Dodge Viper RT/10 Gets the Regular Car Reviews Treatment
To a generation of Dodge fans, the Viper was the Alpha and Omega of performance. How does it hold up 25 years later?
By: Bradley Brownell | January 26, 2018
To a generation of Dodge fans, the Viper was the Alpha and Omega of performance. How does it hold up 25 years later?
By: Bradley Brownell | January 26, 2018
This incredible 1968 Dodge Charger RTR packs a twin-turbocharged V10 from the Viper and an intense sound system.
By: Patrick Rall | November 2, 2017
We want to see Dodge leverage Italian power to make a new sports car. We’ve been lamenting the death of the Viper for far too long. It will forever stand as one of America’s greatest automotive achievements, but the Viper we know and love today, just can’t exist anymore. We are now in a world […] More »
By: Christian Moe | October 18, 2017
Watch as a pair of Mopar titans clash on a highway in Mexico. The Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat is the quickest, fastest and most powerful 4-door sedan in the world with a supercharged Hemi delivering 707 horsepower and 650lb-ft of torque. The Dodge Viper ACR is the most track-capable American production car ever with an […] More »
By: Patrick Rall | June 26, 2017
The 2003 Dodge Tomahawk is, without question, one of the most unique machines to come from a big manufacturer in the last quarter-century.
By: Tony Markovich | August 1, 2016
Today a Craiglist link showed up in my inbox showing a used car listing for a 2001 Honda S2000 packing the engine and transmission from a Dodge Viper. Now, I am not a fan of crossbreed cars…if you want to drive a Honda car – you should suffer with the Honda engine and it breaks […] More »
By: Patrick Rall | September 17, 2014
It’s been almost twenty years since Dodge released the second-gen Viper (1996), the iconic blue-with-white-stripes GTS that paced the ’96 Indy 500. Three generations later and the car isn’t even a Dodge anymore, it’s an SRT. But as a Mopar enthusiast, my only concern is whether the car lost its manic edge. Has it become […] More »
By: Yoav Gilad | December 31, 2013