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The ’70s muscle cars that still turn the most heads
The 1970s were a golden era for American muscle cars, blending raw power with striking designs that captured the spirit of ...
Who knows how different modern cars would look if these classics hadn't been discontinued.
Side view of red 1971 Plymouth Road Runner parked in countryside - Heritage Images/Getty Images Despite the term muscle car being used so often by car enthusiasts, journalists, automotive historians, ...
A front-end close-up of a row of brightly-colored 1970s cars parked in line on a lawn. - thegulfstream/Shutterstock The 1970s were quite brutal for U.S. car culture ...
While the '60s saw automakers in America duke it out for supremacy in a war of horsepower, the Clean Air Act of 1970 saw the following decade turn into a very different kind of battle. Automakers' ...
Among purists, there has always been a debate about high-powered pony cars for the golden age of muscle. Some see them as genuine muscle cars that transcended their market segment, while others are ...
The 1970s were one of the worst eras for the automotive industry, especially as gas shortages during the decade forced automakers to rethink their model lineups. This has since been called the ...
Once called “hideously weird-looking,” the 1975 AMC Pacer has been named the most memorable car of the ’70s and ’80s. Launched in 1975, the AMC Pacer was advertised as the "first wide small car," ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Image Credit: chorche de prigo / Shutterstock. Some cars just look better in vibrant hues. In an era of bell-bottoms and vinyl ...
Some cars perfectly define an era, and much in the way that Tri-Five Chevrolets define the 1950s, and how Jaguar's E-Type is oh-so '60s, the Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser is pure '70s nostalgia. It hails ...
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