Spec did just release their clutch. I think I have the 1st. Maybe the 2nd. Pics and info are here:
http://www4.forum.viperclub.org/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=749345&Main=749345#Post749345 .
RE: the tilton: i have heard (no 1st hand experience here) that the tilton needs to be re-adjusted every few thousand miles. not sure if this is true or not.
the SPEC is suppose to be rebuildable as well. haven't gotten to the point where i need to yet, though (still installing).
JD
Just stumbled accross this post looking for another so I figured I would comment.
The Tilton series clutches require a wear plate to be installed in them once they exceed a certain amount of wear, no actual adustment is needed. Its a simple unbolt, measure, swap plate, rebolt procedure. After you do it two times or so, you will know exactly what kind of interval you personally are getting, and then it becomes routine maintenance- for most people, it will be seasonal or bi-seasonal. Whether the clutch is metallic or carbon will dictate how quickly this happens. While I have no experience with a Metallic Clutch for street use and approximate intervals, it could be expected that a Carbon Clutch could see 7-10K miles per interval, depending of course on driving type. If you have tons of highway miles, you could go much, much further- the opposite it true if you 1/4 your car 100x a day. Roughly, each wear interval is equivalent to the life of other "High Capacity" clutches out there. There is plenty of cushion, as the wear interval is .025, though .040 can wear before much slippage will occur- perhaps longer if you arent even close to the clutches ultimate "new" capacity.
The clutch can wear a total of 3x before a rebuild is needed, which costs roughly 5-10% of the new cost of the clutch. This is where the Tilton shines. While it has a LARGE inital investment of 5 grand or so, from then on, you have tilton quality at close to OEM clutch pricing. You are paying roughly 400-600 bucks for 3 wear intervals on a Tilton, which is dirt cheap by any standards, especiallty considering what exactly the clutch is capable of. This is also not a clutch you sell your car with. You keep that clutch and put something stock back in, and transfer it to your next car, even the generations to come will be adaptable in short order. The clutch pack itself is fairly universal and rebuildable, and will fit any Viper generation, as well as hundreds of others. It is all of the peripherals that dictate the application. (Flywheel, T/O Bearing, Master, Bolt kits, etc)