Newsletter of the American Motors Club of Houston
Transcription
Newsletter of the American Motors Club of Houston
Newsletter of the American Motors Club of Houston February 2015 Issue 18 1971 Hornet SC/360 – pg 5 From the Officers - Latest Club News You Can Use pg 2 Upcoming Events pg 2 Club Information pg 3 Guess the Engine pg 4 1971 Hornet SC/360 pg 5 Ozzie Says Goodbye to an old Friend pg 6-7 AMCs on Television pg 8 AMC Technical Tips pg 9-13 Tidbits pg 14 Club Store pg 15 1 From the Officers: Cover Photo: 1971 Hornet SC/360 Free National Club Membership!! In an effort to get more folks to attend our monthly meetings, a giveaway will be held a couple of times a year to award some lucky members with a free membership to the American Motors Owners Association (our Club is an AMO chapter). If the lucky winner is already an AMO member, he or she will have the option of a free membership in one of the other national AMC clubs, such as AMCRC or NAMDRA. Keep an eye out for email regarding the giveaway. Upcoming Events (items in green are information only, not club events) February 28th – Annual Family Bowling Event at Armadillo Lanes 10055 Fuqua St Houston, TX 77089 o (Paid club members- free, Spouse- $10.00). Arrive 1:30, Bring your AMC too! March 7th – Clear Springs H.S. Car Show. 501 Palomino Ln, League City 10th – Club Meeting at Hickory Hollow Bar B Q (Nomination of officers) 21st – “Sat at the Strand” Open car show ($30 entry fee)– Pier 21 Galveston 14th – Wings and Wheels- 11:30 (supposed to be free lunch for car owners) o 1940 Air Terminal Museum at Hobby Airport o 8325 Travelair Rd o 713-454-1940 27th - Pearland Cruise Night o LOWES Parking Lot at FM 518 & Pearland Parkway starting at 6pm April 4th – Space City Cruisers Annual Spring Show. o Open Car Show, Swap Meet, Arts and Crafts, Show and Shine Walter Hall Park on FM 518 Registration - $30.00 7:00 am till noon T-Shirt and goodie bags to first 150 cars Raffle Drawings – 2:15pm 2 AMCoH Officers President Tom Taylor 4406 Mize Rd Pasadena, TX 775045 713-249-2466 tom.taylor@c-a-m.com amc.taylor1969@att.net ******************************* Vice President Mike Knuckey 713-253-8276 dink-1@msn.com ****************************** Co-Secretaries Ted Davis & Scott Stubler 713-721-8960 & 713-5698421 tedjr1@swbell.net mstubler@hourston.rr.com ****************************** Treasurer Kevin Dalley 281-481-6363 amxamc@aol.com ****************************** Activities Director Tim Gould 281-435-4452 trex6622@yahoo.com ****************************** Membership Chairman Kevin Dalley 281-481-6363 amxamc@aol.com ****************************** WebMaster Peter Groenewold 708-431-0987 gacpete@gmail.com ****************************** Newsletter Editor Gary Parente 713-859-7249 grparen@gmail.com Motors Club of Houston p. 3 Club Information The American Motors Club of Houston was founded in the early 1980’s with the goal of advancing the image and preservation of AMC vehicles in Southeast Texas and the surrounding area. Our club is one of three AMC organizations in Texas – the American Motors Club of Houston, Alamo AMC based in San Antonio, and North Texas AMC headquartered in Dallas form a strong contingent of Texas AMC fellowship, experience and support. We are a chapter of the American Motors Owners Association (AMO) and we strongly suggest joining this fine organization. Planned activities include a large display in the annual indoor Thanksgiving Houston AutoRama Show, the annual AMO Lone Star Regional Show, and the annual AMC East Texas Cruisein, family picnics, cruises, parties, races, etc. The 2001 AMO National Meet was also held in Houston!! We have regular monthly meetings on the second Tuesday of every month (7:30 p.m.) at the Hickory Hollow restaurant, located at 101 Heights Blvd. (just a few blocks south of I-10). If you are not already a member, feel free to join us for a “get acquainted” session before you sign up. Ownership of an AMC vehicle or residence in our local area is NOT required to join our group. Interest and enthusiasm are more than enough. We’ll gladly help you find your own treasured AMC if you don’t already have one!! Dues are *$20 per year – we are a non-profit organization, 100% of your dues go to supporting club activities. The club officers do not receive a salary for their efforts. Dues and an enrollment form may be submitted at our monthly meetings, or mailed to our Treasurer, Kevin Dalley, 12207 Courtney Greens Rd, Houston, TX 77089. AMCoH exists specifically to support you in your AMC endeavors, and we look forward to adding your own AMC experience to our knowledge base. If you need any additional information, feel free to contact any of our club officers. 3 Below are Pictures of the Engines of Members’ Cars displayed at the Houston AutoRama last November. Can you match them to the Owner? David Hughes’ 1969 AMX # #1 Gary Parente’s 1964 American 330 # #5 Steven Colello’s 1969 Javelin # #2 Don Jones’ 1970 Rebel Machine # #6 Ron Eichler’s Gary Parente’s 1970 Machine 1964Rebel American 330 ##______ #3 Jeff Jung’s 1965 American 440 # #7 Jim Sanders 1960 M422 Mighty Mite # #4 Kevin Dalley’s/Steve Polfus’ 1979 Spirit # Answers on page 13 4 #8 Look What Was Buzzing in 1971 AMC Dealerships! 1971 Hornet SC/360 Throughout the late 1960s and early ‘70s, American Motors Corp.--the Rocky Balboa of American automakers-released a surprising variety of high-performance models, all in an unsuccessful effort to win the hearts and minds of muscle-car buyers. Peter Cambrola of Bristol, R.I., is one whom AMC did win over, even if it was several decades later. Cambrola and his wife, Kathy, own six special AMC models, but their 1971 Hornet SC/360 is the rarest. The popularity of muscle cars peaked in 1970. By 1971, crippling insurance rates, fuel costs and emerging emissions restrictions combined to spell the end of an era. AMC advertised the Hornet SC/360 as “a sensible alternative to the money-squeezing, insurance-strangling muscle cars of America. ”The SC/360 dropped the 360-cubic-inch V8 from the Javelin AMX into the 3,057-pound Hornet, introduced as a 1970 model replacing the venerable Rambler American. Insurance rates were based on a horsepower-to-weight ratio, and with this in mind, AMC introduced the SC/360 with a two-barrel carburetor and a single exhaust, rated at 245 hp. The standard SC/360 package also included a three-speed transmission, rally stripes and steel wheels. The $199 Go package included a four-barrel carburetor, dual exhausts and ram-air induction that raised power to 285 hp as well as providing a Borg-Warner Super T-10 four-speed with Hurst shifter or automatic transmission, a handling package and a “Twin-Grip” limited-slip differential with optional 3.54:1 or 3.90:1 gears. Goodyear Polyglas D70-14 tires were standard. The devil was in the details. AMC announced plans to build 10,000 Hornet SC/360s, but only 784 were made. By some accounts, perhaps only 80 remain. Cambrola's car was very rough when he acquired it in 2007, but it was an original, fully optioned car. He undertook the restoration himself, having previously restored an AMC S/C Rambler and a Rebel Machine, although he found it difficult to work on in his one-car garage. The finished restoration is stunning. Every detail--the original white color, red stripes and black vinyl interior, even the vacuum-operated mechanism for opening the ram-air intake--speaks to perfection. Cambrola describes the performance of the SC/360, as “pretty snappy” compared with his bigger-engine cars. “It handles really well. It has the newer double-arm suspension that replaced American Motors' outdated trunnion suspension in 1969. It's a fun car to drive because it's small and light but has the horsepower and torque of the V8 engine. ”The position of the shifter presents a challenge. These cars were never designed for a floor-mounted manual shifter, and the curved-chrome Hurst lever knocks against the driver's knee. But, as AMC's own advertising wryly asked in 1971, “If you had to compete with GM, Ford and Chrysler, what would you do?” From Autoweek, May 9, 2010 5 Ozzie Says Goodbye to an old Friend Club Member, Cliff (Ozzie) Osborne, recently said goodbye to an old friend as he has sold his SS/AMX. Ozzie has a stash of AMC cars and parts and recently decided it was time to let the old girl go. For those of you with limited knowledge of the SS/AMX cars, here is some background. In 1969, with collaboration from Hurst Performance, 52 turn-key, purpose-built drag race cars were created from the AMX. They were called Super Stock AMXs or SS/AMX for short. Hurst lightened them with fiberglass treatments and other modifications. To maximize quarter-mile performance, the 390 engine was equipped with twin Holley carburetors and 12.3:1 compression-ratio cylinder heads, plus aftermarket Doug’s headers and exhaust system, and the tires were drag-radial slicks. American Motors rated the car at 340 hp (250 kW), but the National Hot Rod Association ultimately rated it at 420 horsepower (310 kW) and shuffled it among various competition classes: SS/G, SS/D, and SS/C. Its best recorded quarter-mile was 10.73 seconds at 128 mph (206 km/h). The Super Stock AMX was meant for the race track and lacked comfort equipment such as a heater. The car could be ordered all white, or in the vertical bands of red, white, and blue that distinguished numerous AMC competition cars of the day. Base price was $5,994, some $1,900 more than a fully loaded regular 1969 AMX. There was no factory warranty. Ozzie’s car was the #6 car originally owned by George Warren of Alabama. The story goes that the original 390 and transmission were at some time removed and a big block Chevy took its place. George was to comment after that the car never ran as fast as it did when it had the modified AMC 390 in it. Ozzie says he sold the car to a collector in Rapid City, South Dakota. 6 Here are some early articles/pictures of the car when it was in George Warren’s possession. 7 AMCs on Television There are several AMC Gremlins that show up in the movie ‘Terminator’. Here is one in the parking lot of the hotel where Kyle Reese and Sarah Conner are hiding from the Terminator. South Beach Classics, which is a popular classic car dealership in Miami owned and run by Ted Vernon appears on the Velocity channel. Note the 1964 Rambler American in the background. 8 AMC Technical Tips - originally printed in the August 1999 Alamo AMC News 9 AMC Technical Tip – originally printed in the Cactus Cruisers Southwest Scorcher newsletter from June/July 2008 10 AMC Technical Tip – petronix and AMC Tachometers - continued 11 AMC Technical Tip – petronix and AMC Tachometers - continued 12 AMC Technical Tip – petronix and AMC Tachometers - continued Attention!! Are you looking for a restoration shop? Muscle Car Shop. Full restorations, stock, restomods, pro touring, bumper to bumper including: chassis/suspension, LS conversions, paint/body, custom fabrication, rear-ends, engine work including crank grinding, cylinder boring, valve work, decking and interiors. Please see our web site at: www.texomaclassics.com contact us at: chris@texomats.com or call: 903-819-1452. Disclaimer AMCOH in no way will be a mediator between customers and vendors. Any and all disputes over price or quality of service should be between customers and vendors. Answers to Engine Owners from page 4 13 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 – Jim Sanders 1960 M422 Mighty Mite – David Hughes 1969 AMX – Ron Eichler 1970 Rebel Machine – Steve Collelo 1969 Javelin – Jeff Jung 1965 American – Kevin Dalley/Steve Polfus 1979 Spirit – Don Jones 1970 Rebel Machine – Gary Parente 1964 American Tidbits 14 15
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