Forgive me for the noob question but I’m early in my freshman year of viper ownership. My preliminary research indicated a fairly robust, if not bulletproof, stock Gen III drivetrain, plagued by only a few minor common defects such as occasional plugged cats, shattered diffs at hard launches, maybe a bit weaker than necessary pushrods at high hp levels, etc.
I’ve seen, however, a fairly good number of posts on various forums about Gen III engines blown from oil starvation, usually due to G forces. While those were almost always admittedly hard-tracked cars (with blow-ups happening at the track), SRT revised the next gen oil pan to the swinging pick-up design. I wonder if they did that just to make the Gen IV more appealing to the buyer base who track the cars, or they had other (e.g. spirited street driving) reliability concerns in mind. I realize that better oiling also allowed a higher-revving (higher horsepower) engine, a good selling point.
Yet, an upgraded oil pan ($2.5k in parts?) is not on the typical list of mods even on N/A builds pushing upwards of 600 whp. I’m not a track rat (quite yet), but I probably introduce a good amount of oil sloshing by spirited acceleration blips or hard stopping. I presume I shouldn’t be worried about my engine’s blood circulation if I keep the car off the track, even if I drive spiritedly (not recklessly), as I imagine it would take a long high speed, high-G turn to deprive the beast of the vital fluid long enough to make it spill its guts. Is there any reason to upgrade the oil pan of a street car with entry-level bolt-on mods? Thanks!
Ivan
I’ve seen, however, a fairly good number of posts on various forums about Gen III engines blown from oil starvation, usually due to G forces. While those were almost always admittedly hard-tracked cars (with blow-ups happening at the track), SRT revised the next gen oil pan to the swinging pick-up design. I wonder if they did that just to make the Gen IV more appealing to the buyer base who track the cars, or they had other (e.g. spirited street driving) reliability concerns in mind. I realize that better oiling also allowed a higher-revving (higher horsepower) engine, a good selling point.
Yet, an upgraded oil pan ($2.5k in parts?) is not on the typical list of mods even on N/A builds pushing upwards of 600 whp. I’m not a track rat (quite yet), but I probably introduce a good amount of oil sloshing by spirited acceleration blips or hard stopping. I presume I shouldn’t be worried about my engine’s blood circulation if I keep the car off the track, even if I drive spiritedly (not recklessly), as I imagine it would take a long high speed, high-G turn to deprive the beast of the vital fluid long enough to make it spill its guts. Is there any reason to upgrade the oil pan of a street car with entry-level bolt-on mods? Thanks!
Ivan