The first car you think of when you hear the words 'muscle car' is not usually one made by a British automaker. You'd be excused for thinking of the Ford Mustang, the Dodge Charger, or if you ...
Keith Moon, the iconic drummer of The Who was known for his electrifying energy on stage and his love for the finer things in ...
The 1970s weren’t just about disco and bell-bottoms. It was a golden era for cars, particularly luxury cars, machines that ...
The Chevy Camaro is the only muscle car that never wimped out, and it dominated the 1970s the sales volume champ.
Before the mid-1970s, it seemed as if Britain's police forces bought nothing but British cars. Watch any film or TV programme made between 1945 and 1980 and you'll be treated to a veritable feast of ...
Now it’s back, thanks to the engineer John Stubbs who bought the Austin brand after noticing the brand and trademarks were ...
The 1970s weren’t a decade for subtlety. Like the fashion and music of the era, cars were often bold, brash and unapologetically stylish, designed to command attention and dominate the road.
As the first all-new car launched by British Leyland, the Maxi of 1969 was a crucial model ... As British Leyland morphed into BL Ltd and finally left the troubled 1970s behind, so it embarked upon an ...
The first-generation Dodge Challenger, produced from 1970 to 1974, is a highly desirable ... This figure includes 692 convertibles and 2,522 cars equipped with the Special Edition (SE) package ...