08ACRVTEN00GTS
Enthusiast
I am considering buying a ACR, just wondering what you guys think - will values will go down $20 or $30k in 3 to 5 years or hold there own like the FordGT. It will most likely depend if they stop production or not????????
Ummmm, they made a little over 4000 Ford GT's in a few years. They SURE look like they are appreciating. ACR production this year is estimated to be about 150. I would presume about the same next year. 300 total, The Ring champion? Run the numbers.
Will the car be discontinued? Not if any of us who are involved have anything to say about it, and I see that as an impossibility anyway based on the economics of producing it. It will survive and continue to be built by Dodge or someone else. But it will take a loooong time to get to 4000 units at 150 a year. Again, run those numbers.
But don't buy it for an investment, buy it to drive, the only guys having more fun than ACR owners are fighter pilots
the only guys having more fun than ACR owners are fighter pilots
I am considering buying a ACR, just wondering what you guys think - will values will go down $20 or $30k in 3 to 5 years or hold there own like the FordGT. It will most likely depend if they stop production or not????????
Having a lot of fun here with 700+rwhp
Yeah, but if you had the downforce you could go down your mountain at 100mph.
You could even strap Wilbur on the roof and it would be ok.
Well Lee lets post a 1/4 mile run under 11's and that might help just a tiny bit.
I feel the ACR does more then just turns.
What hurts the most is when dealers start dumping cars for way less than MSRP, which they did with the Gen III and ruined the resale value on the Viper all down the line (including so-called collector cars like 97 b/w, etc). Whether they do that with the Gen IV is yet to be seen. It has a run life of 3 years, and is just in the first year. Too early to call, and depends on the economy in two years. Can you forsee that far? IMO, its a "risky" investment based on recent history with the Viper. My 2c--Buy one to drive one, not to invest.
Often the biggest indicator of future performance can be found in historic performance.
In other words, if you're curious how the market will eventually play out on a new ACR, just compare it to the 99-02 ACRs. The GenII ACR MSRP'd at $90k...today, some are for sale at $50k with mileage around 5k. There is a strategy to buying an automobile as a financial investment, but buying a new Viper (ACR or not) at MSRP isn't it.
From an "investment" perspective, invest that $100k in a mutual fund for 5-7 years and then buy the then depreciated ARC for less than the interest earned on that $100k. At that point, you've turn one liability into 2 investments.
Not a valid comparison to compare the older ACR with this one. That model did not differ much from a regular Viper with only different wheels, shocks, harnesses. THIS ACR is almost like a different car. FULL Carbon Fiber Aero, brakes, fully adjustable suspension, light weight wheel, stand alone paint shemes.