ViperGTS
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GEN-I and -II came with the clamshell hood.
GEN-III and IV not.
Put LAMBO doors on your car!
GEN-III and IV not.
Put LAMBO doors on your car!
Correct me if I'm wrong but aren't boats made of fiberglass? They get pretty big and they must be strong because they take a hell of a pounding.
Correct me if I'm wrong but aren't boats made of fiberglass? They get pretty big and they must be strong because they take a hell of a pounding.
Where did you get this info from?
When we get into accidents and have to pay for a new hood through insurance, what does that have to do with Dodge? It dosnt cost them a dime. If anything they make more $$$$ by selling the marked up hoods...
I actually think it's easier to work on my engine with the clamshell. I don't have to worry about scratching up the fenders when I bend over. Of course head clearance is a different issue.
I always wondered why the Comp coupe hood wasn't adapted for the SRT.
All one piece! No cracks/seams. Just 100% curves
I've work on closure designs (hoods, doors, etc..) in my automotive design career I can mention that a clamshell is a heck of a design nightmare for adjustment, margins / gaps, latching and hinges. Thinking about separate a separate hood and fenders, multiple parts are easier to adjust to build tolerances. Having to fit to a door gap and to the headlights is a challenge, thinking all of the parts between. Hood design is required to a pass a blow-by test, which is a side road test, for instance if a truck blows by while you are parked, the hood is not supposed to shut on a person if tinkering under the hood, and a clamshell catches more air being a disadvantage. Latching is troublesome, the clamshell twists and it's hard to open freely like a conventional hood, to add stiffness to a clamshell would require more structure which adds weight. The car chassis can twist, adding more work to sort out deflection, squeaking, rubbing at margins, etc.. A conventional hood only requires a couple basic hinges, the clamshell hinge assembly is quite complex, many parts which adds cost. The folks in assembly are surely happy with fitting fenders and goods. It's an easy rant from the engineering and manufacturing world.. yet it's great for engine bay servicability.. just sharing some design insight..
yet I own one, and I like it!
All excellent points. But nothing worth having comes easy and the clamshell is definitely worth having.
What are your thoughts regarding a CC hood on a Gen4? The CC hood wouldn't be a difficult to manufacture or fit.
Also do federal regulations require the hood be hinged or can it be entirely removable like the CC?
Problem is with FMVSS (Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards) is that you need a secondary latch if the first fixed latch opens fails and the hood can catch air at speed. Any hood that opens from the front like an alligator mouth requires a secondary latch because it can flip up over the windshield blocking vision. A hood that opens up from the cowl (backwards) like a Corvette such as a C5 didn't require a secondary latch because going forward the wind will keep the hood down, it won't flip up over the windshield. In other words, if you pop the hood latch on a C5 from inside the car, you just lift the hood, you don't have to flip a secondary release. The Gen2 Viper clamshell is dual motion, pops open from the front first, hence a secondary latch release, then it lifts from the rear. That's the problem, regulation requires a fixed secondary hood retainer if the first latch mechanism fails and if it can catch air.
Regards,
Mike
Problem is with FMVSS (Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards) is that you need a secondary latch if the first fixed latch opens fails and the hood can catch air at speed. Any hood that opens from the front like an alligator mouth requires a secondary latch because it can flip up over the windshield blocking vision. A hood that opens up from the cowl (backwards) like a Corvette such as a C5 didn't require a secondary latch because going forward the wind will keep the hood down, it won't flip up over the windshield. In other words, if you pop the hood latch on a C5 from inside the car, you just lift the hood, you don't have to flip a secondary release. The Gen2 Viper clamshell is dual motion, pops open from the front first, hence a secondary latch release, then it lifts from the rear. That's the problem, regulation requires a fixed secondary hood retainer if the first latch mechanism fails and if it can catch air.
Regards,
Mike
One more thing does anyone know if those aftermarket hoods are even crash tested?
Look Chuck... just because YOU wear a padded bra doesn't mean you can make us wear em.Wearing a padded bra while we drive will undoubtedly, eventually save someone from injury too, perhaps we should all be required to wear padded bras?
Thanks for the explanation.
Doesn't it seem strange that a hood safe enough for 190mph 24-hour endurance racing isn't safe enough for the street? Any ideas on why the FMVSS wouldn't see this?
Look Chuck... just because YOU wear a padded bra doesn't mean you can make us wear em.
Look, if it saves just one life it's worth it.
No it's not! You're sounding like the Goverment.