Bruce H.
Enthusiast
I had the pleasure of spending considerable time with a number of SRT/Dodge's senior management as their guest at the Tudor Race the weekend before last, and met another couple this past weekend at Homecoming. What a great bunch of passionate and knowledgeable enthusiasts, and I found them all candid and sincere when answering questions. As I listened to them I realized that they could address forum user criticisms and diffuse concerns that are constantly discussed here. When asked why they don't I learned that in some cases they had in the past, not necessarily under their own names, and it was clear from some that it was the attitudes of some (or many) members that had discouraged them from doing so.
Let me ask you these questions...
-Do you really think that SRT is the only one to give Motor Trend or other magazines a mule or test car that had some difficiencies from previous testing that obviously were not representative of what customers would receive? Do you think the rags would generally give the manufacturer a chance to provide a proper test sample...or would they condemn the car when they knew an individual(s) had screwed up the prep of the car? And would they really conduct the test with an obviously faulty car and rank it last knowing their test car was in no way representative of the model's production quality?
-How do you know that the 8.4 V10 can easily run 700 hp or more with a more aggressive factory tune and still meet durability and reliability requirements. Are you sure the existence of forged components in the engine really means it was designed and tested for forced-induction?
-While the Hellcat would certainly have been durability tested for use in the Challenger, would anyone here really know whether the Hellcat could survive use in the Viper under its testing procedures?
-Is it possible that there are a wide range of things we argue over and criticize that maybe we just don't have the inside scoop on?
-Is it possible that there really is a 2015 Viper planned, and an announcement would have been made if it wasn't? I asked them about A-Z but felt it completely unnecessary and insulting to ask them if there was going to be a 2015.
-When Ralph addressed sales missing an annual unit level they had thrown out once as simply being an estimated volume, and not being the volume that they needed for the car to be viable, is it possible he was being accurate? And is it possible that the car is maybe profitable, or profitable enough, at even existing levels? Afterall, Dodge recently made it their halo car...not something they'd do if it was anything but viable.
It seems to me that there are a lot of people here that can't possibly know enough to justify being so negative towards SRT and/or the car, and so full of doom and gloom. As the saying goes, "Misery loves company", but I think it's time we stop piling on the band wagon and give SRT a whole lot more credit than we do. Those of us who have lots of experience behind the wheel of the Gen V know it's a stunning exotic supercar in every aspect of those definitions, and a few of us know it's as capable on the street as it is on the road course for track days. The SRT team would surely love for every enthusiast to purchase a Viper, as would Aston of the Vantage, or Ferrari of the F458, but this end of the automotive market is a niche at best, and while you can satisfy some enthusiasts with your best effort, your pool of prospective buyers is very small, and difficult to know what will trigger their purchase.
So are we going to be a group that seeks to have the advantages that a positive attitude provides, one that encourages and welcomes participation of both owners and the manufacturer, or do we want to go down the road that leaves us isolated and uniformed due to the views of a vocal and negative minority that typically aren't fully acquainted with the car, have no knowledge of the reasons for the manufacturer's decisions, or are simply trolling?
Let me ask you these questions...
-Do you really think that SRT is the only one to give Motor Trend or other magazines a mule or test car that had some difficiencies from previous testing that obviously were not representative of what customers would receive? Do you think the rags would generally give the manufacturer a chance to provide a proper test sample...or would they condemn the car when they knew an individual(s) had screwed up the prep of the car? And would they really conduct the test with an obviously faulty car and rank it last knowing their test car was in no way representative of the model's production quality?
-How do you know that the 8.4 V10 can easily run 700 hp or more with a more aggressive factory tune and still meet durability and reliability requirements. Are you sure the existence of forged components in the engine really means it was designed and tested for forced-induction?
-While the Hellcat would certainly have been durability tested for use in the Challenger, would anyone here really know whether the Hellcat could survive use in the Viper under its testing procedures?
-Is it possible that there are a wide range of things we argue over and criticize that maybe we just don't have the inside scoop on?
-Is it possible that there really is a 2015 Viper planned, and an announcement would have been made if it wasn't? I asked them about A-Z but felt it completely unnecessary and insulting to ask them if there was going to be a 2015.
-When Ralph addressed sales missing an annual unit level they had thrown out once as simply being an estimated volume, and not being the volume that they needed for the car to be viable, is it possible he was being accurate? And is it possible that the car is maybe profitable, or profitable enough, at even existing levels? Afterall, Dodge recently made it their halo car...not something they'd do if it was anything but viable.
It seems to me that there are a lot of people here that can't possibly know enough to justify being so negative towards SRT and/or the car, and so full of doom and gloom. As the saying goes, "Misery loves company", but I think it's time we stop piling on the band wagon and give SRT a whole lot more credit than we do. Those of us who have lots of experience behind the wheel of the Gen V know it's a stunning exotic supercar in every aspect of those definitions, and a few of us know it's as capable on the street as it is on the road course for track days. The SRT team would surely love for every enthusiast to purchase a Viper, as would Aston of the Vantage, or Ferrari of the F458, but this end of the automotive market is a niche at best, and while you can satisfy some enthusiasts with your best effort, your pool of prospective buyers is very small, and difficult to know what will trigger their purchase.
So are we going to be a group that seeks to have the advantages that a positive attitude provides, one that encourages and welcomes participation of both owners and the manufacturer, or do we want to go down the road that leaves us isolated and uniformed due to the views of a vocal and negative minority that typically aren't fully acquainted with the car, have no knowledge of the reasons for the manufacturer's decisions, or are simply trolling?
Last edited: