Texas1, I would suggest that you start posting this type of question in the Gen I/Gen II section as more folks read that section than this one...so you should bet more answers faster.
I see (by doing a search) that you have a 95...I like to know "the anatomy"...especially of the cooling system.
I am unfamiliar with the specifics of your "mishap' but would suggest that you could have sustained "collateral damage" to the coolant overflow bottle in the front fascia (a fastener under this bottle can puncture it with right front damage) and/or to the radiator.
When you say "NO coolant in the coolant bottle"...about which "bottle" are you speaking?? The pressure bottle under the hood or the overflow bottle in the right front fascia...of both??
There is a another reason to worry about low coolant in the system...the well known Gen I head gasket failure. Have you seen any coolant in the oil? Did the oil level rise? Smell of coolant when driving?? White smoke out of the sidepipe cars can be harder for the driver to see that a rear exhaust system...noting that some synthetics give off a white smoke as well.
Another COMMON problem is that many owners have NO IDEA how/where to check coolant status nor how to maintain proper levels of the coolant. You MAY have started ownership with levels on the low side. Ever replace "radiator cap" on the pressure bottle?
As to "proper" coolant...YOUR Viper carries the recommendation for MOPAR "Antifreeze/Coolant 3 Year Formula" 04267020AB"...which happens to be green. It DOES NOT MATTER TO ME what you use...BUT, to my recently updated knowledge, SRT has NOT recommended (or "signed off on") using even Mopar's own 5 year coolant that comes as the factory fill on Gen III and IV Vipers. Read some recent issues of Viper Mag and this will confirm same. While I LIKE the 5 year Mopar stuff ( "HOAT"), I still use the 3 year formula in OUR Gen I and II Vipers BY MY CHOICE. Dex-Cool is a different product, widely used in GM cars...though NOT without some negative history itself. While I do use Dex-Cool in my GM cars, I stick with Mopar's formulations and recommendations for our personal Vipers. (right or wrong). PLEASE KEEP IN MIND, that I test and change coolant regularly...AND that I am just a hobbyist...NOT an engineer or chemist !!!
For "editorial balance", I feel obligated to add some coolant info from a well known ENGINEER, Viper Guru, serious hobbyist, great all-around guy who REALLY knows this stuff and who has spent countless hours kindly mentoring many of us "dummies" with a gentle hand:
Tom, F&L GoR ...who recently posted:
"The green antifreeze uses silicates that coat the surface upon the first heating to protect against corrosion... but after 2-3 years it flakes off. The flakes are abrasive and cause water pump seal wear.
Long life coolants (and there are many, different colors, etc) are all extremely low or no-silicate. The chemistry lies in wait until corrosion begins, then attacks it. Therefore it lasts longer (5 yeats to lifetime) and water pumps last much longer. Whatever you do after your radiator swap, go with a long life
coolant. The Peak Lifetime
coolant looks good to me.
Coincidentally my '96 Dakota is going to my daughter, so I looked at the radiator and it is corroded from the outside; the lower half had lost all the cooling fins, even though the inside tubes looked great. I also had a hardened radiator cap gasket, so upon replacing the cap and radiator, the pressure caused a water pump gasket leak. To be safe, I bought a new pump.
Here is a picture of the OEM pump after one-fill of pre-DexCool antifreeze. Texaco pioneered this long life technology and um, well, I helped evaluate it. I guess I should let someone know how it did. After 13 years and ~95,000 miles, it looks better than the reman pump I put on."
This was posted in the following thread:
http://forums.viperclub.org/rt-10-gts-discussions/636612-cooling-questions.html
Tom has written a ton on this issue...AND, his Viper sees REAL usage...street and competition...and has at least 100,000 miles on it, and is still going strong.
Please let us know how you progress with your "coolant diagnostics"!!