L'AMC Eagle SX,4 fut produite de 1979 à 1987. 2 motorisations sont sur Histomobile de 2,5L à 4,2L présentant des puissances de 90ch à 110ch.
The AMC Eagle SX,4 was produced from 1979 to 1987. The datas with 2 different engines from 2,5 to 4,2 liters and powers from 90hp to 110hp, are below.
Curieux de voir à quoi ressemble ce véhicule ? Besoin de voir quelques images ? La section photo de la AMC Eagle SX,4 de 1979 du DVD Rom Histomobile vous satisfaira probablement. Choisissez une vue réduite afin de voir la disponibilité en photos pour la AMC Eagle SX,4 de 1979.
Curious what this vehicle looks like ? Need to see some pictures ? The 1979 AMC Eagle SX,4 photos section on DVD Rom Histomobile has you covered. Choose a thumbnail below to view 1979 AMC Eagle SX,4 pictures.
The AMC Eagle was produced by the former American Motors Corporation, introduced for the 1980 model year and based on the AMC Concord range. The vehicle utilized an full-time all-wheel drive system (mechanism similar to the Jeep Cherokee, also produced by AMC) and had a noticeable increased height compared to competitors' automobiles. At the time, the Eagle was a logical extension to the Concord range: since AMC made Jeeps it made sense to combine off-road technology with a passenger car range. It is now considered ahead of its time, creating the model which vehicles such as the Subaru Outback, Audi Allroad Quattro, Volvo XC70 and Holden Adventra follow: that of the "raised" station wagon. Shift-on-the-fly 4WD was standard in 1985. Unlike the later cars, the Eagle was available as a 'Kammback,' essentially a three-door hatchback with a very vertical tailgate; a four-door sedan, a five-door station wagon, and a three-door fastback topping the range with an SX/4 variant. The Kammback and fastback had two-wheel-drive equivalents in the AMC Spirit range, which were basically restyled AMC Gremlin. As the range developed, the three-door models were deleted (1983). Toward the end of the Eagle's life, only the station wagon remained (1987). Sadly, the Eagle eventually suffered from sluggish sales, reliability, and mileage concerns, leading to its cancellation in early 1988 after AMC’s merger with Chrysler.
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