For a general reference, Hagerty is at $43,500 for a #3 good condition car and $55,500 for a #2 excellent condition car so this one is very doable if the high bidder does a lot of the work him/herself. The whole car needs a full restoration which won’t be inexpensive. The back seats and door panels are missing but the seller says that otherwise, it’s 95% complete with a lot of parts being stored in the trunk. The interior is rough with rust in the floor pans that needs work both front and rear. It was a partnership with Hurst and there were no automatic transmissions available, they were all Hurst 4-speed manual shifters with Borg-Warner T-10 transmissions. They were made for one year only, 1969, and they are incredibly collectible and valuable today with just over 1,500 examples being built. The cleaned-up photos sure look good compared to these dusty no-grille barn photos.ĪMC had a serious muscle car on their hands with the SC/Rambler, which was based on the Rambler Rogue which was itself based on the Rambler American. ![]() ![]() Bidders have upped the ante to $17,000 and there are over three days left on the auction as I write this.įrom what I understand about the history of this car, the seller has had it for a year and they bought it as part of a package deal but I don’t know what the other part or parts of the package were – more cars? I’m assuming that the opening photo and this one above are how it looked when they got it, but I don’t know for sure. Don’t fret, here’s how it looks cleaned up! The seller has this jewel in the rough listed here on eBay in one of the great cities of America, The Gateway to the West: St. This 1969 AMC Hurst SC/Rambler is a car that a few million of us dream about finding hidden away in a barn or garage somewhere, forgotten, hidden amongst the general stuff. Is this Barn Find’y enough? I thought so.
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