jwwiii
Viper Owner
SRT steering behavior. \"taming the two-headed beast\"
A chilly Iowa hello to all;
My third Viper, the gorgeous Silver SRT is a real joy to drive. 400 miles on the ODO now. I LOVE this new Viper.
Yesterday, I experienced the "untamed" side of the beast when the Interstate went from good pavement to a much older section of Interstate. This "older" section had worn tire wear from trucks, cars, buses, and many years of use. The second I hit that "old" section, it was like the road had "taken control" of my steering wheel. Not knowing when the highway ruts would level out, I just held the wheel tightly. Pretty spooky to experience instantly when your not expecting it!
Yes, I know that our beasts are made to be responsive. My observation is that the new wheel/tire size and grip are more likely to "track" and hunt. I by no means am being down on my SRT; it is just a behavior that comes along with owning a race car that's street legal. Just be aware of worn roads and keep your hands on the wheel.
Question: is there a simple way to adjust "bump steer" for those drives when you know you have stretches of grooved highway, and then have the ability to return to factory settings? I felt like a drunk driver, and probably LOOKED like one as I was on that section of road.
Before you folks go off on me for addressing this, just remember that you will most likely experience it too. I am just curious if there is an easy way to "tighten up" the steering response if you are planning a long highway drive?
On decent roads, this beast is fantastic and handles like a dream. The magazines did mention this behavior as well in every article I read. If this is the way it must stay, then so be it as I love the SRT. BUT, if anyone has a quick adjustment that can easily be reversed, I am sure many would appreciate your input.
Thanks,
Jim
A chilly Iowa hello to all;
My third Viper, the gorgeous Silver SRT is a real joy to drive. 400 miles on the ODO now. I LOVE this new Viper.
Yesterday, I experienced the "untamed" side of the beast when the Interstate went from good pavement to a much older section of Interstate. This "older" section had worn tire wear from trucks, cars, buses, and many years of use. The second I hit that "old" section, it was like the road had "taken control" of my steering wheel. Not knowing when the highway ruts would level out, I just held the wheel tightly. Pretty spooky to experience instantly when your not expecting it!
Yes, I know that our beasts are made to be responsive. My observation is that the new wheel/tire size and grip are more likely to "track" and hunt. I by no means am being down on my SRT; it is just a behavior that comes along with owning a race car that's street legal. Just be aware of worn roads and keep your hands on the wheel.
Question: is there a simple way to adjust "bump steer" for those drives when you know you have stretches of grooved highway, and then have the ability to return to factory settings? I felt like a drunk driver, and probably LOOKED like one as I was on that section of road.
Before you folks go off on me for addressing this, just remember that you will most likely experience it too. I am just curious if there is an easy way to "tighten up" the steering response if you are planning a long highway drive?
On decent roads, this beast is fantastic and handles like a dream. The magazines did mention this behavior as well in every article I read. If this is the way it must stay, then so be it as I love the SRT. BUT, if anyone has a quick adjustment that can easily be reversed, I am sure many would appreciate your input.
Thanks,
Jim