Right! It is true that tons of hours behind the wheel generally translate into a driver strategically knowing his car and its reactions in borderline situations.
In doesn't mean in turn that this car should be "raced" around everywhere in frantic ways...
Doing so would only gather all conditions for disaster : cold tires, oncoming traffic, pedestrian hazard, slippery/uneven road surface, etc..
Do airline pilots with "zillions" of flight hours on their clock fly their commercial airline carriers upside down or in loopings just because they are able to?
Of course race track is a good answer for training purposes, but I'm quite sure Vipers can be very rewarding to drive also when handled within reason, not getting anywhere near the limit.
There is this American saying about cars which goes : "Horsepower sells cars, Torque wins races". In that regard, Vipers really are truly special machines. If 450HP isn't really a shy number in terms of power (even by 2020 standards), 665Nm of torque really is the figure that should switch brains on (for anyone who actually has a brain)
It is EXACTLY what MoparMap was talking about when writing : "it's torque right off idle". It just doesn't get any simpler than that!
Anybody thinking about making bumper stickers or a T-shirts out of it?!