
To pull this off, we needed the best body we could find, because even the cheapest paint j
We know. It's hard to imagine spending $3,500 and still look cool, but it's possible. You just have to do it the Car Craft way by waiting and watching for a clean body to show up in the classifieds, then scrounging the wrecking yards and stripping useful parts off other models.
That's how it went down with the '67 Rambler American after we figured out that if you want to build a car for low bucks, you need to either buy a clean six-cylinder car and swap in the V-8 goodies, or try to find a complete V-8 version and hope there is no hidden body damage. After looking at a herd of rusted-out Javelins and AMX bodies, we were surfing the Internet and came across a clean-looking but faded American with a 232ci inline-six and a column-shifted automatic parked about 15 miles north of us. When we arrived, we found the car in original, untouched condition on four flat tires covered in a tent of dust. The owner told us that the brakes failed and his mother took a trip into the garage door before permanently parking it. We decided right there that hidden under the crust was a lightweight two-door post just waiting for the right combination of look-cool and go-fast parts from the aftermarket to be a way cool street/strip car.
So we were hooked. We called AAA to have the car towed home, then swapped in all the V-8 parts from other AMCs in the family with the addition of a couple of hot rodding mainstays. But this is only the beginning. Now that we have a running car with a clean look, we're going to build it a piece at a time using only the hard parts that make it go faster or stop better, with a heavy emphasis on the go-faster part.
We're also going to use this car to do the wrong thing, like installing a sheetmetal tunnel-ram or a really loose torque converter, just to give you the truth about living with these parts on the street. Since our favorite wrong thing to do is add too much power, we're also going to plug in the 370 we built in the Jan. '06 issue. With it, we are going to test the limits of the stock parts and find out if the AMC guys are right that they are bulletproof, or if the rest of the world is right and we are going to fling shrapnel at the guy in the water box with the garden hose in his hand.
But first, check out how we transformed this car into street-machine material with more wrenching and less cash.
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When you look at non-mainstream vehicles, know that you aren't going to be able to buy int
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The Rambler is going to be about fairgrounds and dragstrip fun, so we planned to pull the
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The entire drum-brake system was worn out, but we didn't care. With some minor differences
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The '82-'83 Concord uses GM-style single-piston calipers and discs that are slightly under
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Make sure you grab every part seen here. We heard that the brake lines were metric, but th
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The caliper can be mounted either in front of or behind the disc. The theory here is that
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This is a 100 percent bolt-on in front. We didn't bother with the rear drums because we ne
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We scored huge when Steve Magnante spotted a '72 Gremlin in a Wilmington, California, wrec
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Everything on a small V-8 AMC has value, so we pulled the entire drivetrain and took home
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Before we pulled the six, we had the car running and driving with the disc-brake swap. We
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At this point we had to decide what to do with the engine compartment. Paint it body color
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We stripped the heater and the wiper motor and filled the holes with flashing left over fr
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This is the Gremlin crossmember after we sanded and painted it. It is a simple design that
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We decided to simply pressure-wash the Gremlin running gear and plug it into the car. We f
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The Rambler was overheating even with the six. We found a Pontiac Fiero and pulled the amp
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The M20 bolts directly to the leaf springs on the Rambler. The measurement to the outside
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We also partially stripped the '74 Matador of its exhaust when we pulled the radiator. It
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We found a four-door Rambler and took the stock hood for the hoodscoop installation in the
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The Concord also provided the GM-style throttle cable that required a 1/2-inch hole in the
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We gambled and took the gas pedal from the Concord as well-then heaved a sigh of relief wh
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This is a new disc-brake master cylinder that fits the '68-'74 Javelin and the Gremlin and
| Parts List |
| Description | PN | Source | Price |
| The Car |
| '67 Rambler American | NA | eBay | $2,000 |
|   |
| Used Parts |
| Radiator and misc. parts | NA | '74 Matador | 40.00 |
| 750 carb | 3310 | Loper's Performance junk pile | 25.00 |
| Disc brakes/gas pedal | NA | '83 AMC Concord | 130.00 |
| Drivetrain | NA | '72 AMC Gremlin | 350.00 |
| Electric fan | NA | Pontiac Fiero | 29.99 |
| Dog-dish hubcaps | NA | '67 four-door Rambler | 10.00 |
|   |
| New Parts |
| 2-1/16-inch Auto Meter fuel | 6114 | Summitracing.com | 109.95 |
| 2-1/16-inch Auto Meter water | 6155 | Prostreetonline.com | 156.57 |
| 2-1/16-inch Auto Meter oil | 6153 | Summitracing.com | 199.95 |
| '68 Hemi Dart hoodscoop | NA | Kramer Automotive | 195.00 |
| ACDelco battery | NA | B&C Auto Parts | 85.00 |
| Autolite spark plugs | AUT 66 | B&C Auto Parts | 12.00 |
| Autospecialties master cylinder | M-83011 | B&C Auto Parts | 35.00 |
| Black paint | NA | B&C Auto Parts | 4.95 |
| Brake fluid | NA | B&C Auto Parts | 3.95 |
| Brake cleaner | NA | B&C Auto Parts | 2.50 |
| Condenser | DR60T | B&C Auto Parts | 2.33 |
| Distributor cap | DR429T | B&C Auto Parts | 3.67 |
| Edelbrock Torker intake | 2930 | Summitracing.com | 225.95 |
| Fan belt | GAT 7425 | Gates | 5.00 |
| Hood | NA | '67 four-door American | 40.00 |
| Lower-control-arm bushings | 10-3059 | Galvin's Rambler Parts | 33.70 |
| Mr. Gasket cable bracket | 6038 | Service Center | 16.00 |
| MSD plug wires | 31199 | Summitracing.com | 74.88 |
| Radiator cap | AWA FH38 | B&C Auto Parts | 4.20 |
| Rotor | DR311T | B&C Auto Parts | 2.49 |
| TCI Thunder Stick | 618016 | Summitracing.com | 189.00 |
| Standard points | DR2270PT | B&C Auto Parts | 4.22 |
| Brake fittings | 11/42x20 | B&C Auto Parts | 4.95 |
| Brake-light switch kit | 8629 | Total Performance | 13.00 |
|   |
| Labor |
| Exhaust system installation | NA | Speedway Muffler Service | 80.00 |
| Custom driveshaft | NA | Drive Shaft Masters | 160.00 |
|   |
| Subtotal | 4,249.25 |
|   |
| Sold |
| Running 232 six and trans | -300.00 |
| Extra crossmember | -350.00 |
|   |
| Total | $3,599.25 |
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The interior cleaned up nicely. The TCI shifter is a must-have because the stock linkage f
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The factory warning lights and gauges were junk. These are Auto Meter electric Cobalt gaug
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Here it is on game day. Plan on seeing it with more motor, wheels and tires, and some drag