1968-70 AMX was American Motors’ answer to a question nobody asked

1968 AMC AMX

(EXPANDED FROM 3/24/2023)

Our recent discussion about a smaller, more internationally-flavored Ford Mustang led me to expand on a previously-posted story about the 1968-70 AMX. American Motors was arguably in a better position than Ford to pioneer that market niche, but the tiny automaker took an evolutionary wrong turn. The original AMX may now be prized by collectors, but back in the day it was the answer to a question that nobody asked.

J P Cavanaugh once wrote that he appreciated the two-seater AMX more in concept than real life. “I really want to like AMC cars of this era. I guess my problem is that they are too quirky to be normal cars and too normal to be quirky cars,” he commented at Curbside Classic (2019). “Chrysler made better normal cars and Studebaker made better quirky cars.”

1969 AMC AMX
Ads trumpeted the AMX as a “sports car” when it was merely a shortened Javelin with high-end performance equipment and the back seat removed. Nobody was fooled. Click on image to enlarge (Automotive History Preservation Society).

The misguided attitude that gave rise to the AMX was subsequently repeated by a new American Motors management team headed by Roy D. Chapin Jr. He was so intent on obliterating the utilitarian image of a soon-to-be-retired Rambler nameplate that the automaker overcompensated with a series of quirky performance coupes. These included the 1969 SC/Rambler, the 1970 Rebel Machine and a wildly redesigned 1971 Javelin.

Also see ‘Collectible Automobile puffs up the 1971-74 AMC Javelin’

Historian Foster Patrick described Chapin as “especially proud” of the AMX, “feeling that it embodied all the renewed strength and dynamism of American Motors.” Foster seemed to be on the same page because he lauded the car as a “true Grand Touring machine” with “impeccable” styling and “incredible” performance. Foster concluded that the “AMX became the preeminent symbol of AMC’s new vitality” (2013, p. 100).

1969 AMC AMX

1969 AMC Javelin
The AMX largely used Javelin parts. Although this cut costs, it resulted in a car lacking in features which could have helped it carve out a distinct market niche, such as a targa roof and a more aerodynamic front-end design (Old Car Brochures).

I would counter that the AMX was a mistake that sapped AMC’s scarce resources. It wasn’t a very good high-performance coupe despite its relatively high price. Not surprisingly, the car sold so poorly that it likely lost money.

That was a problem because it took scarce resources away from other potential cars which could have helped American Motors claw its way back from near-bankruptcy in 1967. As we will discuss, one such car could have been a smaller and more internationally-flavored pony car.

1968 AMC AMX ad
Initial advertising in 1968 tried to turn the AMX’s modest production into an advantage by suggesting that the car would become a collectible. Click on image to enlarge (Automotive History Preservation Society).

AMX doesn’t hit modest sales target despite good press

To be fair, the AMX was clearly intended to be a “halo” car, so it wasn’t expected to generate high volume. When the car was introduced in the middle of the 1968 model year, AMC set what Karl E. Ludvigsen called a “modest sales target” — 10,000 units (1968, p. 21). “This is less than half of a typical year’s production of Corvettes,” he wrote, but added, “In sheer product appeal they will have no difficulty selling that number.”

The AMX was met with generally positive press. For example, Car and Driver gushed, “If AMC had done something as bright as the AMX five years ago, they’d be in a lot better shape today.” The magazine described the car as possessing “American-style acceleration and European-style handling” (1968, p. 15, 17).

1968 AMC AMX

1970 AMC AMX dashboard
The AMX had almost the same front cabin as a top-of-line Javelin SST. It was trendy but  plasticky and had a tiny glove box. A 1970 dashboard redesign responded to complaints. Click on second image to enlarge (Old Car Brochures).

Despite the encouraging words, only 19,134 AMXs left the factory in the two-and-a-half years the two-seater was offered. Even in its peak model year of 1969, output failed to reach 8,300 units. Then, in 1970, production fell to under 4,200 units. That was a 50-percent drop — twice as much as its five-seater sibling, the Javelin.

The AMX sold better than the ill-fated Marlin, but only by a few thousand units. So management quite rightly pulled the plug after the 1970 model year. This was done over protestations from design chief Richard Teague (Wikipedia, 2022).

1968 AMC AMX
The AMX’s wheelbase was one inch longer than a Gremlin’s but it did not come with a fold-down back seat and a hatchback. As a result, the AMX lacked versatility despite having more cargo capacity than a typical two-seater.

AMX comes off as a gimmick rather than a contender

The fundamental problem with the AMX was that it didn’t do anything well. When it came to straight-line acceleration, the AMC wasn’t king of the hill compared to the Big Three’s muscle or pony cars. The 12-inch-shorter wheelbase resulted in a lopsided weight distribution that contributed to twitchy handling and braking.

The lack of even a marginal rear seat limited the AMX’s use as a daily driver, and you could neither enjoy the open-air experience of a convertible nor the extra versatility of a cargo pass-through to the trunk.

Also see ‘Richard Teague’s styling helped to kill American Motors’

You might think that the lack of a back seat would allow for more front-seat travel. However, Motor Trend complained that “you can’t even approach the arms-out driving position, let alone being totally comfortable if you are over six feet. Silly but true.” Road tester Eric Dahlquist (1969) also noted that the flow-through ventilation system was weak — which was particularly problematic because the quarter windows didn’t open and vent wings on the doors were deleted because they were considered old fashioned.

The AMX’s underpinnings may have been typical for an American sedan, but that wasn’t impressive compared to sports cars with independent rear suspension. Perhaps most importantly, the styling lacked the panache of a typical two seater. The body was too tall and boxy for AMC to call it a “sports car.”

1968 AMC AMX
Cutting the wheelbase behind the B-pillar of a postwar coupe generally improved its proportions. However, the AMX’s deck looked too long in relation to its short wheelbase. Rear-wheel speed streaks didn’t help (Old Car Brochures).

Despite all of these weaknesses, the AMX had a fairly steep price tag: $3,297 for the 1969 model year. That was more than hardtop or coupe versions of the Ford Mustang Mach 1 ($3,122), Dodge Dart GTS ($3,226), Ford Torino Cobra GT ($3,209), Plymouth Road Runner ($3,083) or Pontiac GTO Judge ($3,161). However, the AMX was not as pricey as a Pontiac Firebird Trans Am ($3,556).

Instead of exuding the gravitas of a serious contender, the AMX came off as a gimmick. And that reinforced the impression that American Motors was too small to meaningfully compete against the Big Three. The AMX didn’t have as much of a “joke” quality as the Rebel Machine, but it was an asterisk in Detroit’s high-performance wars of the late-60s.

1969 AMC AMX

1969 AMC AMX front
You can see by comparing these photos how the AMX’s long hood resulted in quite a bit of dead space ahead of the radiator. That added to the weight-distribution problem of plopping a V8 into such a short car (Old Car Brochures).

Cutting a foot from the Javelin proved to be a mistake

A major fad of the second half of the 1960s was giving sporty coupes a long-hood, short-deck look. The Javelin partially reflected that trend, although AMC did it on the cheap by giving the car a fairly long front overhang rather than significantly extending the car’s wheelbase ahead of the cowl, as Ford did with the Mustang. It looked a little half-baked and hurt weight distribution.

The AMX’s wheelbase chop accentuated the above problems. A 1970 AMX had a more lopsided weight distribution (58/42 percent) than its 1971 successor (53/47 percent), which was demoted to a top-end Javelin model. This didn’t help handling — and contributed to brakes locking during panic stops (Clarke, 1994).

Also see ‘Rambler pays price for not listening to Car and Driver magazine’

In an effort to better distinguish the AMX from the Javelin, designers further undercut the car’s styling. Convex, flying-buttress C-pillars had a tacked-on quality compared to the Javelin’s lovely concave shape.

By the same token, the speed streaks on the AMX’s rear wheel cutouts looked juvenile. So too did the grille, which lacked the finesse of the Javelin’s twin-venturi grille. A new AMX grille in 1970 looked even worse.

1968 AMC AMX

1968 AMC AMX
The AMX’s exaggerated flying buttresses made its rear quarter overly massive — even with rear-wheel speed streaks.

Was there a better way to handle the AMX?

In my parallel universe, the AMX’s wheelbase should have been at least six inches longer, thereby allowing a Mustang-sized back seat. This could have been achieved without increasing the car’s length of 178 inches — almost four inches shorter than the original Mustang — if the AMX’s snout had been trimmed so the wheelbase was increased to 103 inches.

1969 AMC AMX
The AMX could have had at least a small back seat without increasing the car’s length if a few inches had been taken out of the front overhang and the wheelbase ahead of the cowl (base image courtesy Old Car Brochures).

Add a hatchback with a folding back seat and the AMX would have had a packaging advantage over every other pony car. The Mustang and Plymouth Barracuda fastbacks only had a pass-through door to the trunk, so they couldn’t fit large objects like a hatchback.

Offering more utility would have been in greater alignment with AMC’s Rambler heritage — and might have sold better once the newness of the design wore off. That could have protected the automaker’s big investment in a pony car given that sales for the genre nosedived in the early-70s.

On the mechanical side, the base AMX could have benefitted from a high-performance six with an available four-speed manual. In the late-60s most buyers would likely have opted for a V8, but the six might have given the AMX credibility as a more Euro-centric grand touring coupe. Or as an economy car that was fun to drive like a typical import — and not like a strippo American compact.

1970 Maverick

1970 AMC Hornet SST

1965 Rambler American 440H 2-door hardtop
Our fake AMX would have been 178 inches long — roughly the length of a 1970 Ford Maverick, 1970 AMC Hornet or 1964-65 Rambler American. Back-seat room varied due to wheelbases that ranged from 103-108 inches (Old Car Brochures).

The only problem with this scenario is that the AMX would have arguably overlapped too much with the Javelin. That leads me to my biggest question — why did financially troubled American Motors spend scarce dollars on two separate cars when one would have done fine?

Making the Javelin/AMX as small as a Rambler American would have allowed the automaker to straddle the pony car and economy-coupe markets. A car that could appeal to more than one market niche was more appropriate for AMC, which didn’t possess the economies of scale of the Big Three to field a relatively low-volume halo coupe with a unique body.

1970 AMC AMX brochure page
Marketing for 1970 still called the AMX a sports car. Click on image to enlarge (Old Car Brochures).

AMC doubles down on product proliferation

AMC went in the opposite direction of our fake car. Indeed, the AMX was an early indicator of a product-proliferation blitz that matched the Big Three model for model. By 1971 American Motors fielded three bodies using five different wheelbases and six nameplates. That was entirely too many for a company whose total passenger-car production was exceeded by the Ford Torino.

The two-seater AMX was one of the first hints that the automaker’s new management team didn’t know what it was doing. By the same token, AMC’s rush to join the Big Three in shoehorning their largest V8s into their smallest cars illustrates how the U.S. auto industry was dominated by rigid conformity.

Whatever else one might say about George Romney’s tenure in heading American Motors, it’s a good bet that if he were still around in the second half of the 1960s that he would have broken ranks with Detroit orthodoxy (go here for further discussion). That could have been a good thing in helping the domestic auto industry better compete against a rising tide of imports.

NOTES:

This article was originally posted on March 29, 2023 and expanded on Sept. 3, 2024. Specifications and production figures were from the auto editors of Consumer Guide (2006), Clarke (1994),  Flory (2004, 2009), Gunnell (2002) and Wikipedia (2020, 2023).


RE:SOURCES

AMX and Javelin Muscle Cars book

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12 Comments

  1. I know it’s hard to price compare cars like this. I would like to know what your price comparison was based on. I know the options lists were massive by today’s standards. Also, some of the cars listed were options packages. I would be curious to see each model compared using a small block V-8 and a stick. I don’t recall if AMC had a 4 speed stick then. I had a 74 Hornet hatchback with the Levi’s option, and had a 3 speed stick. This was with the six, though.

    • I used the prices in the Standard Catalog. Of course, cars are going to vary in their standard-equipment levels, but the listed price can show at least in a general way where the AMX was positioned in the market.

      This was a “Design Notes” feature so I didn’t dwell as much in non-styling realms. When I update the story in a year or two I could expand it into a more general “History” piece that includes a more detailed price comparison.

      Your question has made me curious about how the prices of high-end pony cars compared to those of mid-sized muscle cars. My general sense from this story was that the high-end pony cars tended to be priced near the lower-end mid-size muscle cars.

      • Thanks for your reply. It got me curious. The AMX was not a pony car as such, and the only other American 2 seat mass production car was well out of its league. Sort of equivalents were the MGB at $3200 and Datsun 240Z at 3600. the 1970 240 Z production was about 16k for the US, and the MGB was selling a good 10k cars per year in the US during its production run. The TR6 msrp was $3275 and they sold 6700 in 1969 and after that about 10k per year. So, you were looking at a good 35k market for these kind of cars sold from a relative handful of storefront dealers. So, I think that AMC thought they had a good chance of grabbing a good share of that market. They probably thought theyh had a built in tailwind with their dealer network and the British reliability reputation.

        • I sort-of get what you’re saying but do you really think that very many people considered both an AMX and, say, an MGB? For one thing, in the 1968-70 period AMC didn’t have a whole lot of street cred with sporty car drivers. Just getting someone to consider a Javelin over a Mustang was a stretch. So now you’re talking about people who were thinking about an imported two-seater sports car? The Road & Track readers who saw tinkering with a British car as a badge of honor?

          But let’s put on the side for a moment both AMC’s reputation and the cultural biases of sports car drivers. I would insist that the AMX was a pony car — except with the back seat removed. It’s not like they even tried to disguise it with a racier front end, like with the Shelby Mustangs. Or by giving the AMX a targa roofline that would have provided at least a little evidence that the car was a poor-man’s Corvette.

          Also keep in mind that they needed to produce 10,000 per year to break even . . . and couldn’t pull that off. BTW, I don’t think it is surprising that sales fell sharply in 1970 when the standard V8 was the 360ci. That resulted in low gas mileage, high insurance rates, and nose-heavy handling and braking. Not exactly an alternative to an import.

      • This is in your reply to the second post. I agree with you completely. I was rather unsure about this conjecture myself, I dug up these figures more to convince myself. Maybe AMC execs figured they could steal more sales from the burled walnut and leather crowd.

  2. First, I have to believe that George Romney would never have approved the AMX for production…maybe the Javelin, but still not likely. Too much was riding on the Hornet and an eventual replacement for the Classic architecture.

    I drove a 1968 Javelin and a V-8 AMX in 1968. The Javelin was nicely equipped as was the AMX. The Javelin drove and rode better, likely due to the longer wheelbase. Again, just like Studebaker-Packard, A.M.C.’s dealer network was dwindling. You cannot sell cars when the number viable dealers evaporate to nothing !

  3. I’d like to posit this: How do you change your image, if you don’t change your image?

    Clearly, AMC had an image problem at that time and needed something to break out of their “malaise”. They knew that the youth market was exploding (or maybe had actually exploded by the time of the release of the Javelin). Unfortunately, their cars weren’t Volvo enough for the Volvo crowd. And they were increasingly out of date, by offering flathead motors for the folks who never saw the big deal about those complex overhead valve engienes.

    Flipping the script in this instance demanded they have the product in place. The Marlin and the Rogue were their first attempts, but hardly muscle cars or pony cars. There was no way anything that AMC had in 1966 was going to compete with the Mustang. Whatever they were going to put out, it was going to need to be perceived as a pony car. While the Javelin was not the perfect pony car, it did what it was supposed to do, compete against the Mustang.

    I love the audacity of the idea of the AMX. It was clearly a chopped Javelin, but it was positioned against the “big man” of American sporting cars, the Corvette. How better to change your image than to take on the Corvette?

    I wish it had worked out better than it actually did, though.

  4. Perhaps I can fill in some of the blanks for you.

    The 2-seat 1966 Vignale AMX concept car garnered much enthusiasm on the show car circuit, suggesting that a market existed for such a car. The production AMX embodied the concept, but not the styling of the 1966 show car. Ford’s 2-seat shortened Mustang prototypes probably encouraged AMC to beat them to the market, but Ford never took them beyond the show car stage.

    The 1968 Javelin was based on the old Rambler American platform, just as the Barracuda was a Valient with a bubble and the Mustang was a gussied-up Falcon. That platform was shortened to make the 2-seat AMX. In 1970, the same two platforms formed the basis for the Hornet and Gremlin. A few AMX owners discovered that a Gremlin back seat would bolt right into an AMX. Too bad AMC didn’t think of that in 1968, but then, as you have noted, it would have overlapped even more with the Javelin.

    I am a little confused by your comments on the AMX’s performance and handling. Every previous article I have read, from back in the day or retrospective, has had nothing but praise for both. Are you using contemporaries of the AMX or today’s cars that have benefitted from 55 years of technological advancement as your benchmark?

  5. IIRC the AMX was available with a rumble seat option. I don’t know if this was factory or aftermarket. Also, the hit them where they ain’t strategy for the independents just led to them being beta testers for the big three.

  6. The rumble seat was a feature of the 1966 Vignale show car. It was never offered as a factory or aftermarket option for the production models.

  7. All AMC V-8’s have the same architecture. So the 290, 343 and 390 all weighed the same. So the 1970 360 engine wouldn’t have changed the weight distribution. The AMX was to have a 4 barrel high compression engine and 4 speed Borg Warner transmission standard. For the 1970 model year the 360 was the smallest engine with a 4 barrel that was offered in the US market.

    • What is a forecast of unintended things to come, the weight distribution of the AMX was almost identical to the 1971 Gremlin with a 258-cu.-in. six., which was widely criticized for its terrible handling. Perhaps a firmer suspension might have helped, but the results of the Javelin Trans-Am racing experience had not been applied as yet as from Ronnie Kaplan Engineering as those bits were still in constant revision and upgrading. Plus, R.K.E. did not have the all-out racing budget that Mark Donohue and Roger Penske would have later on.

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