I'll jump in with some limited knowledge. By way of background, I have personally supercharged with the Vortech "kits" available for the Mustang 5.0 and presently have a pretty heavily-modified (but daily-driven)'95 C4 based upon the Vortech Corvette Kit. I experimented with a S/C on the '93 RT/10 with a local "tuner," which was fabulously unsuccessful, but that's another story.
Doug did the setup and I have seen his work - marvelous craftsmanship and happy customers, so I know he does a fine job. The pics are the most detailed I have seen to date and reveal the answer to one of two important questions.
The questions are: (1) how do you supply extra fuel to go with the increased manifold pressure?; and (2) how do you control (usually retard) timing to avoid detonation? These questions are actually related, as increased timing can in effect lean out the mixture due to the combustion process starting sooner and therefore more completely burning the available fuel.
The pics (correct me if I am wrong, Doug) appear to reveal that Doug's solution was a "parallel" fuel system fed by an auxiliary fuel cell in the trunk. This is necessary because the stock fuel system has no fuel return line and "dead ends" at the manifold, making the rising rate fuel pressure regulator solution commonly used impossible. This auxiliary fuel tank feeds the extra injectors that you see on the tubes feeding the throttle bodies. Basically, this whole system can run independent of the stock fuel system and provide supplemental fuel as a function of boost pressure and rpms. There are electronic devices on the market to accomplish just this task and Doug may also use a rising-rate fuel pressure regulator to increase fuel pressure with boost.
To actually answer some of the questions, there may be some issue about mixture distribution of the auxiliary fuel. Notice that the injectors fire in front of the throttle bodies (unlike the factory injectors that fire into each runner) and at right angles to the air flow. It is probably impossible to say if the resulting mixture is evenly dispersed to each of the 10 cylinders, but I doubt it is a big problem (otherwise the car would have blow up long ago!). I also suspect the setup is programmed to run fairly rich, which is conservative and safe. As I explain below, I would prefer to control the factory injectors in order to eliminate this concern and provide the extra fuel at the point the manifold was designed to have fuel introduced.
I still wonder about timing. Traditional boost retard products are no good with the Viper because it has no distributor. There are now supposedly "boost retard" products that will work with DIS (distibutorless) systems to retard timing as a function of boost. With low boost pressures and enough fuel, timing retard might not be necessary at all.
This leads me to why I have never tackled the Viper S/C system. On my C4 and earlier cars, I could actually monitor and program the factory computer. I can change fuel injector sizes, pulsewidth and timing and then monitor the results via the factory O2 sensors (and knock sensor, which the Viper does not have)and a wideband O2 on a chassis dyno. I am very comfortable that I can safely obtain about a 12:1 air:fuel ratio and can avoid detonation. I consider this a preferred solution and I can't do this on the Viper. You might just run the whole shebang with a MOTEC controller, but then you have likely spend $10K or so just on the computer. Then I wonder how you interact with the other stuff the computer manages, like evaporative emissions, speedometer, cooling fans, etc. I would vastly prefer to just re-program the Viper PCM, but alas, there is no way that I have access to.
Oh, the software exists to reflash late-model Viper PCMs for performance purposes, but it is closely controlled and done only on an exchange basis. I am not 100% confident that timing and injector events can be precisely mapped over all rpm and load factors. Regardless, I just don't bellieve in mail-order programming with significant mods like forced induction. Maybe the tuners are able to do accurate long-distance programming, but I sure don't see how! I have to precisely monitor and fine-tune the programming on my C4 based upon several dyno pulls. In addition, I find that I have to make seasonal changes to my programming on my C4. I think it is a factor of fuel formulations and perhaps ambient temps.
Finally, on the early Vipers, the PCMs cannot be "flash programmed," but have dedicated chips. Usually not a problem on other cars, but I think the Viper PCM is epoxy-potted, so there is no easy way to remove and replace the "chip." Ever notice how there are no "chips" for Vipers? So I think there is probably no choice but to piggyback on the stock computer to provide extra fuel and control timing on the '92-95 Viper.
Well, my geek alert is going off big time. I'd sure love it if a kit was available, but it probably makes no sense. First, you don't want to make the technology available and second, there are parts of the install that are beyond most DIY folks (like adding a keyway to the crank in order to not spin the balancer on the crank snout). I sure do wish I could get a kit, though, as the prospect of customer service 1000+ miles away is just too much.
Anyone want to jump in and "get technical" and fill in the gaps/correct my errors?