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10 American muscle cars that basically vanished
Coming straight from the X-Files, many old-school muscle cars that are revered today, fell out of favor and virtually ...
The golden era of American muscle cars came during the 1960s and at the very beginning of the 1970s. General Motors arguably ...
It was the beginning of the end for the GTO in 1970. Muscle cars were no longer selling like hotcakes due to a combination of rising insurance rates and new federal regulations, so Pontiac's superstar ...
While flawed, the Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais 442 was a reasonable sendoff for the iconic namesake because, much like its ...
The title of "muscle car" gets thrown around for almost any old American performance machine, but the classic idea is simpler: it's a mainstream front‑engine street car built around big power and ...
Detroit promised a replacement, but the real story is far stranger.
The muscle car has proven a resilient component within American car culture. From its earliest rumblings in the mid 1950s to the current version of the Ford Mustang, American automotive enthusiasts ...
Muscle cars don't have to be a forbidden dream for enthusiasts with a tight budget, especially those looking to get a less classic one. With well-kept examples selling between $10,000 and $20,000, the ...
V8-powered Mustangs are currently without any direct rival. With the demise of the previous-generation Dodge Charger and Dodge Challenger, the American automaker found itself without a V8-powered ...
Pretty much all of GM's coolest muscle cars in the 1990s can be attributed to SLP. To cover some of the most iconic of the ...
Chase Bierenkoven is a gearhead and writer based in Denver, Colorado. As the family lore goes, Chase's first word was "truck." Cars have been a problem ever since. By 16, Chase was spending his ...
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