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Let's see your Ramblers!

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by White Trash Renegade, Feb 2, 2011.

  1. mikebastard
    Joined: Mar 11, 2011
    Posts: 1

    mikebastard
    Member
    from langley bc

    IMGP1271.JPG
    my 1965 rambler american hardtop..not done yet but gunna finish up the body and go in for paint soon.
     
  2. nali
    Joined: Sep 15, 2009
    Posts: 828

    nali
    Member

    This is just a the Gimp . But I m working to have the same . I ll need a 65 front and cast the tooths .

    [​IMG]
     
    Maverick Daddy likes this.
  3. farna
    Joined: Jul 8, 2005
    Posts: 1,294

    farna
    Member

    The teeth don't have to be metal. You could cast them out of some type of resin then paint, unless you want a shiny chrome. Well, I take that back, there are some plastic chrome platers out there. For painted even a smooth wood tooth coated with fiberglass resin would look just as good, would just be hard to hand finish all those teeth uniformly!

    It does look good that way though! What year car do you have?
     
  4. davelamboriginals
    Joined: Jun 9, 2006
    Posts: 50

    davelamboriginals
    Member
    from fremont nh

    WAHOO.............. here's mine
     

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  5. nali
    Joined: Sep 15, 2009
    Posts: 828

    nali
    Member

    Farna , it s my 66. You have already seen it on theamcforum :)
     
  6. farna
    Joined: Jul 8, 2005
    Posts: 1,294

    farna
    Member

    DUH!!! I didn't look to see WHO posted....
     
  7. White Trash Renegade
    Joined: Oct 28, 2009
    Posts: 115

    White Trash Renegade
    Member
    from Derby, KS

    Come on guys!! Get your pics up!
     
  8. marks73turbota
    Joined: Jun 27, 2009
    Posts: 210

    marks73turbota
    Member

    Excuse me guys for chiming in but I had to tell you. Never owned an AMC or a Rambler but I've been in a hundred of 'em. My Dad hauled Ramblers then AMCs out of Kenosha for K.A.T. (Kenosha Auto Transport) from 1951 to 1973. I was born in 1952 but started looking at and likiing cars by the time I was 8 years old, 1960. I always got to set in one car for almost every load as long as my Dad supervised. And the best time of the year was when the new models were coming out and Dad had to use a car cover on every car until reveal day. He would get mad because I would start to uncover them and he had to yell at me to leave them alone until reveal day. Usually the second week of September IIRC. Used to use the greased up fifth wheel for a slide too but that's a story for another time. I've always held a special spot for Ramblers and someday would like to build one. Growing up I became a Pontiac nut but the one car I really would like to find is a 2 door 1957 Rebel. I've been told that they only made 4 door rebels but I could swear that Dad had one on his truck that I sat in. And that would put me at only 5 years old. Sooo, maybe I'm not correct. I do remember my Dad talking about how everyone was so up about the '69 Rambler S/C with the big motor and him saying that Rambler did that way back in '57 with the Rebel. So I know he was talking about the '57s. Sure wished he was still around so I could ask him. My other favorites are '65 Classic hartops and 1967 2 dr hardtop Ambassadors. I won a model contest way back in '67 with a model of a '67 Ambassador that I built a gasser out of. Anywho, just wanted to pass along that my Dad hauled Ramblers and AMCs back then.
    A side note. When Kenosha was slow he would haul for the government. Made two trips from somewhere east of Wisconsin (we lived just outside of Milwaukee)to Nebraska one summer carrying tanks for the Army. And one year made several trips around the states delivering specially built International Scout mail trucks.
    He was traveling west one summer with two other trucks loaded with the Scouts. Somewhere out there they had resurfaced the highway but never marked the new bridge height, and with the scouts being so much taller than the Ramblers, the first truck went under an overpass and sheared off all the tops on the scouts. My Dad was the third truck and stopped just in time with the second truck stopped under the overpass and shearing off only two of the three tops. OK, I'm done. Felt good to think back. Mark L
     
  9. farna
    Joined: Jul 8, 2005
    Posts: 1,294

    farna
    Member

    No two door mid/big size Ramblers at all until 1962. Only two doors were the 50-55 Nash Rambler and 58-61 Americans those years (100" wheelbase). Only one size Rambler made in 56 and 57, the 108" wheelbase four door as a sedan, wagon, or hardtop. Beginning in 62 a two door was in every model (small American, mid Rambler 6 and Rebel V-8, long wheelbase Ambassador). You probably remember the Americans, or a 62 Classic (Rambler 6 and Rebel V-8 renamed Classic in 61 which came as a six with optional V-8 -- the two were the same except for engine).
     
  10. Buzzman72
    Joined: Sep 26, 2010
    Posts: 52

    Buzzman72
    Member

    My first car, which I bought in 1970, was a '57 Rambler Super with the 250 V8, Carter WCFB four-barrel, factory dual exhausts, and the GM-built Flashaway Hydra-Matic transmission. The one in the photo isn't my car, but it's nearly identical, right down to the Bermuda Green over Berkshire Green two-tone paint. The '57 250 had solid lifters, would top out at 120 MPH @ 6000 rpm, and would do it all night as long as you didn't run out of road. My dad and granddad were AMC dealers [originally having been Hudson dealers] until '60, and Granddad owned a '57 Rebel with the Hydra-Matic and a continental spare tire kit. That car wouldn't spin the rear tires on hard acceleration; with the continental kit, the rear end would just squat a little, and then launch like a rocket.[​IMG]
     
  11. farna
    Joined: Jul 8, 2005
    Posts: 1,294

    farna
    Member

    That's a 57 Rebel to the right of the Bermuda Green and White 57 Rambler. They were all charcoal silver (forget actual name) with a gold tone insert down the side similar to a 57 Chevy Bel Air. Looks like the insert may have been removed on the one in the photo, which looks like Larry Blatt's "survivor" Rebel. Anywhere around Pennsylvania? The "Rebel" name plate can clearly be seen on the front fender. After 57 all V-8 Ramblers were badged "Rebel", but they all got the 250, the 327 was only available in the Ambassador from 58-66. There was a 2V or 4V version of the little 250, which still weighed nearly 600 pounds like the 327. The continental spare was the only option for the 57 rebel, everything else was included.
     
  12. marks73turbota
    Joined: Jun 27, 2009
    Posts: 210

    marks73turbota
    Member

    I could have the styles mixed up. The one I'm thinking of is more the style like the #74 post. But I remember it was black, and it had the really thin tall fins that had a distinctive curve to them. My memory says the curve was even more pronouned than the #74 post shows, but then I was 5 and that's a long time ago. Sorry if my memory is way off. I do know he talked much later (in reference to the S/C Rambler) about the '57 Rebel though. So he and I might have been on different pages. I can still see that black car on the trailer but I thought it was a 2 dr. I had looked this up many years ago and I do remember others saying they never made a 2 dr. It's just so strong on my mind. Did those body styles have a split chrome trim line down the flank to the rear tail light? I seem to remember it being painted red inside of the trim split? Boy I better stop here. I'm starting to sound like a nut case!! Thanks for listening guys. On with the show! Mark L
     
  13. Van Dutch
    Joined: Nov 17, 2008
    Posts: 247

    Van Dutch
    Member

    That's looking ready to go right now. Evil family mobile.
     
  14. juhap
    Joined: Nov 16, 2006
    Posts: 112

    juhap
    Member
    from Finland

    Here are my AWB American pics...

    http://s6.photobucket.com/albums/y228/JuhaP/Gasser/

    It has been a sleeping project for some 8 yrs now. But now there is place (a new garage) to finish it. I started it before "Gasser trend" began here in Finland, and it looks like that if I finish it, that trend is over... :rolleyes:
     
  15. red lion
    Joined: Sep 28, 2010
    Posts: 2

    red lion
    Member
    from new york

    what did you do for the suspension and did you brace up the frame for all that? i have a simular project minus the 351
     
  16. 48reo
    Joined: Feb 21, 2008
    Posts: 305

    48reo
    Member

    ok here it is.
     

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  17. angry
    Joined: Jan 6, 2006
    Posts: 344

    angry
    Member
    from ventura ca

    Added a little something
     

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  18. White Trash Renegade
    Joined: Oct 28, 2009
    Posts: 115

    White Trash Renegade
    Member
    from Derby, KS

  19. onebadrambler
    Joined: Dec 19, 2009
    Posts: 16

    onebadrambler
    Member

    Here`s my 64 american wagon 220 2 door altered and my 68 220 sedan (On the set of the tv show life on mar`s)in the garage is my buddy`s 65 330 [​IMG][​IMG][​IMG][​IMG][​IMG]
     
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  20. nali
    Joined: Sep 15, 2009
    Posts: 828

    nali
    Member

    Nice way to get rid of trunions :p

    What s the black car behind the American ? Lincoln ?
    I think I m in love again ....
     
    Last edited: May 18, 2011
  21. American Hellbilly
    Joined: Jun 11, 2008
    Posts: 121

    American Hellbilly
    Member
    from Seymour,IN

    I think thats a 68 to 70 mark III.
     
  22. sixbangr
    Joined: Jul 17, 2010
    Posts: 212

    sixbangr
    Member

    my 440H, just finished the engine compartment.
     

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  23. farna
    Joined: Jul 8, 2005
    Posts: 1,294

    farna
    Member

    The photos not big enough to really see, but looks like you're using a remote filter setup. Do you recall what adapter you used? I believe it's the same as the later 232/258 filter (prior to around 1980, 80 or so and later used a small metric filter).

    I can't see the oil feed line for the head, unless it's coming from whatever that is on the right wheel well. Should be coming from a plug in the flat of the block near the front, metered through the front cam bearing. Do you have a link to a larger photo?
     
  24. Heo
    Joined: Jan 8, 2010
    Posts: 524

    Heo
    Member

    Rambler/amc realy made some but ugly cars
     
  25. smoked1
    Joined: Sep 19, 2010
    Posts: 123

    smoked1

    I used to have a 64 rambler american twin stick. And Im glad I dont have it anymore.Ha Ha! I hated that fr$%^%en car. Rustbucket supreme. You could see me comin 2 miles away! (smoked like crazy!) I think its rear axle made someone a trailer. It was my first car and I don't want another! Thank you. I much prefer old chevs. My 2 cents if anyone gives a sh$t!:eek:h yeah I did like the laydown seats!
     
    Last edited: May 21, 2011
  26. farna
    Joined: Jul 8, 2005
    Posts: 1,294

    farna
    Member

    Heo, so did Ford, Chevy, and Chrysler.... along with every other manufacturer. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, I guess. But think of the Edsel line, some of the 58-59 GMs, and some of the Exner Chryslers. I think some of those are way uglier than anything AMC ever made, but I like AMCs.

    I'm not real fond of the Pacer, but don't think it's ugly. It's sort of a transitional design between 70s and 90s cars. A lot of cars mimic the rounded look now. It had some short comings, but that was more due to technical limitations and the design coming out on the heels of a gas crunch. It got about the same mileage as a traditional full size car because it weighed as much due to all the safety features (more so than the glass, though it obviously had a bit more heavy glass than traditional sedan designs). AMC sold them faster than they could build them, there was a 3-4 month waiting list when they came out. 44,000 were built and pre-sold in the first three months of production because they couldn't build them faster -- they had to be assembled on a special line due to the short wheelbase and wide body. So it was successful -- until the gas crunch hit. Then it was a novel design, but people didn't want a smallish car that got the same mileage as a bigger car (though there was about as much room in a Pacer as a traditional two door sedan) -- and sales plummeted.
     
  27. farna
    Joined: Jul 8, 2005
    Posts: 1,294

    farna
    Member

    smoked1, that's typical. Start with a junker and don't like the brand/make any more. If it had been a rusted out trashed Chevy II instead of a Rambler I guess you'd not want another Chevy?? Ramblers were typically cheap used cars and got used as winter beaters up north and weren't taken very good care of. So naturally they got trashed and rusted. One taken care of is at least as good as any other make car. On the flip side, any other make abused as the Ramblers typically were would be as bad -- or usually worse. Ramblers were built to be very dependable for a long time and many have praised that quality. I've heard many say something similar to you but add "couldn't kill the darn thing!" right after. The sixes were especially tough!
     
  28. Thom.high
    Joined: May 21, 2011
    Posts: 9

    Thom.high
    Member
    from Oregon

  29. 50specialdeluxe
    Joined: Nov 23, 2009
    Posts: 88

    50specialdeluxe
    Member

    Not HAMB friendly but here's my '65 Rambler 660 wagon.

    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
     
    Maverick Daddy likes this.
  30. farna
    Joined: Jul 8, 2005
    Posts: 1,294

    farna
    Member

    Maybe it's just beyond the official cut-off year, but it's HAMB style! 63-66 big Ramblers share the same chassis, just a restyling for 65-66 models (63-64 are virtually the same -- just hood, grille, and taillight housings are different -- 65-66 have different outside sheet metal).
     

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