Well, the most damaging thing is lack of oil on the internal parts. If you REALLY want to do things right, then you could, if it's a 6-cylinder engine, remove the distributor, get a special oil pump slotted tool shaft that engages the shaft under the distributor gear to the oil pump, and turn it with an electric drill until you get oil pressure. This won't work, I don't think, with a V-8 AMC/Gremlin motor. If you DON"T want to buy the tool, remove the spark plugs, and just crank the engine for awhile until the oil pressure comes up ( you could also remove the valve covers, and hand-spray all the parts with oil to coat them ). That way, you take away all the pressure and heat from it while it's building oil pressure, and it'll turn over MUCH faster without plugs.You will loose a few thousand miles of potential use on the engine by just starting it up and doing nothing, but at 18k, you've got alot to work with! Me, I'd just remove the plugs, squirt some light oil into each cylinder, crank the engine with plugs OUT, then once it's turned over about 1 minute, put the plugs back in, and go for it! Depends on how much you want to baby it. Unless you want to take off the oil pan and squirt oil on the internal side of the cylinder sleeves, you'll have to accept some engine wear. Besides, oil drains down every nite from your daily-use car engine, and most engines are virtually dry-started every day. That's why hi-po cars use a "sump pump" to pre-pressurize the oil pressure to the motor before cranking ( kinda like an electric fuel pump, only much more expensive! ). Most car's engines would probably last 300,000 miles or more if they had a sump pump added to the engine ( that's why you don't see the auto manufacturers doing it....they wouldn't sell as many cars! ) I swore if I ever put money into an engine rebuild, I'd spend the $500 or so it'd take to mount a sump pump to preserve it. So far, haven't had the car worth doing it to. So, that's my 2 cents worth on trying to restart a car that's been sitting awhile. I"m helping a guy with a '76 Matador that's been sitting awhile, too, we'll just stick a battery in it and go for it. Good luck on it, take good care of it, John! Not many low-mileage cars like that are around at all! Jerry Casper Woodbridge, VA '78 Gremlin GTs ( two, but one's too rusty to save ) '76 Gremlin w/no motor '74 Gremlin, runs '71 Gremlin w/factory sunroof '70 Hornet SST '70 Javelin w304 3/spd '79 Pacer wagon