W hen it comes to automotive reliability, muscle cars – from any era – aren’t usually among the first things that come to ...
Getting a high-powered muscle car during the 1960s didn't necessarily mean that gearheads had to deal with a big-block beast. Plenty of vehicles came with potent small-block V8s instead that ...
The legendary Chevy 350 small-block V-8 is under the hoods of more vehicles than any other engine, including some of the ...
During a decade free of unnecessary restrictions, American manufacturers developed a series of wild drag strip-oriented ...
The 1970 Chrysler 300 Hurst Edition forms an exception to the muscle car rule of putting big engines in small(ish) cars. The 300 was a full-sized, 4,200-pound car that normally served as a ...
While the GTO was the first high-performance intermediate to sell in large numbers, it wasn't the first American model worthy ...
The arrival of the muscle car came about thanks to a number of cultural phenomena all happening at the same time. Large numbers of young men, having returned from World War II, had newfound ...
Buick may not be famous for muscle cars, but they sure did create some of the baddest rides of the Golden Age.
However, we want to be quite clear that adding the Dutchboys Hotrods Grand National to our list was definitely not influenced by our affinity for Buick’s greatest muscle car. This build stands ...
Besides maybe apple pie and baseball, you can't get much more American than the muscle car. There's quite a lot of speculation surrounding what was the first true muscle car. Some argue it was the ...