I remember reading if you're running 19s in front and 20s in the rear having 3:73 gears feels like you have 3:45 gears, since that would be the equivalent. I believe Dave stated that.
So if I currently have stock 3:07 gears, what would my gears supposedly be compared to? Considering I'm also running 19" wheels front, and 20" wheels in the rear.
Depends on what 20" tire you run. Stock Gen 2 is 26" OD. Lower profile 20" are less than 27" OD. My 20" PS2's are 28" OD hence the effectiveness of my 3.73 is 3.45.
Should have done 4.10
My 20's with 3.07 was equivalent to 2.82:1 -->> Great on the freeway.
Just a terminology note as I am Mr. Correct lately, I often see people ask what changing tire diameters does to their gear ratio. And the answer is it does nothing to your gear ratio. You have the same gear before and after the tire change. It has an effective equivalent, which as stated mine was 2.82 with 3.07 and then 3.45 with 3.73's.
Alright, so my 20s with the stock 3.07 gears would be compared to 2.82... What about my 19s??
Does not matter the wheel size just the tire size. A 19/35 can be the same diameter as a 20/30.
the choice of gear is the choice of what you want the car to do. 'Freeway' gears like the equivalent 2.82 are great for cruising fun but not for performance fun in the 500 hp range. The equivalent 3.45 I have now is way better performance wise which if I wanted a 'sport-cruiser' I would have gotten a German car.
Shifting is really not horrible unless you consider that I could cruise the freeway in 2nd with the 2.82. Now I use 5th. RPM's come up quick when you go to kill mode so you have to be paying attention when you do the 3.55 etc.
I would not go back and would love to have the 4.10 with my 20's. Meanwhile I'm dave3.73
costanZo unless your viper was converted to front-wheel-drive it dosnt matter
The fronts are just rolling along. Not connected to the driveshaft changing your "effective" gearing like the rears.
costanZo unless your viper was converted to front-wheel-drive it dosnt matter
The fronts are just rolling along. Not connected to the driveshaft changing your "effective" gearing like the rears.
Based on the mods in your sig line you are less than 500 hp so the 3.55 would not be excessive IMO. But if you have an oversize rear tire like the 20" PS2 then you would need to do 3.73 or 4.10 to get to 3.45 to 3.55 respectively. Actually, the 4.10 would be closer to 3.73 with the PS2 20's.
Wheeeeeeeeeeeee.......!
If you get up to 600 hp I would say your limiting factor will be traction. Like tire sticking to the ground when you nail it if you have a 3.73. You have to figure when your 'usable' traction comes about. I can spin the tires at 70 to 80 mph with 450 at the wheels. 600 hp may mean over 100 mph before things stick.
A 3.55 however will net you at about 3.30 which some have said is the perfect ratio.
So, what does everyone think of 3.33 gears for a lightly modded '98 RT. I don't like to have too short of a first gear, which is my concern with 3.55's.
Jon at Parts Rack has gear sets that run $399, but seems there are other supporting kits that are needed:
- Precalibrated speedometer kit - $179
- Normal rebuild kit - $149
- I think (if I read this correctly), internal/external service kit - $149
So, already at $876 without shipping and estimated labor or 3-5 hours (not sure about this), at $100/hour, $300-$500. Estimating this mod to run between $1,200 & $1,500.
At that price, am I going to notice enough of a difference moving from 3.07 to 3.33 to be worth it?
Thanks!
When Plum and I finally hook up to do some pulls in Mexico, one of us will post as my hp is slightly lower but enough to get some type of comparison.
The reason I bring it up, is because with small kids, modding the Viper is a lower priority in the house. I need to choose carefully, what I think will have the greatest impact vs the cost. This week I get my hi-flow cats installed. Then I need to decide what the next mod will be, I was actually going to have a Mopar style wing installed but decided i just didnt like it enough. So, right now seems the next upgrade will be to rr's.
I'm sure they are and I know headers are a good upgrade. My intent is to keep this car relatively stock and any changes I make can be "easily" put back to original should the next buyer (if there is a next buyer) choose to do so.
I do know that the '98 was the first year that they put tube headers in the car. While probably not up to aftermarket headers, they are satisfactory for my purposes. Rockers and pushrods can be changed back and so can the exhaust.
So, for me, my choices at this point are rr's and/or rear end gear change.
But, thanks for the suggestion!
after a ton of research I purchased 3:55s, its a great compromise with my SRT10 19 rears and nitto tires, I cant wait to install them later next month
Just burn the rear end up. Stimulates the thought process of changing.
So, what does everyone think of 3.33 gears for a lightly modded '98 RT. I don't like to have too short of a first gear, which is my concern with 3.55's.
Jon at Parts Rack has gear sets that run $399, but seems there are other supporting kits that are needed:
- Precalibrated speedometer kit - $179
- Normal rebuild kit - $149
- I think (if I read this correctly), internal/external service kit - $149
So, already at $876 without shipping and estimated labor or 3-5 hours (not sure about this), at $100/hour, $300-$500. Estimating this mod to run between $1,200 & $1,500.
At that price, am I going to notice enough of a difference moving from 3.07 to 3.33 to be worth it?
Thanks!
I'm just under 700 hp at the wheels and have the 355's. The jury is still out but it doesn't seem too excessive. On the other hand I haven't floored it yet the power is ridiculous with the Paxton. Without the Paxton I'd say 355-373 with stock size tires isn't too much gear at all. If I decide to go back stock I'll let you know. Last dyno tweaking this coming weekend and then we'll see what the car will do. I only put about 300-350 miles on the 355's and loved them once I adjusted to the difference. 373's would have a better choice.
Frankly gears have nothing to do with horsepower at all unless you are looking at et's. If you can handle the power the lower gear (higher number) the better, even on the street. Once you learn to control the traction you will love the gear change.