Browse Listings

Restorable Cars & Trucks

Gremlin Parts

Listing Information:

Year: 1973

Make: AMC

Make: Gremlin

Exterior: yellow and green

Listing Contact:

Jim or Dave
573-763-5352
Location: Linn, MO Linn, MO Linn, MO Linn, MO

Description

Gremlin Parts

Call Dave or Jim

573-763-5352

Located a couple Gremlins that are restorable or for parts at Schollmeyer Auto Salvage near Linn. Mo. Cars have titles and a lot of good parts. For more information call Dave or Jim, they don’t use email.

 

 

The AMC Gremlin was a subcompact automobile introduced in 1970, manufactured and marketed in a single, two-door body style (1970–1978).

Using a shortened Hornet platform and bodywork with a pronounced kammback tail, the Gremlin was classified as an economy car and competed with the Chevrolet Vega and Ford Pinto, as well as imported cars including the Volkswagen Beetle and Toyota Corolla. The small domestic automaker marketed the Gremlin as “the first American-built import.”[7]

The Gremlin reached a total production of 671,475 over a single generation. It was superseded by a restyled and revised variant, the AMC Spirit from 1979 to 1983, long after the retirement of the Ford Pinto, which suffered from stories about exploding gas tanks, as well as the Chevrolet Vega, which had durability problems with its aluminum engine.

 

Origin and design[edit]

The design of the Gremlin was inspired by the AMC AMX-GT concept car

The idea for the Gremlin began in 1966 when design chief at American Motors, Dick Teague, and stylist Bob Nixon discussed the possibility of a shortened version of AMC’s compact car.[8] On an airline flight, Teague’s solution, which he said he sketched on an air sickness bag,[9] was to truncate the tail of a Javelin. Bob Nixon joined AMC as a 23-year-old and did the first formal design sketches in 1967 for the car that was to be the Gremlin.[10]

Ford and General Motors were to launch new subcompact cars for 1971, but AMC did not have the financial resources to compete with an entirely new design. Teague’s idea of using the pony car Javelin resulted in the AMX-GT concept, first shown at the New York International Auto Show in April 1968.[13] This version did not go into production, but the AMX name was used from 1968 to 1970 on a shortened, two-seat sports car built from the Javelin.

1978 Gremlin X

Instead, Bob Nixon, AMC’s future Chief of Design, designed the new subcompact based on the automaker’s Hornet model, a compact car. The design reduced the wheelbase from 108 to 96 inches (2,743 to 2,438 mm) and the overall length from 179 to 161 in (4,547 to 4,089 mm), making the Gremlin two inches (50 mm) longer than the Volkswagen Beetle and shorter than the Ford Pinto and Chevrolet Vega.

Capitalizing on AMC’s advantage as a small car producer, the Gremlin was introduced on April 1, 1970. The April 6, 1970, cover of Newsweek magazine featured a red Gremlin for its article, “Detroit Fights Back: The Gremlin”. The car was available as a “base” two-passenger version with no rear seat and a fixed rear window, at a suggested retail price of $1,879, and as a four-seat hatchback with an opening rear window, at $1,959 (US$13,055 in 2020 dollars[14]).[15]

From the front of the car to the B-pillars, the Gremlin was essentially the same as the AMC Hornet. Although it was only fractionally longer than the contemporary Volkswagen Beetle, Time said the length of its hood over the front-mounted engine made “the difference seem considerably more”, adding that the car “resembles a sawed-off station wagon, with a long, low hood and swept-up rear, and is faintly reminiscent of the original Studebaker Avanti.”[16] As with the Volkswagen, the Gremlin’s styling set it apart from other cars.[17] Time said, “like some other cars of less than standard size, the back seat is designed for small children only.”[16] The Gremlin’s wider stance gave it “a stable, quiet and relatively comfortable ride—for the two front passengers”, for whom, by small-car standards, there was more than average interior width, seat room, and legroom.[18] The six cubic feet of luggage space behind the back seat was less than in the rear-engined Volkswagen Beetle, but with the seat folded the cargo area tripled to 18 cubic feet (509.7 l).[18]

The upright design of the tail, which enlarged interior space, was aerodynamically efficient. Later, European and Japanese manufacturers similarly created different body styles on one compact car chassis by extending or curtailing the trunk (e.g. Volkswagen’s Jetta and Golf models).

Marketing[edit]

AMC Gremlin logo on gas cap

 

Designed and named by Teague to look either “cute or controversial – depending on one’s viewpoint … for many, it seemed perfect for the free-thinking early 1970s.”[19] American Motors executives apparently felt confident enough to not worry that the Gremlin name might have negative connotations.[18] Time magazine noted two definitions for gremlin: “Defined by Webster’s as ‘a small gnome held to be responsible for malfunction of equipment.’ American Motors’ definition: ‘a pal to its friends and an ogre to its enemies.'”[16] The car’s cartoon-inspired mascot was marketed for product differentiation and was intended to be memorable to consumers.[20][21] The Gremlin’s hatchback design was also needed to make the car stand out in the competitive marketplace, and according to Teague: “Nobody would have paid it any attention if it had looked like one of the Big Three” automobiles.[19]

AMC promoted the Gremlin as “America’s first subcompact”.[22] This description overlooks the Nash Metropolitan and the earlier Crosley.[23] The Metropolitan—a subcompact-sized[24][25] captive import, American-conceived and American-designed for the American market, and built in the UK with a British engine—has a claim to be “America’s first subcompact.”[26]

AMC marketed the Gremlin as “cute and different,” a strategy successful in attracting more than 60 percent of purchasers under the age of 35.[27]