>> experience with the aftermarket roofs that are available now? I'm thinking MAACO or similar that will be around to stand behind their warranty if the Thing leaks. Comments. << Lifetime warranty + area installer = wife happy. http://www.webastoshowroom.com/9Jeep_Liberty_730_04.html http://www.webastoshowroom.com/locator/WVirginia.html >> I have been told that Americans, Ambassadors and Classics al shared the interior quarter trim from 64-66 [67 American << Original literature + shared interiors = AMC profits. http://www.riversiderebels.com/amccf/mainokset/64rambler_27_seats.jpg http://www.riversiderebels.com/amccf/mainokset/65American_03_convertible.jpg http://www.twoy.net/wille/amc/esite_04.jpg Preservation cars + new digital photos = history alive http://www.mattsoldcars.com/gallery/EdmundAnderson2004/low_mile_american/ind ex.shtml so an "early '50s Cadillac" http://www.mattsoldcars.com/gallery/PowerTour2003/page2.shtml is remembered as a Buick http://www.buicks.net/years/50.shtml http://www.1motormart.com/gallery/50bck01.jpg (they do look similar...) http://mclellansautomotive.com/photos/B32416-2.jpg when "The two most requested [November 2004] items" http://www.mclellansautomotive.com/images/a4726.jpg http://www.mclellansautomotive.com/images/b32456.jpg (rare can mean valuable...) are also 54 years old. Available archives of AMC historical documentation >> <http://www.mattsoldcars.com/gallery/kenosha2004/amx400.shtml> - A body line similar to the rear body line was added from the rear of the front wheel wells to the middle of the doors This article claims that the car started out as a 1970 model but Mike's flyer states it's a 1969. << can also help prove who copied what from whom and when. http://www.fraserdante.com/3561%20%2069%20Camaro%20Pace%20Auto/69rspacephoto s.htm If you remember which 1969 car was sold from September 26, 1968 through February of 1970 [!], you should also remember which 1968 car had rear speed lines --- even if you've never seen the 1950s dream car (dreamt up by the then-unemployed designer responsible for 1968 AMC design, of course...) that had adapted them from which famous 1910s American independent car >> but it LOOKs like the '66 Vixen 4-door show car with interchangeable front and read fenders and doors! The rear doors DEFINITELY have suicide handles, so that leads me to believe that it's the Vixen. Or whatever one was the 4-door version of the future Hornet. I got << Cavalier? >> The Nov. 25, 2004 issue of Old Cars Weekly does a 2-page story on the AMX400 owned by Mike Geary. In the last sentence in the article, part of the sentence states - "the most photographed AMX in the world". How is this true? << They've never seen Zinn's BBO?