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Not What You Meant?  There are 15 definitions for Rebel.

AMC Rebel

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AMC Rebel
1968 AMC Rebel 770 station wagon
Manufacturer American Motors Corporation
Also called Rambler Rebel
Production 19671970
Assembly Kenosha, Wisconsin
Brampton, Ontario, Canada
Predecessor Rambler Classic
Successor AMC Matador
Class Mid-size
Body style(s) 2-door convertible
2-door coupe
2-door hardtop
4-door sedan
4-door station wagon
Related AMC Ambassador
1967 AMC ad for the Rebel shows how AMC marketing attempted to produce ads designed to change the perception that AMC only made economy cars
1967 AMC ad for the Rebel shows how AMC marketing attempted to produce ads designed to change the perception that AMC only made economy cars
1967 Rebel SST convertible
1967 Rebel SST convertible
1970 Rebel Machine, a factory prepared muscle car was available in a sedate standard paint scheme
1970 Rebel Machine, a factory prepared muscle car was available in a sedate standard paint scheme
The AMC Rebel Machine, a factory built drag racer in its standard RWB stripe and paint scheme
The AMC Rebel Machine, a factory built drag racer in its standard RWB stripe and paint scheme

The AMC Rebel (known as the Rambler Rebel in 1967) is a mid-size car produced by American Motors Corporation (AMC) from 1967 to 1970. It replaced the Rambler Classic. The Rebel was replaced by the similar AMC Matador for the 1971 model year.

Contents

History

The Rebel name was introduced by AMC in 1957 as a special model with a big V8 engine: the Rambler Rebel, the first American factory muscle car. The Rebel name reappeared in 1966 on a specially trimmed version of the Rambler Classic two-door hardtop with a revised roofline. For 1967, AMC's entire intermediate line took the Rebel name. Throughout its life, the Rebel was available as a 4-door sedan, 4-door station wagon, and 2-door hardtop. In addition, a 2-door sedan (coupé) with a thin B-pillar and flip out rear side windows was available in 1967 only, and a convertible was offered in 1967 and 1968. Engines included the 232 in³ I6 (145/155 hp), 290 in³ (200/225 hp), 343 in³ (235/280 hp) and 390 in³ (315/325 hp) V8s. Styling was similar to the senior Ambassador, which shared the same basic unit body aft of the cowl. In 1970, the sedan and coupe received a restyled rear-end, along with a new C-pillar shape and rear quarters. The Rebel was built at AMC's "West Assembly Line" (along with the Ambassador) in Kenosha, Wisconsin and at Brampton, Ontario, Canada (Bramalea). The 1970 restyle was to last only one year before a further restyle and renaming the models as the AMC Matador. The 4-door and wagon platform would remain unchanged until the retirement of the Matador after 1978.

Regional wagons

During the 1967 model year, AMC issued a series of specialty Rebel station wagons, each with their own distinctive side trim:

  • The Mariner (600 units) featured simulated grey lapboard trim and was issued along the coastal regions of the United States;
  • The Briarwood (400 units) featured simulated Rosewood panels and was issued throughout the east and south;
  • The Westerner (500 units) featured plankwood trim inserts and was issued west of the Mississippi River.

The Machine

The most recognizable muscle car version of the Rebel was named The Machine, which in its most patriotic or flamboyant form was painted white with bold red, white, and blue reflective stripes following success of the 1969 SC/Rambler. First proposed in June 1968, the car was to have been a 1969 Rebel coupe finished in black with authoritative black wheels and fat tires, without any stripes, scoops, or spoilers, but with an aggressive, street-fighting stance.[1] American Motors' high performance halo vehicle made its official debut October 25 1969, in Dallas, Texas; the site of the National Hot Rod Association's World Championship Drag Race Finals. The Machine had a 390 in³ V8 (6.4 L) engine with 340 horsepower (Expression error: Unrecognised punctuation character "{" kW), the most powerful in any AMC vehicle. It featured a large ram-air intake hood scoop that was painted Electric Blue (code B6) with a large tachometer visible to the driver integrated into a raised fairing at the rear of the scoop. The heavy-duty suspension was augmented by station wagon springs in the rear giving the car a raked look. Standard were a Borg-Warner T-10 four-speed manual transmission with a Hurst floor shifter backed by either 3.54:1 or 3.91:1 rear axle gear ratios, as well as power disc brakes, wide E60X15 Goodyear Polyglas white letter tires mounted on "Machine" mag-styled steel 15-inch wheels, and a black interior with bucket seats and a center armrest upholstered in red, white, and blue vinyl. Numerous other upgrades were standard to make each Machine a potent turn-key drag racer. The manufacturer's suggested retail price (MSRP) price was US$3,475 (approximately $20,000 in 2007 dollars). After the initial run of 1000 units, the Machine was available without the stripes in other colors with a blacked out hood. The rarest of all paint schemes for the Machine is Frost White with a flat-black hood (72A-8A), with only three made. The original trim scheme became a $75 option. The Rebel Machine was a limited edition, with 2,326 built in 1970.

Convertibles

Also of note is the 1968 convertible, which was the last AMC convertible built (not including the Renault Alliance). This is among the rarest AMC models, with only 823 produced. Less than 100 are known to survive today.

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AMC Rebel from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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