The Haggerty article was good, but it brings up that problematic idea of paying a premium for a "Craig Breedlove Special". Has it been solved yet whether or not these are an actual edition, or dealer creations, i.e. don't even exist? I live in the desert, and am not qualified to comment on rust, except to mention that out here, at least, AMC's tend to fare far better than most other cars in this department. I have six, and except for the the 69 Javelin that had the paint removed and sat in a farm field for 25 years, none has any rust whatsoever. In fact, we traded a 79 Camaro that was going to break in half at any moment from all-over cancer, for a perfectly dry, complete, yet non-running 1975 Gremlin X. It seems I constantly hear that AMC's rust out worse than other cars. Is this true in those snowy, salty places where you guys live? Or is it a normal rate of rust, more obvious because of the rarity of the cars? On a related note, Hemmings Collector Car published a list of the "Top 21 Collector Cars" in their January 07 issue. They don't actually rank them, but here they are in the (alphabetical) order presented: 1) AMC AMX 1968-1970: "Really taking off in the muscle car market is AMC's AMX.... "...left its mark among AMC collectors' minds as a great alternative for power and style compared to the Category 5 Hemi hurricane that continues to blow through auction houses." To me it is significant that it was even mentioned in the same breath as the Hemi hardware. 2) Buick Model F 1906-1910 ( A very profitable period for Rambler, by the way, while Charlie Nash was on the way up.) 3) Buick Skylark 1953-1954 4) Cadillac Convertible 1939-1941 5) Chevrolet 1958 (My wife's friend just bought a perfectly presentable, running hardtop for $2500) 6) Chevrolet Impala 1960 7) Chevrolet Chevelle SS 454 LS6 1970 (Anyone surprised?) 8) Chevrolet LT-1 Corvette 1970-1972 (The quality on these cars is miserable) 9) Chrysler 300F/G/H Convertible 1960-1962 10) De Soto 2 Door Hardtop (?) 1961 (Really?) 11) Dodge Challenger 1970-1971 12) Ford Mustang K-Code 1965-1967 (These are a real bargain in the West) 13) Ford Thunderbird F-Code 1957 14) La Salle Convertible 1940 15) Oldsmobile W-30 & W31 1967-1971 16) Packard Convertible 1953-1954 17) Plymouth 'Cuda 1970-1971 (Please. Don't even get me started.) 18) Pontiac Ram Air IV GTO 1969-1971 19) Studebaker Starliner 1953 20) Pontiac Super Duty Trans Am, and Formula 1973-1974 (In my opinion, the only truly fast Pontiacs ever mass-produced) 21) Shelby G.T.350 1965 (Now that's going out on a limb) Upon reviewing this list, I find it remarkable that so many of these cars can be had dirt cheap.(At least in AZ and SoCal) This might be a way to finance that Javelin restoration. Also, they could have arranged this list any way they saw fit, and choosing to go alphabetically put the AMX front and center on its own page, while the rest of these icons had to share space among three cars per page. Is this a turning point? Of course, Hemmings has been awfully AMC-friendly over the past decade, anyway. mike _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list