Eagle: The fate of non Jeep American Motors

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Published 2024-01-26
Welcome to Auto Chatter. Todays episode is about the Eagle Brand. This short lived Division of Chrysler was the product of aquiring AMC to get Jeep, but figuring out the best way to address the cars in the lineup. Join me for a brief romp where we will explore every model with a Eagle on the grille! Thank you for watching!

Green Hawk Drive : Jeep and Eagle special editions you forgot about!
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All Comments (21)
  • @P_RO_
    It always saddens me to see the slow death of AMC, a once-great hard-fighting underdog worn down to the point it just could not get back up again to fight another round ☹ I don't know if Iacocca really believed in Eagle and wanted them around because his main focus was naturally the Chrysler brand, but I'm sure that he believed that he could sell them, and perhaps the effort might become more lucrative than he expected so it was worth trying I guess. It was a strange time for the US car market as Japanese cars had become more 'Americanized' and respected for their virtues, but nobody was fooled by rebadged cars no matter who sold them. There was also uncertainty of what would happen if the rebadged models were dropped, pushing a lot of buyers into simply buying what was essentially the same car directly from a Japanese brand dealership instead. French cars were never popular in my part of the world no matter whose name was on them, nor were really small cars like the Colt popular back then either. Another regional quirk is that none of these cars were referred to as "Eagle"; instead everyone here called them "AMC Eagle". This is the South and that's just how we are, no offense intended y'all 😁 And this is also where the mountains begin. That fact meant that a lot of folks here were and still are very interested in AWD and 4WD cars, since many days out of the year there are snows at the higher elevations which makes them a very practical choice indeed. Prior to this you only had Jeeps and pick-ups to choose from, but now you could get a car better suited to family use and they came with much better fuel economy too 😎 Those models were fairly popular and you did see those on the local roads, but very few of the others. Eagle did do one remarkable thing; they convinced a lot of the hold-outs from the past who would still buy only American cars that imports really were OK, and they could keep their pride in buying an American brand even if the cars weren't built here. Lee Iacocca was someone who you felt you could trust and if he said this was an American brand then it was. I do wish that he and Chrysler had kept the AMC brand alive and hadn't changed to Eagle but such is the way things sometimes go, and I doubt that this one thing would have much changed the final outcome for these cars. Nowadays nobody who wasn't there when it happened knows who and what Eagle was and I'm glad this channel has highlighted and thus kept alive yet another part of our automotive past.
  • @GreenHawkDrive
    Thank you for including me man. Much appreciated, nothing but respect🤝😄
  • @atdcorp28
    I had a 92 Eagle Talon mid range. 5 spd..i loved that car.
  • @BensEcoAdvntr
    I was a kid when the Eagle Vision came out and I thought it was one of the coolest looking cars ever. Still looks good today, decades later
  • @CPTDoom
    Years ago I was walking to the local Metro station here in DC when an elderly woman called to me from her second floor balcony. She was on her landline with the police, trying to report a clearly stolen/abandoned car and asked me to see what kind of car it was. I yelled up that it was an Eagle Summit and she was totally confused. She had no idea that brand ever existed.
  • @Ramcharger85
    The Eagle was the OG crossover. That said. They should have made the Eagle brand the crossover division of Jeep. Kinda like Subaru with their AWD cars that came later in the 90's.
  • @davidbelleau776
    I worked at a Jeep/Eagle dealer in 89 and 90. The Premier was a nice comfortable car. They weren't too bad reliability wise. The Eagle Summit were nice and we hardly had any in for warranty work. The Eagle Medallion drove nice, but they were "junk". We had so many complaints and 2 customer buybacks. We started getting arbitration cases brought to us. Chrysler would re-sell the buybacks and sell them with extended warranties and free maintenance. The Talon TSI AWD was a rocket and decently reliable.
  • @doug6191
    9:29 - that vehicle had so many different names depending on the market. The sliding door mechanism was pretty slick to make it work on such a short vehicle.
  • @OtterlyInsane
    Fun fact, the Espace was originally designed for Simca which was part of Chrysler Europe. They turned it down and Renault later took it up. Chrysler brought out it's similarly styled people carriers around the same time as the Espace, so it may have influenced those. When Chrysler pulled out of Europe, Simca etc were bought by Peugeot. Chrysler and Peugeot are now owned by Stellantis now, circle of life...
  • @aguerra1381
    I had the pleasure of owning a 1990 and 1992 Eagle Premier. On two occasions, during that time, I had the opportunity to drive a Toyota Camry, and also a Dodge Intrepid. Neither could compare to the Premier. It felt much more substantial a vehicle in every way. A truly understated car. Very reliable also.
  • @aguerra1381
    The Eagle Sumitt Wagon was one fun vehicle to drive. I've known of at least 2 used car dealers that chose those as their daily drivers. They loved them. Could have driven anything else but chose them.
  • @doug6191
    10:47 - Early in Greg Kinnear's career, before he got a big break with "As Good As It Gets". I think he just did a tabloid show on E! Network before the Eagle commercials.
  • @OLDS98
    Thank you for another video. I thought it was interesting how you explained Eagle. I liked the fact you included the details about AMC and Renault and the later connection of Mitsubishi. You are correct about the Chrysler 300 M. It was supposed to be an Eagle. It was turned into a Chrysler. I recall the Premier and Dodge Monaco. The Eagle Vision looked like an Oldsmobile. You could called that car Oldsmobile Eighty-Eight and people would have believed it. I thought it looked the best out of the three LH cars underneath the Chrysler New Yorker . I thought the New Yorker was the best. It is sad it was short lived, but they had to think quick and Eagle was it. They took AMC and turned it into Eagle quick and fast and on a budget. Jeep lives on globally thriving. AMC was like little car company that could. We have lost so many car brands since. Three should not be dead( Oldsmobile/Pontiac/Mercury). Thank you again.
  • @doug6191
    15:09 - GM's equivalent wasn't Saturn; it was Geo. Saturn was much different - more of a proof of concept that GM could design & build a true import fighter with an altogether different approach from the legacy GM brands. Eagle (and Geo) served as a label to group rebadged vehicles built by other brands.
  • @GermanCarGuyMN
    I honestly don’t think I’ve ever seen a single Eagle vehicle in person
  • Great video as per usual. Thanks for shining light on these. I especially liked the 1995 Talon TSi the best. They still look phenomenal. Thanks for the interesting chatter.
  • @trailblazer91
    Canada also had the Eagle Vista, based off the previous generation Colt and the 2000 GTX, a rebadged Mitsubishi Galant. If you thought Dodge selling the Monaco alongside the Premier was bad enough, Dodge also sold a rebadged Galant creatively called the Dodge 2000 GTX. The same car with either a Dodge or Eagle emblem
  • @DMETS519
    The 90's sunset the Eagle and Greg Kinnear together.