Encyclopedia > Dodge Viper

  Article Content

Dodge Viper

The Dodge Viper is a two-seater sports car, the most powerful production car made by Dodge.

The car was developed as a modern AC Cobra and also has a certain amount of muscle car heritage in its distinctive aggressive styling. The basic shape was displayed as a concept car[?] in early 1989 and the first prototype was tested in December 1989. The first car was first offered for sale in January 1992 as the RT/10 Roadster.

The RT/10 has an aluminium ten cylinder, 7990 cc engine developed by Lotus from a Dodge V-8. The engine produces 400 bhp and 664 Nm of torque and comsumes a gallon of fuel for every 21 miles travelled. The body is a tubular steel frame with resin transfer molding (RTM) fiberglass panels. Unusually for modern performance cars it has a classic layout with a front mounted engine driving the rear wheels, it is also heavy with a curb weight of 1,488 kg and lacks many modern driver aids such as traction control. Despite these characteristics, in straight line performance it can complete a quarter mile in 12.9 seconds and had a maximum speed of 264 km/hr.

Later models increased engine power, the 1999 GTS had a 450 bhp engine and could complete the quarter mile 0.7 seconds faster and had an extra 35 km/hr or so of top speed. A number of third party firms modify the car to boost performance, for example Hennessey Motorsports sell a Viper with a 650 bhp engine at a bit more than double the Dodge list price.

Dodge raced a version of the Viper in the FIA GT-2 Manufacturers World Championship, winning the Overall Series in 1997.

In the first six years of production almost 10,000 Vipers were sold.

see also the Dodge Car list



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Museums in England

... Life[?] Northampton Central Museum & Art Gallery[?] Norfolk Bressingham Steam Museum[?] East Anglia Railway Museum[?] Strumpshaw Hall Steam Museum[?] Toad Hol ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 30.1 ms