Venom Lover
Enthusiast
Sorry I've been out of the loop for a few days. Very busy at work. You know, have to do some work to be able to afford Viper goodies. Anyway....
Steve,
I never said Dodge was misleading anybody. Strictly speaking, you are correct that Dodge is producing what it showed (though I don't know if the VGX coupe was shown as a street legal car vs. a track only car, since I never went to a car show before this year). I'm just questioning the wisdom of a marketing strategy in which, apparently, there would've been great interest in a street-legal coupe, and in fact many would've preferred it to the SRT, and in the end, we will only be rewarded with another street legal coupe if sales for the SRT are stellar. I don't get the logic or the strategy there, but I'm not saying Dodge mislead anybody.
Joe,
We asked for a convertible? I guess I haven't been around long enough (only since May of '00), but no one asked me. And based on the "pockets of resistance" that we've seen here to the actual version of the convertible that Dodge decided to produce, perhaps the question was ill-posed. I.e., I believe many people asked for a true convertible -- just not this exact one. With all due respect, the competition coupe is out of my price/practicality range, since I go road racing about 3-4 times a year, and I don't have a truck and trailer, and I'm just a working stiff. And practicality issues notwithstanding, I'm not even allowed to buy one, based on the rules that were established.
Mike B,
Yeah, car sales are way up, but based on what I've heard, one major reason for that is 0% APR financing, which is not available for the Viper. It's a very different thing for someone to decide to risk it and buy a long-overdue new $20K minivan for the family because the financing terms are so good, vs. buying an $80K toy with 5.9% financing.
<FONT COLOR="#ff0000" SIZE="1" FACE="Verdana, Arial">This message has been edited by Venom Lover on 04-16-2002 at 08:14 PM</font>
Steve,
I never said Dodge was misleading anybody. Strictly speaking, you are correct that Dodge is producing what it showed (though I don't know if the VGX coupe was shown as a street legal car vs. a track only car, since I never went to a car show before this year). I'm just questioning the wisdom of a marketing strategy in which, apparently, there would've been great interest in a street-legal coupe, and in fact many would've preferred it to the SRT, and in the end, we will only be rewarded with another street legal coupe if sales for the SRT are stellar. I don't get the logic or the strategy there, but I'm not saying Dodge mislead anybody.
Joe,
We asked for a convertible? I guess I haven't been around long enough (only since May of '00), but no one asked me. And based on the "pockets of resistance" that we've seen here to the actual version of the convertible that Dodge decided to produce, perhaps the question was ill-posed. I.e., I believe many people asked for a true convertible -- just not this exact one. With all due respect, the competition coupe is out of my price/practicality range, since I go road racing about 3-4 times a year, and I don't have a truck and trailer, and I'm just a working stiff. And practicality issues notwithstanding, I'm not even allowed to buy one, based on the rules that were established.
Mike B,
Yeah, car sales are way up, but based on what I've heard, one major reason for that is 0% APR financing, which is not available for the Viper. It's a very different thing for someone to decide to risk it and buy a long-overdue new $20K minivan for the family because the financing terms are so good, vs. buying an $80K toy with 5.9% financing.
<FONT COLOR="#ff0000" SIZE="1" FACE="Verdana, Arial">This message has been edited by Venom Lover on 04-16-2002 at 08:14 PM</font>