Ron
Enthusiast
<FONT face="Comic Sans MS">While I'm sure many would laugh at a cruise control for a Viper, I find myself with a stiff right knee after several hours on the interstate and eventually using my left foot for the accelerator as a relief. After looking around for a solution, I came across the Snake Oyl / Collectors Choice Viper Cruise Control kit and decided to try it out.
Installation was pretty straight forward, requiring 5 wire splices into the Viper harness, all in the engine compartment. Not a big deal if you're careful and not colorblind. A pair of drilled holes in the left front inner fender hold the actuator and two more holes on the throttle bracket hold the cable. The unit is controlled by a battery powered, remote radio transmitter, which I velcro'd to the steering wheel and via a receiver which is mounted under the lower windshield molding via double stick tape. I also sealed the receiver so car washing didn't short anything out.
It holds the speed very accurately and disconnects via the control switch, brake application or clutch depression (it senses an rpm increase without a corresponding speed increase and then disconnects). The unit needs 20 minutes are so to learn the engine's response time before accuracy is obtained.
The installation instructions are a bit weak, but if anyone wants to give it a go, let me know and I'll save you some time. Unit seems well designed and so far reliable. Removal would leave only the two inner fender holes as the throttle bracket could be easily replaced ($15.00 via Parts Rack) and the wiring just clipped and taped back up.
</FONT f>
Installation was pretty straight forward, requiring 5 wire splices into the Viper harness, all in the engine compartment. Not a big deal if you're careful and not colorblind. A pair of drilled holes in the left front inner fender hold the actuator and two more holes on the throttle bracket hold the cable. The unit is controlled by a battery powered, remote radio transmitter, which I velcro'd to the steering wheel and via a receiver which is mounted under the lower windshield molding via double stick tape. I also sealed the receiver so car washing didn't short anything out.
It holds the speed very accurately and disconnects via the control switch, brake application or clutch depression (it senses an rpm increase without a corresponding speed increase and then disconnects). The unit needs 20 minutes are so to learn the engine's response time before accuracy is obtained.
The installation instructions are a bit weak, but if anyone wants to give it a go, let me know and I'll save you some time. Unit seems well designed and so far reliable. Removal would leave only the two inner fender holes as the throttle bracket could be easily replaced ($15.00 via Parts Rack) and the wiring just clipped and taped back up.
You must be registered for see images
You must be registered for see images
You must be registered for see images
You must be registered for see images
You must be registered for see images
</FONT f>