Shameful display this is...
I need to go see this. Time capsules like this are exceedingly rare, and there’s a sadness and melancholy to watching this video and seeing the footage of the decaying dealership and cars on its lot.
I had a 69 AMX and sold it because the ex-wife bitched about my fuel mileage. I should have divorced her sooner.
Genius Russell yes you should have!
Nice no woman is worth getting rid of that special muscle or classic car..
"Stop all you're bitchin'! Back in the kitchen!!" - Donnie Iris 😊😊😊
Yep, with a car like that you ruled. Maybe she was scared some ladies would give you a second look driving that beautiful machine.
Keep the car...sell the wife 🔪
Make American Motors great again.
it doesn't even exist anymore
@@klingerkun5766 what part of "great again" don't you understand?
@@WeWereYoungandCrazy it will never come back
@@klingerkun5766 of course you're right. it can't happen. on a side note though, and a big what if.. American Motors owned Jeep. But this was in the years just before the big SUV boom. If they could have just held on a few more years, maybe Chrysler would have taken the fall instead of AMC.
Yes damnit yes! I wish the rest of the country thought that. Fuck we used to better than them now we're trying to be like them. Fuck foreigners Take pride of our previous accomplishments
A waste for those old AMC cars to sit there and rot.
Amx have shot up in value alot over the last few years
well go buy one then.
@@bandccoresohio Yeah, I bought a 69 AMX for $900 in 90. Couldn't get a hood for that now. Prices sky high for a solid AMX.
@@JohnSmith-wd9rc - For anything old american.
@burningfeet 57 no they aren't they're nice
my late husband had a 1959 Rambler Rebel V8. Ran like the dickens. Had more get up and go than my lazy ass husband, rest his soul. He like the reclinin' seats...After I went to bed he'd get a couple of Schaefer Beer Tall Boys, go down to the widow Irene's house, and they'd both head out to the outskirts of town. After downing a couple of cans they'd recline the seats and have a good ole time. When Sheriff Bob came around with a flashlight the old goat would say that widow Irene was me!. Sheriff Bob would tell him and Irene to get the hell out of the car and they'd be standin there naked as jaybirds piss drunk.
If you leave those cars on top of grass they will rust out! Save the AMCs before they rust out for no good.
its true, the long grass will hold moisture against the body and cause the floors to rust out in no time.
How many of those floors are already as strong as construction paper? Leaving them unattended like that is like leaving a diamond in the streets of Detroit; the weather's not helping them unless you want one that looks ratty. Don't think of turning one of the engines on without replacing the gaskets either.
Yeah that’s why the ones up front by the fences don’t get as many weeds growing around them and get airflow underneath the frames and they don’t rust out as easily
I'm surprised someone hasn't come in & snapped up those Javlin's & Amx's They are quite valuable & desirable cars.
my grandpa bought a new javelin in early 70s with 401 CI&4speed manual.he still drives it every day.what a beaut.
Wow, wonderfull, how many miles on that thing?
In my humble opinion, if I wanted to still sell AMC's I would have that jungle that surrounds the dealership cut down and have the place looking nice. Clean those cars up. It looks like a junk yard. I salute them for their idea and efforts, but goodness your pride in the brand needs to be evidenced in how you care for the place and the vehicles.
agreed, a weed whacker and a hose would go a long way to make this business do better.
Yeah, I'd have to agree.
Agreed, I work in a "Salvage yard" and auto shop of sorts, yet the yard work is kept up, the best we can. The grass is cut, brush is managed, and thats just the back part, where the parts cars lie. the upper area, with the shop, and the lot with the whole cars is kept impeccable, and the cars as clean as rusty old project cars can be, and the driver quality cars are kept well. The best pieces are inside a garage with concrete floors.
This place was on an episode of Fast & Loud. They went inside and the owner was sitting at a desk in rubble from the ceiling falling in. They didn't keep the heat and lights on so the building is falling apart.
Brian Teed that place was on American Pickers
Why was the audio recorded at the bottom of a well?
This comment made me crack up! It does sound like that.
Kinda appropriate cause the owners let the place go to shit!!
Been there. They still have a lot of rare cars, not just AMC cars. Found a 67 Dart GT and a 70 Demon. Well worth the trip. You will find a Restoration project.
Thank you for your constructive and informative comment.
Where is this place?
Pacer304
Pikeville, North Carolina
The reason that stuff is sitting out in the rain is that the guy's son is asking ridiculous money for that stuff so nobody will buy it. It's just going to compost for the most part.
This isn't an AMC Dealer, it's a junk yard....he stopped selling AMC in the mid 80's, the real "last" AMC dealers are the dealers that kept going in 1988. Like Brigham Gill AMC Jeep in Natick Ma. or Lahti's in Leominster MA and Dan's Jeep Chrysler in Westborough MA. Dealers that sold AMC and Jeep and then Eagle and continued selling even after the Eagle Brand Left....these were the guys that sold cars and new how to run a business. Collier's is a joke, it's just a junk yard that once sold AMC's before they bailed because they couldn't make money selling cars. They are simply Losers
Renault won Motor Trends car of the year with the Alliance. The Encore & Alliance were extremely competitive with the cars of the day. Renault was planning to roll out the Medallion which was a class leading car, it lived on as the Intrepid and even as the Charger / 300 of today. Renault sold out after Besse was assassinated by Action Directe and the company was in turmoil due to leadership issues not lack of quality offerings.
meangreen69Nova do you know this as fact? Do you live in the town where this dealership exists?
What did these people do to you?
Daniel Lewis they sold AMC, that was bad enough and if you can’t tell this is a junk yard you haven’t been around cars enough to know!!!
@meangreen69Nova They also didn't know what horrific piles those cars were. I had one, my grandfather had two, my cousin had five.
The only new car my folks EVER bought was a 79 Concord I6 4spd station wagon. It had problems, but I've got fond memories of it regardless. Beautiful car. Would love to see AMC make a comback. Cars today have no character, or soul, except for a few minor (and usually PRICEY!) odd balls.
Motor Trends car of the year.
The final nail in the coffin for AMC - when Renault gained almost complete control in 1980.
Yeah, Renault really made some lousy excuses for automobiles. My sister bought one what a POS!
The 1.7/1.8/2.0 OHC engine was the worst. It had a really weak head gasket. My sister's Laguna 2.0 OHC (F-type) had engine failure at 60 000 miles. It used to burn crazy amounts of oil also. It ended up with a warped cylinder head.
Renaults were unfit for the American market. Should've stayed in Europe where they did fine.
To my understanding, it was that or shutting AMC down immediately. Their range was massively obsolete, their cars sold poorly and there was literally no money for R&D.
AMC didn't have the clout that Chrysler had, I guess, to have loan guarantees made by the Carter government. Chrysler's belly-up would have forced a lot more (speculative, because I don't know how many employees AMC had in 1978 versus Chrysler - however, AMC was the smallest of the Big Four) layoffs and would have had such a ripple effect in suppliers. AMC, up to 1979, rose and fell with Jeep's success. When the CAFE guidelines became more stringent, Jeep couldn't be the saviour any longer. AMC didn't have the money (after the Pacer and the Matador coupe flopped) to develop a front-wheel-drive small car.
Apparently Honda and PSA Peugeot Citroen were also approached in the mid-1970s by AMC to be strategic partners.
By the time 1983 rolled around, Renault called all the shots. It wasn't AMC/Jeep any longer, it was Renault North America/Jeep.
Wow!!! This is like traveling back to a place and time that I thought only lived on in my memory. Back in 1987, my first car was a 1975 AMC Hornet. Had the D/L trim package, which included reclining velour upholstered front seats, vinyl top, and color keyed hubcaps. Car was loaded for a '75, with factory AM/FM and A/C, tilt wheel, and delay wipers. Under the hood was a 258 straight six with Carter 1 barrel carb. The 258 was a torque monster, would light up the tires off of the line, and hit 50 in 7 seconds. Acceleration was slow above 50, but this didn't matter. The speed limit was 55, and it pulled a hill like a bear at 70. The entrance to parking lot at my high school was at about a 12% uphill grade, so I could lay a major patch of rubber, thanks to all that torque. Compared to the anemic newer cars of that era, the Hornet was quick and powerful.
Ohiomusical Sawman Nice!
I had a '74 Hornet w/ the 258 straight 6; got it from a Wino for a large pepperoni pizza & $25, that included the title also. Used it as a pizza delivery vehicle, basically a piece of junk w/ 60,000 miles on it; but what fun we had! Leaky rear main seal & junkyard tires; it was a car built to be beat...Had a cigar box hood scoop, primer gray w/ a hole in the muffler, used to scare the shit out of people w/ it...It's semi-demise occurred 2 years after I bought it after taking a jump at a construction site & grabbing a bit too much air- tweaked the frame a bit so I sold it to some dudes in a trailer park for $100. Legendary, what that machine held up to, including racing in the dry canals during the winter, jumping curbs, pouring bleach on the tires & smoking the shit out of them through the McDonalds drive thru, doing 360's in the gravel parking lot of the cheese factory at 3AM drunk and more....!
In about 1980 I did my first (and last) carburetor "rebuild" using a kit, on my inherited '73 Sportabout X in Maxi-Blue with the 258 CI six, automatic. Afterwards, I was stunned to ACCIDENTALLY lay a patch of rubber ! Very satisfying.
My Dad had a 76' Gremlin with a 304 V8. The hatch back leaked and it had some areas that rusted underneath the body but that car ran like a champ!
@@tskraj3190 my dad had a '75 Gremlin he used as his work car in the mid to late '90s hauling water heaters and other plumbing equipment. He could fit a water heater lengthwise in it with the rear seat down. It had Plexiglass on the rear hatch he put on when the original glass broke. He used it on a camping trip from Central California to the Oregon border, too. He loved it and said it was like a small pickup truck as far it's power, having that 232 inline six engine, the base Jeep engine at the time. I had it as my first car and drove it until the wheels literally locked up at around 125,000 miles. Cars like these seemed to have such character and charm. People talk about them fondly when they're gone. I don't think about the crappy 1996 Nissan Sentra I had.
just wondering why they don't get a kid to run through there with a mower ...
Yeah, they might find a few more cars! ;-p
LOL! good one.
I've seen a goat before in one of these lots. They would stake it in various spots to clear the weeds.
amc mower? wont start!
Cheap skates don't wanna pay anybody to do anything nor do they wanna either ashame
man I wish that company was still around then made some damn good cars
I had a 1977 Pacer in college back in 2006 paid 65.00 for it. That Pacer would start even in the coldest of condition. My Pacer had Auto PS/PB Cold A/C Alum wheels Cloth int tilt CC Rear Defrost Power Windows/Mirrors. Drove that car three years no problems just basic maintenance. AMC made good cheap dependable cars and that 4.2L straight 6 was indructable which led the famous AMC Jeep 4.0L Straight 6 which was used from 1987-2005. I took that Pacer to the car shows at my college every year not many knew what it was. I sold it to a girl in my apartment complex. She had brought a brand new 2009 Cobalt with 24 miles her car would not start and it was -5 out with the wind chill of -25. I was parked next to her. I remember her saying I bet the old Pacer wont start. I said it will got in the car pumped the carb three times she fired right off. The car had 177,850 miles. I put 20k on it many self. She asked if I would sell her the car I said give me 300.00 for it She did. She took the Cobalt back and the dealer had to buy her car back. She drove the Pacer for another 10 years or so after that. Last time I talked to her she said the car has 377,480 on it and still runs excellent. She had it repainted and restored. She told me that was the best 300 .00 she ever spent. Now its been repainted professionally and she had the int professionally restored back in 2017. She told me after that POS Gm Cobalt she will never buy a new car ever again. She told me she sticks with cars that are 20+ years old and easy to work on.The only thing that was rebuilt in the Pacer was the moter and trans she said those were the same as I sold it to her. We are still friends to this day. I helped her take that Cobalt back and bitch at the dealer 8 times for the same thing. I told them next time I have to help her bring this car back i want you the service advisor and the tech standing in front of the door so when I honk i can run this car right up your ass both of you. Then she called GM and they brought the car back. I felt bad for her. The dealer was taking advantage of this 25 year old woman and I was her friend and not putting up with it.
65 dollars for a car? Certainly a time you don't see anymore.
i owned a 1968 Rambler American and a 1974 Javelin. i wish i hadnt been so stupid to let them go. my step dad bought the American new and then totaled it. new front clip, windshield, rear glass, top and trunk lid later, she was looking spiffy again. then he found Ford and parked the American in a field for 8 years. i bought it, changed the fluids, cleaned the gas tank and she fired right up. drove it another 6 years.
AMC quality, its sad that AMC is getting so much hate even though they were good cars.
SCROUTE55 Not really.
In my younger days, late 1970s to early 1980s, I was a big AMC enthusiast. I owned three Javelins - 1968 with 232ci six cylinder, 1970 SST with 360 V8 and a 1971 with 304 V8, and a 1968 AMX with little 290 V8. The 68 Javelin was my daily driver through my Airforce years in the late 1970s, the AMX was my fun car in my last year in the USAF and first couple years in the Navy - reenlisted 1980. I wish I still had them, especially the hot little AMX.
74 AMX Javelin with a 401 V8 was an absolute quarter mile beast!!!
The funny thing about AMC was that sometimes they were a company that was ahead of its time with some of their designs. They were one of the first to adopt unibody platforms, and the Eagle was something like the first crossover--something which Subaru would exploit with the Outback and of course what we have today. And when Chrysler took over the company, some of the designs AMC was working on (admittedly through Renault) ultimately became the LH cars of the '90's, which were revolutionary in their use of interior space.
@1:56 That's a nice Nash Healey though...
Eddie Zweers Good catch. Now which Nash did they show? I don't know but looks late 40s.
American Pickers Frank & Mike once paid a visit to this place and even bought a car FYI the AMX Javelin is worth a ton of money just like it sit's .$$$
I fell in love with AMC when the first time I saw James bond Live and Let Die when he drives the red Hornet out through the glass of the AMC Dealer.chasing the other bad guy in a gold Matador with black hard top, it ends up flying like a plane. but the Hornet when he went over the bridge that was out and rolled a 360 in mid air to land safely on the other side I was hooked.my first car 73 Gremlin -X 258 6 cyl put 412 k on it sold it for 500, then a 78 Concord Wagon 304, then my baby 79 Amx Spirit took out the 304 and put the 401, wow what a ride.
The was in The Man With the Golden Gun.
Fake News....This guy isn’t selling Nothing !!
“Hoarders disease”
Was in contact years ago with him on a Matador, even threw a higher offer then what a run and drive sells for....nothing but a long conversation that went nowhere.
Google maps showed the cars in the exact same spot untouched 10 years apart, with car added here and there
But he’s very knowledgeable on these cars, more then anyone I’ve know in the business, I’ll give him that.
This place is a junkyard, not a car dealership. If you don't know the difference, I have a brand new 2016 Cheverolet Bellair for you.
2016 pile o shit you mean
you spelled chevrolet and bel air wrong
Since it doesn't actually exist, maybe that is the correct spelling.
If you own a Chevrolet then you own a rolling junkyard and, apparently, spelling is a major challenge for you.
@Gappie Al Kebabi Dont drive a Chevrolet if you want to be in a comfort zone. Unless you consider cheesy dot matrix readouts, crappy hard plastics and shantytown build quality to be a 'comfort zone'.
"AMERICAN PICKERS" made a visit to this dealership a few years ago.
Got one of the Healy's I believe...
Where is this place ???
I could be wrong but I believe American Pickers came to this place a few years back and bought a car or at least bought some parts and other historic memorabilia.
They purchased 2 Nash-Healeys. See the You Tube video "American Pickers: Rare Nash-Healey Collection".
Pacer304 now that you mention it I remember it now I just knew the location looks familiar
The Rusty Hubcap If you can answer is it like they show it on the TV series or is it scripted and planned out when they visit locations??
I know a few people on RUclips that are collectors and they would probably love to visit these locations.
American Pickers visited a "old goods" dealer near me in Cortland NY ("old goods" not antiques; things the dealer bought at local Friday night auctions). The American Picker convoy was 18 vehicles: the truck they have on TV; makeup RV; director's RV, writer's RVs, many International 26' box trucks, etc.; the 18 doesn't include the catering trucks or any cars. Everything is driven by OTR drivers, it's a bigger parade than the circus coming to town, *It isn't two guys driving around on the backroads, everything is preplanned months in advance. they even have a mobile HR department and lawyers they bring with them.* Real life isn't what appears on TV.
they did.
I thought they will save the Rambler American compact car through 1970 instead of 1969, but it does happen. It was the last of Rambler nameplate, while Rambler did changed it brand to AMC, starting in 1966 for the full size Ambassador, and the mid-size Classic, then changed it to Rebel for 1967. For 1965, Rambler Marlin is a 2 door fastback hardtop and it did continued for 1966 and 1967. The latter 2 model years are AMC Marlin. For 1968, AMC introduced the muscle car, Javelin with a high performance V-8 engine through 1974. For 1971, AMC did introduced the Gremlin as of ugly car through 1976.
I got a 1968 rebel with a 290 typoon with less than 30000 miles on it
My 68 AMX is my pride and joy it even inspires me to be healthier so I can drive her as long as possible..
If they really cared about those cars they would cut the grass.
When I was a little kid, an elderly lady's friend I knew had a Hornet.
The front hood emblem had a little hornet on it, and I always was scared that it would come alive and sting me...
Why are they letting those cars sit there and rot? Such a waste
My son and I meet Robbie at Collier Motors and we spent 3 hours looking at the vast collection of AMC cars . We got to chat about cars and hopefully all the cars will find a new home. Robbie thanks for sharing your stories on these timeless classics!
This is no dealership it's a junkyard. This guy is not likely as willing to get rid of those cars as some would believe. It's more likely just another person who has grown attached to what's there, and "may" actually sell some of them for a ridiculous amount of money.
What is up with the audio in this video?
i could have done without the stupid audio effect
Yyouu ccann ssayy tthatt aagainn.
Chrysler had to buy out the competition to stay alive Jeep saved them i was AMC/JEEP teck for many years , i have 2 of them ,
Do some land clearing, get those iconic examples OUT of that area so they can be revived.
If you guys truly care about these cars, invest some time in making that area and the cars more respectable. Farm tech's right, it looks like a wrecking yard. What a waste.
If there is a 69 or 70 AMX...I would be very interested.
Nothing pictured was in remotely running condition. It was a wrecking yard, place for parts.
Just need to restore them they might not be in terrible condition
tenacity and stupidity is a fine line
Debbie,
You may wish to consider searching for the survival of your Javelin by placing an inquiry on AMO and Rambler Club user forums
describing its last known location, model year, exterior and interior colors, equipment, distinguishing features, VIN number etc..
It looks more like an AMC used car lot---some of those cars have seen some miles, not all of them kind. I agree with the others that the place (and the cars) need to be kept up much better, things need to look at least somewhat professional.
AMC even tho it was a small company it's still offered ver cool cars that were pretty sporty i would now imagine AMC if it was a giant these days
I have a 1965 Rambler american 440 convertible with a 287 small block engine it's still in great shape... runs like champ
My first running car was a 1968 Rambler Rebel with a 343 2-bbl and side pipes. Fully reclining front seats that eventually reclined at their own whim, leading to the often-favored milk crate wedged behind the driver's seat to keep it upright. Quite a boat, quite a babe mobile.
This bout family more than dealer, clik bate, bye
What a wonderful video, thanks for posting.
You are most welcome. I am glad that you enjoyed watching it.
Thanks for the AMC memories, really brought them back. I could write a book on all the AMC's that went thru our house growing up with cars in the early 70's. My Dad my older brother and I were gearheads. Those cars were cheap and easy to get back in the day. We had them all, Ambassadors, Madadors, a Pacer, a Gremlin, a 68 AMX 390, a Rebel Machine ,2 Javlins 1 had 401 engine. 1 Hornet. 2 Wagoneers, and lots more going back to Rambler.
@@Pacer304 I really wish Chrysler had the financial backing to bring AMC back. They were fantastic cars until Renault merged with them. We had such good luck with our Gremlin that we traded it in for a 86' AMC Renault Alliance but that car was a piece of you know what. I don't know how much that guy sells those cars for but I would love to get my hands on a Javelin!
How is that jeep wagoneer sitting there if they're selling ?
Back when I was in high school in the mid 70's, My mother had a new 76 Pacer and my brother had a new 76 Gremlin. My mom's Pacer ate up new 60,000 mile steel belted radials every 5 to 6 thousand miles. She kept taking it back the dealership and getting a front end alignment every month, but it never did any good. On brother's Gremlin, the bolt connecting the exhaust manifold and the exhaust system would break every 3 or 4 months and the back hatch window would break if you didn't shut really carefully. I had a 1966 Olds 442 with over a 100,000 miles on it. It never had any mechanical problems, but the 400 Super Rocket sure sucked a lot of gas and it sure wasn't happy with anything less than 93+ octane. I sure wish I had kept the 442, but in 1978 while in college, I traded a guy even for his 1973 MGB.
A little piece of heaven left after all these years!
Legendary American cars from the 60/70's
This is a very good video, I owned a 1978 AMC CJ5 Jeep.
Poor AMC-they lurched from crisis to crisis. they never had the money to modernize their car lines..still using the 232 straight six engines (designed in 1955) to the end. i had a coworker who had a Hornet-it still had vacuum operated wipers! have to admit-they kept the company running on a shoestring.
The all-new 7 main bearing 232 6 cylinder engine was introduced on the limited edition Rambler Typhoon in April 1964.
The Clock Is Ticking for America's Last AMC Dealership: www.thedrive.com/news/39807/the-clock-is-ticking-for-americas-last-amc-dealership?fbclid=IwAR29y7YclPBv9qbQHPbPSjz-uOE5SYeLIexKVgx5ABVFSZvqLfuJxHYON90
70 amc rebel
All junk execpt for the Constantly going up in Goddam price dodge powered javelin, the Pacer is so funny cute looking the fish bowl.
"The Last AMC Dealer" or an abandoned building overgrown with a bunch of AMC junk rotting in the weeds?
Sad to see. I grew up not far from there if they could clean the place up it would make a great museum to show a place in time of how it was not to mention most of those AMCs are all original and this place was on the show American Pickers not to long ago
20th Annual Rambler Regional Reunion July 20-21 Windsor, CT:
www.amcrc.com/ne/show/2018_flyer.pdf
One of the greatest marques of the Twentieth Century was NASH. Nashes were dependable and beautiful with unique stylings and many automative innovations: first wrap-around windshields, first American seatbelt, first dual headlights, etc. They were akin to GM's Buicks or Oldsmobiles. Then NASH lost its glamour and dignity: little 2-seat Metropolitans were also called Nashes. The early unattractive Ramblers used the name. NASH debased its currency. I owned many Ambassadors, starting with the 1937; my last was the 1957 Nash Ambassador -- then Nashes were no more. Gorgeous cars.
When I saw the thumbnail pic I thought,,,,, it`s like propping up dead people in a cementery. Not to groovy.
I had two 74 Javelin AMX ,, a 68 Javelin and a gremlin. I wish I still had them .. not because of resale value or anything it's because I truly loved those cars.
I share your sentiment. Thanks for the comment.
The Amx was awesome
Ohhhh.... to get a Javelin in running cond. that isn't rusted through the floor....but not a 'garage princess', but a driven car. Boy, i would love to buy one of them.
Marc B. They're out there. You can find them for a reasonable price too. Pull the trigger brother.
Well i cant find one in south Fla. I HAD a Javelin WAYYY back in the early 80's. Brown on brown, perfect cond. (technically my second car)...except the entire right rear quarter was crushed in and rusting away. But I bought it, Leaking tranny and all! Young and stupid!
Since then, after i sold it and broke even as I recall, and bought my first REAL new car, a Honda Civic HB. I have seen maybe 2 perfect Javelins on the road, thats like 30 years now. And those were definitely collector cars, only driven to keep them running. They must cost a fortune and not for sale , as they flew by me!
Frankly an AMC Spirit, or a Concorde, or Javelin, the jewel! I would buy any of them. Had 2 Concordes in the family, they were solid cars, comfortable, and just always ran.
The Spirit was going to be my first NEW car, and just as I was ready to buy one, AMC was out of business.
Marc B. The last one we had we did pretty good on. It was a purple '70 SST clone with a Torqueflite and a 360 and had been converted to disc brakes. Literally one of those barn finds. Bought it for $7K then just freshened it up. Carburetor, pulled the brake fluid out to put new in, did the shoes and wheel cylinders on the back, little stuff like that. Just washed it and it shined. Sold it couple months later for $14,500.
I was so lucky from about 14 to about 19 years old my runnin buddy went thru first a sst hornet it was badass 60's on the back with cragar mags. Then a sst javelin. Then we drug up a gremlin and later pulled the javelin motor and put the gremlin motor in the javelin . All this time his parents other car was a rebel station wagon. Then after the javelin he had a Rambler. Then we drug up a nice clean pacer we never could get runnin and after that a clean matador and we never could get it runnin. One thing for sure we used to go out on a country road and do spin forward then spin reverse in the hornet that torque command transmission is the baddest ass automatic transmission there ever was. And you could speed shift the Rambler coloumb shift everytime no hangup shifter!
Wow, Nash Healey.
2018 AMC Rambler Club Slide Show: ruclips.net/video/n_gLgLeEOH4/видео.html
it's really too bad that Renault took over AMC/Jeep. Chrysler Credit was doing a huge share of the AMC dealers; financing and floorplanning at that time, 1983-1987. The AMC Eagle was an excellent car in that it seemed to pioneer the shift inside, 4x4 viscous coupling and eventually, the shift on the fly system. Jeep was way ahead of the others with the smaller SUV with their smaller Cherokees / Wagoneer Ltd's...code name, XJ. If Chrysler had edged out Renault, I believe that AMC /Eagle would have survived right alongside Jeep. But then again, Chrysler got into bed with Daimler and all sorts of stupid shit happened after that. I read recently that Jeep is probably bringing back the Grand Wagoneer again...to the tune of upwards of $140,000 top end model. whew.
My second ever car was a '67 Rambler Rebel. Had reclining front bucket seats that would 'recline' at inappropriate times, but get a gal down a dark dirt road and that seat refused to drop. Probably a good thing, too.
🚘 Sure would like to know where my old ugly green 1970 - 509 DLY Javelin might be? Hopefully not junked. (Would love to have it refurbished & mine.)
Are they all talking into cans?
Excellent video! Loved it. Rambler/AMC cars appealed mostly to the very patriotic independent thinking blue-collar conservatives in the 60's. These people didn't trust the big three and the name American Motors just really rung their bell.
Imagine if they'd sold a few hundred of each of the mid-engined AMX/1,2&3 and put AMC on the world stage as a contender for Ferrari, Porsche, Lamborghini, Maserati
Someday the Chinese corporations will buy the Rambler trademark patents and they'd be new-released with the sticker Made in China for US specifications ( as It happened with the revival of Deutsche's Borgward ) Deutsche
Jeep should of been for AMC not Fiat/Chrysler... They'd might of made it if they would of held out against Renault and rocked the Cherokee...☹️
I do remember seeing that on American Pickers.
Are some of those cars brand new??
I live near this place and recently worked at the local HS CB Aycock.I hate seeing this place.This place has become world famous but to me its just a waste of cars and as the years pass the cars become unrestorable..I almost bought a Javelin back in the day(not from here) and i think what could of been with some of these cars.
AMC needs to come back and Make American vehicles that would sell less then Ford, Chevy, Dodge, and Toyota.
Even a basic, reliable, vehicle is better then a complicated one.
Save those cars
Dealership? More like derelict junkyard. Me thinks the owners lost their minds when AMC went kaput. Are they still expecting new models to arrive? Sad and scary.
That AMC Dealer sells some rusty ass cars. They don't even fix it up
I was there a little while ago. There is plenty of inventory left. It's like the "Island of Misfit Toys" from the Rudolph program.
OMG... They spelled ABC wrong in the title!
I hope to see some of you at the 4 Seasons Rambler Club show in Windsor, CT July 28-29: www.amcrc.com/ne/show/show.html
//////////
My dad had an Ambassador. White vinyl top/dark blue paint. I remember the family driving cross country and back in it. 3000mi one way
Why does the dealership, look so overgrown? Looks like a junk yard! Clean the place up! Make it a real AMC dealership!
2018 Connecticut AMO Show Flyer: www.ctamo.com/2018_Show/2018%20CAMO%20Show%20Flyer.pdf
See here: facebook.com/Collier-Motors-AMC-361894730502494/
I'm guessing they're all stolen. No good reason for them to be there in that condition just covered in dust. Just waiting to be stripped is my guess.
What a gold mine .clean everything up put the cars in a big building bring back the show room i see a history landmark for the common man selling a american product.
Some one should go buy that place from them and make things better all most anything would be a very notice able improvement , All they are is hoarders.
This place must be in the rust belt! Why are they aggravating the problem? Where's code enforcement?
1967 Rambler Rebel 550 with 290 Typhoon 4 door aqua marine
Abandoned car lot gets reperposed into a junkyard...
How on earth they couldn't find a way to keep those preserved in an acceptable way is beyond me and that brush! Jeeze
Where I'm from you see plenty of cars from the late 80s early to late 90s still running fine and looking good because it's all we can afford so we take care of it
Not to mention junkyards actually keep the jungle off their shit.... Shameful display this is...
Such quality brand name nash hudson amc renault chrysler and today nissan to the wastebasket because of the piece of shit mitsubishi greed
I need to go see this. Time capsules like this are exceedingly rare, and there’s a sadness and melancholy to watching this video and seeing the footage of the decaying dealership and cars on its lot.
Time capsules are in good shape, not rotting away like this neglected iron! These dumb asses are worse than Lambrecht Chevrolet in Nebraska!
Vid is more spoof than anything else. Given the subject matter it couldv been a great vid.