Tag Archives: AMC Hornet

Car Spot: 1974 AMC Hornet

This spot has quite the sting …

During the late 1960s and early ’70s, American Motors was looking to shake the stodgy look. You know, great economy, but a car maybe my parents would drive. Among the cars introduced were the Javelin and Hornet. While both could come with AMC’s inline-6s, they also could be equipped with V8s providing a ton of fun. It was along those lines that AMC went off to the races with both cars. The Javelin in Trans-Am and the Hornet in drag racing.

This was from a printed piece my dad got me when he worked at AMC.

Remember this name, Wally Booth, because he was an NHRA Pro Stock racing legend, racing since the mid-’60s in mostly Camaros and Dodges. But in mid-November of 1971 Bob Swaim, the head of the AMC Racing Program, hit up Wally with the opportunity to join AMC’s racing efforts that would lead to his greatest accomplishments.

Photo: MotorTrend

Wally’s first NHRA national event win came just 27 months after joining forces with AMC. On March 17, 1974, his Hornet defeated Jack Roush’s Mustang II in the Pro Stock final at the NHRA Gatornationals, 8.97 to 9.01 seconds. Think about it. An AMC beating a Ford Mustang! He continued racing and winning until his retirement in 1979.

This week’s spot. The pride of Kenosha. Mom had a ’74 Hornet but not as fast as this one.
Props to the owners for keeping the interior mostly stock.
Except for the wheels, this looks like a stock ’74 Hornet nicely restored.

This week’s car spot might have a bit of Wally Booth in it. I found it recently at a World of Wheels event in Milwaukee. This ’74’s body and interior are pristine and look like almost any other that might have come off the line, but underneath, well that’s a different story. AMC peeps, you’re going to like this. Instead of going to the dark side and plopping an LS engine in it. The owners, John and Kathy Bots from Summit, Wis., got ahold of a 401 and juiced it up to 1,200 hp! Gotta love that!

It’s simply great to see cars like this that keep the AMC name alive.

1,200 hp from an AMC. Gotta love it!

In researching this article, I found other interesting tidbits about the Hornet’s racing career. Pop these out at the next Cars and Coffee event you attend.

In 1973, AMC cars very nearly placed 1-2-3, in a BF Goodrich Radial Challenge Series race, but Bob Hennig driving an AMC Hornet went out while in third place with only six laps to go. BMW driver Nick Craw and AMC Hornet driver Amos Johnson ended the IMSA series as co-champions in Class B. Wow, a Hornet as fast as a BMW! Johnson also campaigned Gremlins and later Spirits and won.

Chrysler wasn’t the only manufacturer of a turbine-powered car. In 1971 an AMC Hornet was converted to a WR-26 regenerative gas turbine power made by Williams International.

In 1970, Lou Haratz drove an AMC Hornet and went on to be the first to drive completely around the widest practical perimeter of the North, Central, and South American continents for a distance of 38,472 miles in 143 days. True fact!

Who says Hornets were cheap cars and not dependable?

Thanks for stopping by. Be sure to check back next week for another spot along with some of its history. Have a great weekend.

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Promo model: AMC Hornet

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Screen grab from YouTube. Bond jumps an AMC Hornet

Who doesn’t love a good car chase? Show of hands. Yup, that’s everybody. Good car chases are a big part of a movie. Perhaps the first one that comes to mind is the classic chase in Bullitt. Now think Bond, James Bond. Super awesome car chases in those movies but because, as you all know, I have this sick love affair for AMC cars, I remember the 1974 AMC Hornet in The Man with the Golden Gun. The action begins as secret agent 007 commandeers the Hornet from a dealership in Bangkok with a vacationer who was looking at the car. The Hornet performs an “airborne pirouette as it makes a hold-your-breath jump across a broken bridge“. Of course the stunt car is significantly modified with a redesigned chassis to place the steering wheel in the center and a lower stance, as well as larger wheel wells compared to the stock Hornet used in all the other movie shots.

OK, now lets back up a bit for a history of the Hornet which was a compact automobile made by the American Motors Corporationamc hornet, american motors, 1970 amc hornet. savageonwheels.com(AMC) in one generation beginning with the 1970 model year and continuing through the 1977 model year. The Hornet replaced the compact Rambler American marking the end of the Rambler marque in the American and Canadian markets. Hornets were also marketed in foreign markets, as well as assembled under license agreements with AMC that included Vehículos Automotores Mexicanos (VAM), Australian Motor Industries (AMI), and by Toyota S.A. Ltd. in South Africa.

The Hornet name plate goes back to the mid-1950s. The name originated from the merger of Hudson Motor Company and Nash-Kelvinator Corporation in 1954. Hudson introduced the first Hudson Hornet in 1951. The new Hornet became an important vehicle and platform for AMC. It served the company in one form or another for eighteen years, until the 1988 model year. It would outlast all other compact platforms from the competition that included the Chevrolet Nova, Ford Maverick, and Plymouth Valiant. The Hornet marked the return of AMC to its original role as a “niche” marketer specializing in small cars.  It also became one of AMCs best sellers.

Savageonwheels.com, promotional model cars, amc hornetWe had a 73, like this one, the first year they made the Hornet in a hatchback. It was green so of course we could call it the green Hornet. Our’s had AMC’s 258 4.2 liter in it and that 170 horse power engine moved it around nicely. OK now promise me you won’t tell my dad but it was really easy to lay rubber with. I really liked that car. Now the real deal can be had for around 4 grand. More if you want the 1970 SC with the 360 in it. Now that laid rubber even if you looked at the accelerator.

For the promo models, they are very affordable to plus, they don’t have the usual rust found on AMC cars in the 70’s. I have a couple of Hornets, a 1970 2-door and a 73 fastback. Mine are both in mint Amc hornet, american motors association, promotional model cars, promo model cars savageonwheels.comAmc hornet, american motors association, promotional model cars, promo model cars savageonwheels.comcondition although I’m not sure if I have the boxes for them. My bad. I might have another 73 around somewhere to. Nope, these were not freebies, I actually bought these at one of those car model swap shows since I most likely blew up/burned up/smashed the ones dad brought home for me. Hey, I was a kid. You know, living for the moment. These are pretty inexpensive to too. I think around 30-50 bucks.

Hey look, I got my 73 to do the Bond stunt. Fishing line,what fishing line?

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My Hornet doing the jump