Dodge up to challenge in ponycar wars
#1
Dodge up to challenge in ponycar wars
http://www.bclocalnews.com/lifestyles/16018257.html
[quote]
Dodge up to challenge in ponycar wars
February 27, 2008
Let the Ponycar wars begin!
Has it really been that long?
Has it actually been nearly 40 years since the Dodge Challenger first attempted to muscle its way onto the scene for a share of the Ponycar pie?
For a certain segment of the population that grew up during the last great horsepower battles fought between Ford, General Motors, Chrysler and American Motors, the new Challenger will seem like a time machine that leads straight to the early 1970s.
In those heady days, there were no fewer than eight vehicles in the Ponycar class, so called because the Ford Mustang was the leader of a herd that spawned similar long-hood, short-rear-deck models available with pavement-tearing V8 power.
As retro looking as the new Challenger is, the clock isn’t exactly being turned back.
Instead, key styling elements have been brought forward from the original car to find their way into a completely new and modern two-door model.
Rather than constantly fussing around with an original Challenger from the 1970s — a weekend, sunny-weather car at best — nostalgic babyboomers can buy a new Challenger, loaded with technology and safety features, and drive it any time they like in any season.
The looking-cool factor is a given.
As the current retro-styled Mustang has demonstrated, close physical ties to the past are more than just a good idea: they’re mandatory.
The Challenger’s headlights are round, just like they were always intended to be.
The full-width taillamp and rear spoiler have a familiar look and
the outside mirrors are actually based on moulds pulled from the originals.
One obvious difference is that there’s far less chrome showing
now than on the original, giving
it a bumper-free, slab-sided appearance.
The Challenger is actually built using a shortened version of the Dodge Charger/Chrysler 300 rear-wheel-drive platform, with about
10 centimetres removed from between the front and rear wheels.
The version of the Challenger initially heading to Dodge’s salivating dealers and only in limited numbers, is the high-performance Street and Racing Technology SRT8 (“8” for eight cylinders) iteration.
Anyone familiar with Chrysler’s other SRT8 products, such as the Magnum wagon or Charger sedan, will recognize the Challenger’s interior treatment, especially its thick, heavily bolstered front bucket seats.
Other SRT standard equipment includes a tight suspension package that includes stiff springs, shocks, anti-roll bars and an SRT-specific stability-control system that helps keep the car pointed in the right direction and its over-exuberant drivers out of trouble.
For that final SRT flourish, the Challenger rides on 20-inch wheels and will thankfully stop far better than the original with 14-inch disc brakes at all four wheels.
In true SRT8 tradition, a 6.1-litre V8 “Hemi” with 425 horsepower and 420 pound-feet of torque is the sole source of motivation.
The engine is connected to a five-speed automatic transmission with manual shift controls that provides at least some simulation of a good-ol’-days manual gearbox, but without the fun of banging the cogs at the redline.
Chrysler states that the Challenger will nail 60 mph (96 km/h) from a standing stop in the low-five-second range, run the quarter-mile (400 metres) in less than 14 seconds and can be brought to a stop from 100 km/h in around 34 metres (110 feet).
At the outset, the Challenger SRT8 will arrive with a full range of standard equipment — air, cruise, keyless remote entry, power-controlled accessories and the like — along with a 322-watt, 13-speaker premium audio system and plenty of safety gear.
Canadian pricing has yet to be announced, although the U.S. price of $38,000 is widely known.
You can expect less-option-filled ver
[quote]
Dodge up to challenge in ponycar wars
February 27, 2008
Let the Ponycar wars begin!
Has it really been that long?
Has it actually been nearly 40 years since the Dodge Challenger first attempted to muscle its way onto the scene for a share of the Ponycar pie?
For a certain segment of the population that grew up during the last great horsepower battles fought between Ford, General Motors, Chrysler and American Motors, the new Challenger will seem like a time machine that leads straight to the early 1970s.
In those heady days, there were no fewer than eight vehicles in the Ponycar class, so called because the Ford Mustang was the leader of a herd that spawned similar long-hood, short-rear-deck models available with pavement-tearing V8 power.
As retro looking as the new Challenger is, the clock isn’t exactly being turned back.
Instead, key styling elements have been brought forward from the original car to find their way into a completely new and modern two-door model.
Rather than constantly fussing around with an original Challenger from the 1970s — a weekend, sunny-weather car at best — nostalgic babyboomers can buy a new Challenger, loaded with technology and safety features, and drive it any time they like in any season.
The looking-cool factor is a given.
As the current retro-styled Mustang has demonstrated, close physical ties to the past are more than just a good idea: they’re mandatory.
The Challenger’s headlights are round, just like they were always intended to be.
The full-width taillamp and rear spoiler have a familiar look and
the outside mirrors are actually based on moulds pulled from the originals.
One obvious difference is that there’s far less chrome showing
now than on the original, giving
it a bumper-free, slab-sided appearance.
The Challenger is actually built using a shortened version of the Dodge Charger/Chrysler 300 rear-wheel-drive platform, with about
10 centimetres removed from between the front and rear wheels.
The version of the Challenger initially heading to Dodge’s salivating dealers and only in limited numbers, is the high-performance Street and Racing Technology SRT8 (“8” for eight cylinders) iteration.
Anyone familiar with Chrysler’s other SRT8 products, such as the Magnum wagon or Charger sedan, will recognize the Challenger’s interior treatment, especially its thick, heavily bolstered front bucket seats.
Other SRT standard equipment includes a tight suspension package that includes stiff springs, shocks, anti-roll bars and an SRT-specific stability-control system that helps keep the car pointed in the right direction and its over-exuberant drivers out of trouble.
For that final SRT flourish, the Challenger rides on 20-inch wheels and will thankfully stop far better than the original with 14-inch disc brakes at all four wheels.
In true SRT8 tradition, a 6.1-litre V8 “Hemi” with 425 horsepower and 420 pound-feet of torque is the sole source of motivation.
The engine is connected to a five-speed automatic transmission with manual shift controls that provides at least some simulation of a good-ol’-days manual gearbox, but without the fun of banging the cogs at the redline.
Chrysler states that the Challenger will nail 60 mph (96 km/h) from a standing stop in the low-five-second range, run the quarter-mile (400 metres) in less than 14 seconds and can be brought to a stop from 100 km/h in around 34 metres (110 feet).
At the outset, the Challenger SRT8 will arrive with a full range of standard equipment — air, cruise, keyless remote entry, power-controlled accessories and the like — along with a 322-watt, 13-speaker premium audio system and plenty of safety gear.
Canadian pricing has yet to be announced, although the U.S. price of $38,000 is widely known.
You can expect less-option-filled ver
__________________
º¿º
~) 69.5 SuperBee
º¿º
~) 69.5 SuperBee
#2
RE: Dodge up to challenge in ponycar wars
Not to rain on anyone's parade... but dethrone the Mustang for the top pony car spot? That'll never happen. It'll give the 'stang a helluva run to be sure... but it'll never dethrone it (at least not completely).
Sorry guys, I don't like that fact anymore than any of you, but gotta give proper credit where credit is due.
Sorry guys, I don't like that fact anymore than any of you, but gotta give proper credit where credit is due.
#4
RE: Dodge up to challenge in ponycar wars
ORIGINAL: kevin2323
definately right yankee the stang has been around and lasted longer...... but hey thats why we buy the challenger.... to be different
definately right yankee the stang has been around and lasted longer...... but hey thats why we buy the challenger.... to be different
Performance & brand loyalty (and a few years of nice styling) = Camaro.
In you face style & HEMI performance (and some exclusivity) = Challenger.
[sm=icon_rock.gif]
#5
RE: Dodge up to challenge in ponycar wars
It doesn't matter if Chrysler was to sell the SRT-8 at $15K while getting 30 mpg having in excess of 500hp, with the conventional models costing in the low teens, and it came with a guaranteed cure for cancer and many other diseases. The Mustang will never be dethroned in this class by the Challenger in sales. The Mustang has in excess of 40 years of momentum behind it. The Challenger is starting fresh. The thing we can hope for though is when the Challenger is in full production, is that the different models give the Mustang a beating.
__________________
"To Debate and Moderate" since 2006
College Graduate:
B.S. in Marketing
A.A. in nothing
The first 426 Dual Quad member.
The first to 2000 posts
"To Debate and Moderate" since 2006
College Graduate:
B.S. in Marketing
A.A. in nothing
The first 426 Dual Quad member.
The first to 2000 posts
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
BLK 6050
Challenger News
1
11-19-2010 12:48 PM