Uh, guys & gals:
While most people on this board have Vipers, many of us are not made of money. If you want to race, figure 2-5X the car cost per year to do it. A $55,000 spec car is not exactly what I'd call affordable.
Also, remember that even if YOU can afford it, you need others with the combination of funds, time, love for the marque, and desire to race. While you are at it, you want them to be at your level - if they are too fast or slow in comparison it becomes a parade, not a race. Spec Vipers are in pretty thin air. How many do you figure will be in your area regularly to race?
I am looking more in the Spec Miata area to race. $10,000 to get one with a logbook, plentiful and relatively inexpensive parts, and fields with 10 or more cars at regional races. (Viper Days comes to TX once a year and I do not have a week per race to pull cross country and return from other events). If you want more speed, then Formula Mazda may be more reasonable and it also has large fields.
As for the Ford/Chevy bashing, I don't get it. Both powerplants can be powerful and reliable and I am afraid that I still like the song of a V-8 over the V-10, as much as I love everything else about the Viper. And come to the Texas Triathlon in Feb 2001, you just might get a lesson from a Ford or Chevy!
Oh, if you MUST have a Viper, a SURE bet is the Trans Am series. You folks with the big bucks can go Trans Am racing in a proper, tube-frame, Viper-bodied car. Tommy Archer is. Get a car like his and go GT1 or Trans Am racing in it. This will be a real option for 2001.
For me, my Vipers are fun on track in "driving school" environments, but I just can't afford to race them.
Keith