Actually, you could be much more clear. Give it a shot and explain
what "Its a precision tool designed for use by a very specific
customer." exactly means?
The people who originally bought the viper, and the people who
kept it after the first six months of ownership, basically wanted
an anti-corvette. A fast, two seater that consisted of nothing more
than a motor glued to some wheels. Hell, the Gen1s didnt even
come with roofs or windows and they still sold better than the
GenV does now. True Viper guys - the ones who will buy the car
and keep it long enough to build a rapport with the manufacturer
(as opposed to the poser who like to show up at starbucks with
a "viper" and sell off the moment it scares them = negative
publicity) dont want a car that can be confused with a Porsche
or Audi, or Ferrari - if they wanted any of those, at the current
GenV prices they can simply buy them.
Sure we complain about leaks and plastic interiors, but none of
us would trade the car in for those issues - we would only trade
in for a faster car IF we could afford it.
Lastly, sure it cost engineering $$ for this, but if I wanted to
double my sales volume, I would easily make the investment.
I am saying your wrong - making the Viper MORE difficult to work on
and adding MORE technology would bitter the taste of the car to the
guys who built the legacy. I mean seriously - take a look at the GenV
forums - #1 ***** is about a locked out COMPUTER, #2 limited
modification options.
No matter how much you suger coat the Viper Porsche guys are not
going to buy it. No matter how much tech you put in Ferrari guys are
not going to be seen in it. And at the current MSRP Corvette guys
simply laugh. There is no "sales market" outside of the people who
STOOD IN LINE to buy a car without DOOR HANDLES - you cannot
tell me these folks will be happier to open their wallet for a vehicle
that nicely blends in with 60% of the market.