Point of information:
All Gen 4 Vipers come with a cute little black kit with something called tire sealant and something that plugs into a cigarette lighter to inflate tires with a round gage on-top to check pressure instead of run flats or a spare tire.....
Well, not every gen IV. Just to be picky, ********'s do not.
I have to disagree with you! I have made hundreds of passes in every type of car there is and when they get loose you lift immediately and you rarely ever have a problem. I also agree with 9 ball that it is this mistake (not lifting) that cause all these spinouts and subsequent accidents.
Here's more irony. Almost all the veterans say, in response to this story, "go spend some track time". And NOT lifting is exactly what they teach you in those DE's. And the same guys then throw confusion into the *** by saying lift when you start to spin. So, what you are really saying, is that DE's are bad for you?
Lot of crappy replies here.
A guy makes a mistake with a car that he probably loved very much. Posts about his mistake, perhaps in effort to learn from his mistake as well as educate others only to get harassed.
WHEN I have a learning experience in my car, I'll be sure not to post here in effort to help others not make the same mistake...
Here's the irony of this whole thread, and the whole argument from tech-haters. Every one of the posters who has argued about keeping the Viper a "purists" car, devoid of driver aids, has a similar story to tell. Almost everyone says how the back end has come around "in a millisecond" or "totally unexpected". Yes, the car deserves respect, and yes knowing how to handle the backlash is an important part of learning to drive. And there are a number of people who can handle that kind of sudden torque in a rear wheel drive car and think nothing of it but that it's a thrill, even a big part of why you bought the car. But not every one of you can handle every situation, even you all admit that.
So, nobody's business but yours, right? It's your $60-100k car after all. Just don't whine about it when your insurance drops you, you lose your legs, the passenger riding with you dies, or you run over some kid on the curb minding their own business. Especially don't whine about it when you get sued--rightfully--after all it was your choice. The poster above even says WHEN this happens, not IF.
Now there's many of you, myself included, who accept this liability as part of the joy and freedom that comes with driving a Viper. We can modify this risk by driving responsibly on the street, paying attention to road and tire conditions, using the track for the real heavy-footed stuff, and really LEARNING TO DRIVE. But the population of "purists" is shrinking. Not to beat up on Ferrari-to-Viper but, well, case in point. Here's a guy with a Modena who buys a 600HP rear-wheel car with no research beforehand! Sorry, but you said you wanted it to be a learning experience and here's the bigger lesson. FTV is the new buyer; the Chuck's, Warfang's, Jamie's, Janni's, Dave's, and MYSELF, are a shrinking pool of potential new or repeat buyers. This was the point of my earlier posts in the other thread. Not that I like Nanny Tech, just that eventually Dodge would need it if it were to keep the marquee alive. You can't do that by selling cars to a shrinking population, otherwise the Viper becomes the Cadillac of the high performance crowd.