Nine Ball
Enthusiast
We (customers)have been hearing excuses for years for the Gen. 4s and now same spin for the Gen.5.Please,the new C7 Corvette is just out and they are already at the tuner shops.
When it comes to supporting the aftermarket, GM is far ahead of Chrysler and Ford. Chrysler is a distant 3rd place, unfortunately. Through my GM past, I have a lot of contacts that are involved in their performance parts and vehicles group. These guys are true gearheads, and support the tuner shops and the aftermarket industry. Example, the C7 Corvette. GM performance made LT1 (the newest engine) head castings available to some of the more popular LSX shops and big-name manufacturers, so that they could experiment with them - months before the cars were to become available. They also sent LT1 crate engines to some of those shops, so that they could begin developing bolt-on parts, do engine dynos, and explore the engines. What other brand does that? So, now that the C7 Corvette has been on the dealer lots for a week now, the aftermarket is already ramping up for it. Count on a LOT of parts developed for this car to be unveiled at SEMA in November. Likely far more parts than the Gen V Viper will have available. GM has also hosted some multi-day track rentals to showcase and teach the LSX tuners about the C7. Not magazine guys, actual guys that will build and modify these cars. Their Facebook updates make me envious.
I figured SRT might offer something similar for the Gen V Viper, but I was wrong. I inquired about purchasing a raw head casting for one of my contacts that produces ported LSX cylinder heads, as they want to develop Viper parts too. The SRT contact got offended that I asked about it, and told me there was nothing to gain in the head, and that I shouldn't question Winkles. Wait...what? I just wanted to help get the aftermarket involved, I didn't expect a reprimand.
Like I said, BIG difference.