1969 AMC SC/Rambler Hurst Numbers-Matching 390 V8, Close-Ratio
4-Speed, 1 of 1,512 Built Why This Car Is Special The 1969 AMC
SC/Rambler Hurst is one of the more deliberately engineered
sleepers in the history of American muscle. American Motors and
Hurst Performance built just 1,512 of them a small enough number to
make any survivor significant, but it is the details of how this
car was built that make it genuinely remarkable. AMC took their
compact Rambler American body, dropped in the 390 cubic inch V8
rated at 315 horsepower, bolted in a close-ratio Borg-Warner T-10
four-speed, hung a functional ram-air hood scoop from the hood, and
sold the whole package for $2,998 the lowest sticker price of any
true muscle car in 1969. A GTO Judge started at $3,161 that year. A
Chevelle SS 396 was over $3,600. AMC was not playing by the same
rules as everyone else. The SC/Rambler was conceived with drag
racing in mind from the start. AMC worked with NHRA to homologate
the car for F/Stock competition, which meant the factory had to
produce a minimum number of identically configured cars. The result
was a vehicle that came out of the showroom drag-strip ready
anti-hop rear torque links, staggered rear shock absorbers, front
disc brakes, a limited-slip differential, and heavy-duty suspension
all came standard. This was not a dealer-option muscle car. Every
SC/Rambler received the full package. The car was offered in two
paint configurations. The more common layout known as the A Scheme
placed a bold red and white body with a blue hood stripe and blue
accents on an otherwise white car. The B Scheme reversed the
arrangement with a mostly red body. Of the 1,512 built,
approximately 1,215 received the A Scheme, making this example part
of the more familiar and most photographed variant of the model.
The car you are looking at wears the factory A Scheme livery and it
is confirmed correct by the VIN, which encodes the X engine
designation verifying this is a numbers-matching, factory
390-equipped car. The SC/Rambler spent one model year in
production. AMC never built another one. That single-year
production run, combined with the low total numbers and the cars
reputation on the strip, has made the 1969 AMC SC/Rambler Hurst one
of the more collected muscle cars from the era particularly among
buyers who understand what these cars actually do rather than
simply what they look like. Features List - 390 CID V8 315 HP,
numbers matching, X engine code confirmed in VIN - Borg-Warner T-10
close-ratio 4-speed manual transmission - Gear Vendors overdrive
unit installed; original tailshaft and crossmember retained and
stored in trunk - AMC Twin-Grip 3.541 limited-slip differential
with Dana internals - Carter AFB 4-barrel carburetor - Hurst
T-handle shifter - Functional ram-air hood scoop with upthrust
snout - Front disc brakes - Anti-hop rear torque links - Staggered
rear shock absorbers - Front anti-sway bar - Heavy-duty suspension
and shocks - Subframe connectors - Dual exhaust with Flowmaster
mufflers - Factory A Scheme red/white/blue paint - Blue Magnum 500
styled steel wheels - Red-stripe Goodyear Polyglas tires -
SC/Rambler Hurst fender badges - Hood pins - Hurst racing mirrors -
Red/white/blue factory headrests - Wood-grain sport steering wheel
- AM radio - 1 of approximately 1,215 A Scheme cars built; 1 of
1,512 total SC/Ramblers produced Mechanical The engine in this 1969
AMC SC/Rambler Hurst is the factory 390 cubic inch V8, and the VIN
encodes the X engine designation that confirms it is the original
numbers-matching unit. The 390 was fed by a Carter AFB 4-barrel
carburetor and breathed through the functional ram-air hood scoop a
design that used an upward-facing snout to force air directly into
the intake under acceleration rather than simply venting the engine
bay. AMC rated the 390 at 315 horsepower, though that figure was
widely considered conservative at the time, a common prac WeBe
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