black mamba1
Enthusiast
I'm #4. Im getting a Hellcat no matter what happens with the Viper. This car is just too bitchin' to pass up...black on black with black wheels...and maybe red racing strips and red trim here and there! Yeah baby!
Black on Black on Black Rules.black on black with black wheels...and maybe red racing strips and red trim here and there! Yeah baby!
Black on Black on Black Rules.
Now, this makes sense to me. if looking for a fast American made sedan, why in the heck would you get a pos challenger over a Cadillac V. they weigh the same, the caddy is better looking, better overall car and handles better and is mildly boosted from the factory with a huge aftermarket options. But how in the world does a viper come into the conversation? Heck, if you have the $$$, go check out a new AMG instead and have a better car if looking for a fast sedan. But please don't confuse yourself into thinking your are getting a sports car.
I don't see why Dodge couldn't build the Viper just because they want a car like that, even if sales aren't through the roof. Look at companies like Lambo and Pagani. Pretty sure their cars don't fly off the shelves.
I don't see why Dodge couldn't build the Viper just because they want a car like that, even if sales aren't through the roof. Look at companies like Lambo and Pagani. Pretty sure their cars don't fly off the shelves. To me it feels like they just build wilds cars for the hell of it because it's what they want to do. They're not all about trying to make the car work for everyone, they just have a vision that they want to offer to like minded people. I know America is all about making money, but can't we also just make stuff that we like? Chrysler is a huge company that sells millions of cars. Just because one premium car doesn't sell well doesn't necessarily mean it has to cease production. The Viper has always been a weird niche market. It's the American exotic. Rarer than a Vette, but way cheaper than most European rivals. It's always had a limited market. I don't want the Viper to compete with the Vette in sales. If it becomes so popular that they sell 10,000 a year it's no longer unique. The Viper is for someone who wants the performance of a Vette but wants to be different and stand out.
...Lambo and other exotic companies all came close to not making it and the reason why they are still alive is because their products are selling well and they have increased their customer base. The Viper cannot continue with its single minded view.
We all have a common love for the Viper and do not want to see it go but it needs to adapt or it will become extinct.
Exactly.The Viper cannot continue with its single minded view.
We all have a common love for the Viper and do not want to see it go but it needs to adapt or it will become extinct.
Unfortunately, Toyota has deeper pockets than Chrysler.The LFA comes to mind as Lexus is another huge company that can afford to have a car that they don't build or sell many of.
The LFA comes to mind as Lexus is another huge company that can afford to have a car that they don't build or sell many of.
You may want to rething your analogy.
Lexus did an amazing job marketing a car that did not have hyper car performance but focused on the engineering feat. MSRP was out of this world at $375k but Toyota still presold the bulk of them. In the US, 150 LFAs were initially sold through a two-year lease program to prevent owners from reselling the vehicle for a profit. LFA still today command a very strong resale price (close to MSRP) on the market. production lasted 2 years only.
I would say that Lexus and the rest of the industry would consider the LFA an outstanding marketing success but a failure for the bean counters.
Compare that to the Gen V where the marketing and the actual performance failed to attract new buyers and new GTS cars are selling at 40K off MSRP after 1 year.
There's not a car I can think of that gives you what the viper does for 100k.
My buddies pushing me hard to get a genV to race his aventador...because he knows the genV is badas in every regard.
Hellcat is badas but geeze. Maybe for a dd or dedicated strip car.....
There's not a car I can think of that gives you what the viper does for 100k.
My buddies pushing me hard to get a genV to race his aventador...because he knows the genV is badas in every regard.
Hellcat is badas but geeze. Maybe for a dd or dedicated strip car.....
The AWD is a killer in a straight line.The Viper/Hellcat have no chance against the Aventador if that racing is the straightline.
I drove an Aventador in Vegas last year and was not impressed.Roadcourse is a much different story for the Viper vs Aventador however.
The AWD is a killer in a straight line.
I drove an Aventador in Vegas last year and was not impressed.
Cramped and unbelievably difficult to get in & out of.
On the roadcourse, it went into understeer way too easily.
http://www.exoticsracing.com/
I wish Exotics Racing did have a Viper in their corral, but they don't.You need the likes of the McLaren 12C/650s/F12 to deal with an Aventador. My money is on the Viper on the road course against all of them though.
If Fiat will allow the Viper to continue to exist as a halo car despite the very slow sales, a la Honda NSX, then I dont mind if it continues the way it does as a pure throwback car with a few tech concessions in the mix. As long as it continues to exist is my concern.
If it "still" is being aimed at the Porsche crowd then they have work to do the attract those kind of clients. The Hellcat is aimed at the right competition and I think the Viper should be aimed at the proper competition as well. Aiming it at the cars like the 911, even though its faster around a track, will inevitably make the average enthusiast shopper compare more than the performance aspects of both offerings. Thats not a comparison the Viper will win most of the time and sales reflects a bit of that.
Historically, pony cars are derived from an economy car architecture. The challenger is a muscle car, and therefore derived from a sedan platform.Well the technical term is Pony Car...and has a stock Cadillac V run 10.85 in the 1/4 mile? What about 11.2? And the Hellcat looks a helluva lot more masculine and menacing then the Caddy...but hey..thats just my opinion. Folks are lining up around the corner to buy the Hellcat...are folks lining up around the corner to buy the Caddy V? What about the Viper?..or even the AMG?
Last time I checked the Caddy V had 556 hp and weighed 4217 lbs and ran a 12.7 quarter mile almost two seconds slower than the 707 hp Hellcat. The Hellcat will be 3 city blocks ahead of the Caddy V at the end of the 1/4 mile. The Dodge Hellcat won't care whether you consider it a sports car or not. The Hellcat is the John Carlos Story of 2014...the car won't give two sh*ts about what people think about it or what people will call it...the Hellcat will simply kick the competitions ass..put its fist in their faces...and still make them give it its' g*ddamn victory medal.
That, in my opinion, is the marketing blunder that SRT made. Thinking that a BMW/Porsche/Euro Sports Car/ ... buyer would ever buy a SRT GTS Viper. It's 'just a Dodge POS'. Didn't happen and it won't happen. As nice as the full leather GTS Vipers are, you're just not going to convince one of these buyers to buy a Viper. The only exception that I personally have seen (this was a few years ago) is a Porsche GT3 buyer who sold it and bought a Gen IV ACR. He got tired of getting his ass handed to him on the track. Plus they were about $60K cheaper.
If I were king, I would get rid of the GTS and make all the expensive interiors an option. The base or core buyers want a car that is < $110K, reasonably nice inside and fast as hell. Just my 2 cents .....