and a continuation of the "poisoned pill" and a warning to those that try todo something positive for someone else...there is the concept of the man who swims out to save the drowing man, but in his panic the drowning man ends up pulling his lifegaurd down with him. The car I bought for 30-33k, after an appraiser (who clearly didn't know anything about Vipers) gave it the exact value my former friend wanted. The Loan company required a professional appraiser to look at the car and render their opinion. Part of the appraising process includes getting a picture of the engine block number and I warned the Appraiser "the Viper was super low and a normal jack wouldn't work"...he assured me it would be fine....and strangely enough, the jack he brought didn't work and he couldn't get the engine block number....awesome....did I say the appraiser didn't know anything about Vipers... somehow the missing picture of the vin on the engine block slipped by the bank. So before I bought the car, I asked my former friend about the 6 speed, as I recalled he had complained about it even after he had it "rebuilt" and a new clutch/light flywheel. But when I asked about this complaint he said "Its fine, its fine" (I guess, fearing I might demand a lower price) and other than the high mileage he encouraged me to "track it"...umm yeah.... anyway I get the car and the gear whine from the trans is friggan LOUD and it gets louder on the deceleration and acceleration...meaning the bearings or the gaps between gears are bad on the main shaft...I also notice a ticking at idle and at low RPMs that sounds ALOT like a Lifter has gone bad. Turns out there was a Chrysler Bulletin for Vipers that have had aftermarket flywheels installed and it warns that the new/aftermarket bolts tend to stretch and cause what sounds like a lifter problem...sigh....but at this point I really only have time to take some pictures at a local park then drive it to the straight to the museum and put it away for the year (2018). the Next year (2019) I pull the car out of the museum and drive it over to a friend/former Chrysler Mechanic and let him drive it...well he tells me the trans is screwed (and gave the diagnosis I listed above). Also I notice the passengers side door pops open randomly and the window crawls down real slow....on this "Perfect car except the miles...you should track it".....disheartened I put the car back in the museum. There it sits until first pay it off and either sell it or deal with the mechanicals which as of now 1) replacing the "rebuilt" transmission, 2) possible engine rebuild due to lifter/cam issue, 3) fix door that won't close, 4) suspension rebuild (I don't Blame the former owner, it is an expected thing for a car with those miles), 5) the Alpine stereo skips all the time so that needs refurbished or replaced. It will at least cost me $45-50k total to get a $20k car on the road. YUMMM old cars....Note: I didn't have to buy it, so ultimately its my fault, lesson learned, "A fool and his money shall soon be parted", the former friend had really helped me out in the past, and I thought id repay him HOWEVER if trying to help someone takes ALOT of work (because it did with 1) shipping across the country, 2) New Tires were "Needed" according to the former friend (tho they weren't) 3) finding a bank to give me the loan, 4) moving money around to purchase it, 5) finding a place to put the car (Vipers aren't meant for parking-lots and street parking)...don't become the lifeguard who gets drown...