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benyl
09-14-2005, 12:46 AM
For Video:
http://www.edmunds.com/insideline/do/Drives/FirstDrives/articleId=107200


http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com/media/roadtests/firstdrive/2006/dodge.viper.srt.10.coupe/viper.powerslide.500.jpg

So Much Torque, So Little Track Time
By Richard Homan
Date posted: 09-12-2005

I still have nightmares, and I wake up laughing.

Snaking, braking and shaking my head through the 2.2 miles and 11 turns of California's Laguna Seca raceway is just about the surest way I know of to keep my ADHD under control. And driving a 2006 Dodge Viper SRT-10 Coupe around Laguna Seca pretty much scares up 1,000 percent of your concentration. And to be honest, fun doesn't get any more fun than this.

It's especially true that the $83,995 Viper SRT-10 can only really show off its best stuff at a track. The rest of the SRT (for Street Racing Technology — they're the Chrysler Group's in-house performance-tuning nuts) lineup is a blast on the track, but you can also approach their speeding, sticking and stopping limits on your favorite twisty two-lane stretch of public pavement. In everything from the super-Neon known as the SRT-4 to the Charger SRT-8 to the upcoming Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT-8, driving at ten-tenths is something you can flirt with. Not so with the Viper SRT-10 Coupe, it's got the same eerie "racecar-for-the-street" outlaw aura that the Ferrari F40 had. No flirting here, only commitment.

Torquing the Torque
That divine commitment starts with the Viper Coupe's showpiece: an aluminum-block 8.3-liter, V10 torque machine. The engine's 510 horsepower recommends it highly, but now it's got 535 pound-feet of pure accelerative torque — the lion's share of which is on tap from as low as 1,500 rpm — that inspires the rear-drive Viper to swallow up straights quicker than anything I've ever driven. Five hundred thirty-five lb-ft of torque. I think that that's enough thrust to throw the planet off of its axis, but I'm not entirely sure. It feels like it, though.

Sifting such ungodly power through the heavy-duty six-speed manual gearbox, with the engine's 10 cylinders sounding like a construction crew speed-hammering overtime at the Gates of Hell, makes it easy to believe SRT's claims of a 0-60 of under 4 seconds and a quarter-mile time in the low 12s.

Corner Worker
Checking in at the corners is a lightweight, but beefy, aluminum suspension setup of double wishbones all around, front and rear antiroll bars, and coil-over shocks. And like nearly everything else about the Viper, the wheels and tires are massive: 18-inch forged-alloy wheels in front, 19s at the rear, clad in Michelin run-flat tires, sized — get this — 275/35ZR-18 (front) and 345/30ZR-19 (rear).

It is in this handling arena, that the Viper SRT-10 Coupe acts most like a racecar. It's either on or off, big-league style, with little margin to play with. If you insist on playing tail-out like Gurney or Villeneuve, low- and moderate-speed corners do afford you some throttle-on mitigation thanks to a speed-sensing Dana limited-slip differential. A Viper that snaps away at high speed, however, is pretty much a bad idea no matter what your last name is.

Extra-massive Brembo brakes — 14-inch ventilated discs at all four corners, with dual-opposing calipers at each wheel — suck speed away from the heavy coupe so quickly, you can feel the mass trying to pull free of the bounds of gravity. And the pedal feel is racecar solid, with short travel and immediate, positive response.

The Crowning Achievement
Let's take a moment now, turning our thoughts to the "coupe" part of the Dodge Viper SRT-10 Coupe. As a convertible, the Viper is a gnashing, angry snarl. But the SRT-10 Coupe's fixed "double-bubble" roof, like that of the Viper GTS Coupe that preceded it, finishes the design. Now, from the Viper's louvered, 10-acre hood to its kick-up rear spoiler and shrouded, wraparound taillights, nothing breaks up the scary, sexy lines formed in composite and steel.

From Where I Sit
The only thing diminutive about the Viper Coupe is its two-seat interior. The topless Viper seemed more accommodating because it offered all the headroom in the universe. The coupe closes that option down. The long-legged especially, will need to adjust the super-supportive form-fitting seats to find an acceptable headroom/legroom balance point. The pedals are set slightly left of center, and they're tightly grouped, so wear your thinnest pair of driving shoes. How tight was it in the footbox? There were times I swore the brake and accelerator were stacked right on top of one another. Made for awesome heel-and-toe work when I got used to it, however.

There was no sweat getting used to the Viper's seats and steering wheel — both were thick, grippy and leather-wrapped. And staring dead-on into the huge center tachometer reminds you why you came here, as do the 220-mph speedo and the red pushbutton starter.

The Last Lap
Laguna Seca never stood a chance. To thread the SRT-10 Coupe through the track's hairpins, uphill/downhill sweepers, and the infamous "Corkscrew," is to turn your adrenaline tap wide open. When you nail a lap, you feel perfect; and when you duff one, you feel like a donkey. The 2006 Dodge Viper SRT-10 Coupe punctuates those feelings, and really brings them home, with its race-bred mechanicals and track-trued specs.

I still have nightmares, and I still wake up laughing.

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com/media/roadtests/firstdrive/2006/dodge.viper.srt.10.coupe/viperrear.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com/media/roadtests/firstdrive/2006/dodge.viper.srt.10.coupe/vipf34street.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com/media/roadtests/firstdrive/2006/dodge.viper.srt.10.coupe/vipengine.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com/media/roadtests/firstdrive/2006/dodge.viper.srt.10.coupe/viperinterior.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com/media/roadtests/firstdrive/2006/dodge.viper.srt.10.coupe/viperstart.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com/media/roadtests/firstdrive/2006/dodge.viper.srt.10.coupe/viperbadge.500.jpg

Vagabond142
09-14-2005, 04:14 AM
He made ONE critical error in his review: the Dodge Viper is *NOT* a supercar. It's a musclecar. A Murcielago is an almost supercar. The Pagani Zonda *is* a supercar. Hell, the Saleen S7 is a supercar. But the Viper is not.

:werd:

403Gemini
09-14-2005, 01:15 PM
Originally posted by Vagabond142
He made ONE critical error in his review: the Dodge Viper is *NOT* a supercar. It's a musclecar. A Murcielago is an almost supercar. The Pagani Zonda *is* a supercar. Hell, the Saleen S7 is a supercar. But the Viper is not.

:werd:

A mustang is considered a muscle car

a GTO is considered a muscle car

a dodge viper is NOT considered a muscle car.

BerserkerCatSplat
09-14-2005, 01:20 PM
Mustang, GTO, Charger: Muscle Cars

Viper, Z06, Ford GT, F430: Supercars

Enzo, Zonda, CGT, S7: Hypercars

That's how I define that sort of thing.

Mr. Burns
09-14-2005, 01:23 PM
I think it is the Vipers price that makes it a super car. Muscle cars are supposed to be performance oriented and (somewhat) affordable.

Redlyne_mr2
09-14-2005, 01:25 PM
Hmm im not sure if Id call it a supercar, not much technology in the Viper, no space age materials. Its a cool car but its pretty much just a glorified muscle car sort of like the z06. The Ford GT and f430 are supercars. Lots of innovative technology, you cant buy them just anywhere and they cost a lot of money. You also dont see f430s and Gt's all the time either.

USHER
09-14-2005, 01:31 PM
i wouldnt call it a super car.

but its a car way above average but below super car status.
its a car that sopposed to feel like a super car for the price but isnt.

z06 and nsx fall in the same category

p.s i dont like the back. the older ones were alot nicer

iceburns288
09-14-2005, 03:53 PM
A Viper to me is a really nice sports car. Not a supercar, but no ordinary muscle car!

nhlfan
09-14-2005, 04:17 PM
the viper is closer to supercar than muscle car. the thing pulls 1.02g around a skidpad in convertible form.

Stratus_Power
09-14-2005, 06:43 PM
i dont think its a super car, its like i dont see the elise or a TVR being a super car

saiyajin
09-14-2005, 06:48 PM
Originally posted by BerserkerCatSpl
Mustang, GTO, Charger: Muscle Cars

Viper, Z06, Ford GT, F430: Supercars

Enzo, Zonda, CGT, S7: Hypercars

That's how I define that sort of thing.

hypercar?? what happened to the term exotic car?

BerserkerCatSplat
09-14-2005, 06:50 PM
Originally posted by saiyajin


hypercar?? what happened to the term exotic car?

Well, some exotics are supercars, and some are hypercars. It's rather tough to define clear defining lines for these sorts of things.

Redlyne_mr2
09-15-2005, 12:42 AM
Kit cars were sometimes classifies as exotics...hypercar is the new word for the CGT,Enzo and Koenisseggs of the world.

lastprodigy
09-15-2005, 04:09 PM
oh they sort of went back to the desing cues of the old on on the back end....i agree that it has some insane numbers but you cannot compare with the likes of a f430 or anything

86max
09-15-2005, 04:49 PM
So much better looking than the convertible imo.

I want one :drool: