ViperInBlack
Enthusiast
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- Oct 5, 2004
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In the lexicon of American automobiles, there is the recurrent use of the term "sports car." Personally, I do not believe that there has ever been, or will ever be, an American sports car.
The MGTD, the Austin Healy 3000, the Triumph TR6 and even the little Mazda Miata were "sports cars." They were rather uninteresting, but they, for me, define that genre.
To me, the Dodge Viper is a muscle car. It is the Swiss Army Knife of muscle cars. It can be used on a road course, drag strip, or even for (God help us) "drifting."
It is a very versatile creation, and it came on the heels of glutinous spending in the 80s and introduced during the hard times of the 90s. It has been described accurately by the media as a cartoon. It is, indeed, a cartoon. The Spiderman Viper was an incredible cartoon (sidebar: I was vacationing in the mountains when the e-bay auction closed on the Spiderman Viper...I still wish I had it).
I saw one in the newspaper this weekend with headers, aftermarket exhaust, flywheel, 3.55 as well as trim changes. It was only a few months old. That "other car" made in America, and made in gross abundance with auto transmission option, is most often found bone stock many years after being sold. By contrast, Viper owners appear to be overwhelmed by the urge to modify and tweak and often rock themselves to sleep with thoughts of tire smoke drifting in their heads.
It could be argued that "the other car" is more refined, more precise, and more complete and needs no alteration.
Yes, and I suppose that digital is inherently more exciting than analogue.
Accuracy is not excitement. Accuracy is synonymous with predictability. Boring.
I do not find the Viper to be predictable. Indeed, I suspect that it is pre-designed to respond differently each time it is fired up. And there is no currently available American muscle car that fires up with this degree of style and flash.
We have a saying here in the South: "when you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail."
Just because it has two seats, that does not make it a sports car, and I am fine with that.
Alice
The MGTD, the Austin Healy 3000, the Triumph TR6 and even the little Mazda Miata were "sports cars." They were rather uninteresting, but they, for me, define that genre.
To me, the Dodge Viper is a muscle car. It is the Swiss Army Knife of muscle cars. It can be used on a road course, drag strip, or even for (God help us) "drifting."
It is a very versatile creation, and it came on the heels of glutinous spending in the 80s and introduced during the hard times of the 90s. It has been described accurately by the media as a cartoon. It is, indeed, a cartoon. The Spiderman Viper was an incredible cartoon (sidebar: I was vacationing in the mountains when the e-bay auction closed on the Spiderman Viper...I still wish I had it).
I saw one in the newspaper this weekend with headers, aftermarket exhaust, flywheel, 3.55 as well as trim changes. It was only a few months old. That "other car" made in America, and made in gross abundance with auto transmission option, is most often found bone stock many years after being sold. By contrast, Viper owners appear to be overwhelmed by the urge to modify and tweak and often rock themselves to sleep with thoughts of tire smoke drifting in their heads.
It could be argued that "the other car" is more refined, more precise, and more complete and needs no alteration.
Yes, and I suppose that digital is inherently more exciting than analogue.
Accuracy is not excitement. Accuracy is synonymous with predictability. Boring.
I do not find the Viper to be predictable. Indeed, I suspect that it is pre-designed to respond differently each time it is fired up. And there is no currently available American muscle car that fires up with this degree of style and flash.
We have a saying here in the South: "when you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail."
Just because it has two seats, that does not make it a sports car, and I am fine with that.
Alice