Hard to do before your FIRST day with the car. So wouldn't help here would it?
Taking it easy would be the other option, but even with that the car can be have surprising torque for most drivers. Even drivers of other exotics, and even previous Viper owners.
There are other options, of course, and we have discussed them in other threads. Like gun control, the consensus appears to be the lives lost are a worthwhile trade-off for the freedom that we enjoy. Easy to talk about in the abstract, but doesn't make the loss of an individual like this kid any easier for anyone does it?
No, Cop, it doesn't, and that was the point of what I posted earlier. Here's the situation as I see it. We asked for a car that was a raw, uncomplicated, street-legal racer. We got it. We asked for a real driver's car. without a bunch of complications. We got it. We asked for better handling. Dodge gave it to us. We asked for more power. Dodge gave it to us. We asked for a better gearbox. Dodge gave it to us. The car has gotten better; whether the drivers have is another story.
I suppose the inevitable question is whether TC/ESC would have prevented this accident. To tell the truth, I don't know. What I do know, is that with 500+ hp it is definitely possible to overpower an ESC, because I've done it (IN A CLOSED ENVIRONMENT) intentionally (with a CZ06). I had to violate my instincts and training to do it, but it is possible, at least under some conditions.Where I'm going with this is that I'm afraid that giving some people TC/ESC in a 600hp car, is that it may encourage them to take even more risks, thereby making the situation even worse. The only thing worse than having an average driver get into a 600hp car, and start thinking he's the next Mario Andretti, is having him think he's also ten feet tall and bulletproof when he isn't.
So what's left? Well, I do know that a healthy amount of fear and a good dose of common sense would have prevented this tragedy (and a lot of others). So would a sense of personal responsibility( of the kind that has increasingly become unfashionable in our society lately). I actually like the gun control analogy, because this car is a lot like a loaded gun. Used properly, it will serve and protect you well; Used improperly or carelessly, it will kill you, or someone else, maybe someone you love. Too many people fail to get that understanding, and when something bad happens, the current tendency is to blame the tool, not the operator. That's unfortunate, because just like most accidental shootings, this incident was completely preventable. A few words of warning, to the effect that "Sudden throttle application in this car can and will kill you!" would have sufficed (had they been heeded, of course). How we get that across, I'm not sure, but we have to find a better way. Setting the right example, as ambassadors of the Viper Nation (which we as Viper drivers are, whether we want to be or not) is a start in the right direction. Doing all we can to educate newcomers to the fold is another. If there's more we can do, I for one am open to suggestions. The key is that if we don't do something, Big Brother is going to step in and do it for us, and we won't like the result.
We asked for this car. We got it. Now we have to do our best to make sure we and others enjoy it responsibly and safely.