New Dodge Charger Daytona edition boasts 717 horsepower

Dodge debuts limited-production 717-horsepower Daytona 50th Anniversary Edition on new 2020 Charger SRT Hellcat Widebody If youve held off buying a Dodge Charger Hellcat because it only has 707 horsepower, get your wallet ready. Theres now a Daytona 50th Anniversary Edition available on the new 2020 Charger SRT Hellcat Widebody that boosts its 6.2-L Hemi V8 engine to 717 horses.The new model, introduced during the annual Woodward Dream Cruise near Detroit, makes 717 horsepower, along with 650 lb.-ft. of torque. The trick is an increase in the shift points to 6,100 rpm in automatic mode, which yields the 10-horsepower boost exclusive to the model. As a tribute to the 1969 Charger Daytona, its limited to 501 units as the original was, and features unique Daytona decals with a matching spoiler.Four colours will be available B5 Blue, Pitch Black, Triple Nickel, and White Knuckle while other features include unique 20-inch Warp Speed wheels with Pirelli all-season or optional three-season performance tires, Brembo brakes, carbon fibre interior accents, blue-stitched seats, a suede flat-bottom steering wheel, and a plaque indicating the production number. A unique “Daytona” decklid, rear-quarter decal with matching spoiler and Daytona-exclusive B5 Blue paint are throwbacks to the 50th Anniversary. Like the legendary 1969 Daytona, production of the Daytona 50th Anniversary Edition is limited to 501 units. Handout / Dodge Like all Chargers, the Daytona 50th Anniversary Edition will be built in Brampton, Ontario. It pays tribute to the Dodge Charger Dayton introduced fifty years ago, which included a large rear wing and nose for NASCAR, and which was the first car to break 200 mph (320 km/h). Only 501 were built because that was the minimum needed to qualify for the race circuit.Dodge claims that the 707-horsepower Charger SRT Hellcat Widebody is the most powerful and fastest mass-produced sedan in the world. The widebody styling adds 8.8 centimetres to the car, along with wider wheels and tires.Pricing hasnt been announced, but Canadian enthusiasts will be able to order theirs this fall, with delivery in early
Origin: New Dodge Charger Daytona edition boasts 717 horsepower

Watch: Ridiculous feud sees Dodge Challenger Demon left to burn after burnout

A Dodge Challenger SRT Demon that caught fire setting up for a drag strip run was left to burn for a few minutes after the owner got in an argument with the tracks safety marshal, reveals a new video posted to YouTube.The burnout starts at about the 50-second mark in the video uploaded to MotorTube, and ends shortly after when a small pop of flame exits the underside of the car and power stops being sent to the rear wheels.The marshal quickly steps in with a fire extinguisher and douses the underside of the car, yelling to the driver to shut the car off. According to the driver, he can’t shut it off, which apparently starts some sort of swear-filled argument between the two.The owner slowly exits the car, seemingly unperturbed by the fact that his rare drag-spec Demon is literally burning to the ground next to him. The marshal leaves, angry at the owner for disobeying him, and lets the car burn, while the owner refuses to open the hood to let the marshals put out the fire.The whole thing just looks bad for both parties why didnt the owner just open the hood? Could the marshal not have kept his cool a little longer? Why does this car have to suffer over this
Origin: Watch: Ridiculous feud sees Dodge Challenger Demon left to burn after burnout

Dealership creates the convertible Challenger that Dodge won’t

A North Carolina dealership has created the Challenger convertible that Dodge wont build from the factory.Ford and Chevrolet have convertible versions of their modern pony cars, but Dodge has never personally stepped up to the game and created its own, and its seeming more unlikely as the platform ages.Tired of waiting, Keffer Dodge, Chrysler, Ram and Jeep sent three Challengers off to a shop named Convertible Builders in Florida, which chopped off the top and added a soft fabric version that opens and closes with the push of a button.According to Motor Authority, the conversions were done to a standard Challenger and two R/T Scat Pack models, one fitted with the 485-horsepower 6.4-litre HEMI V8; and the other with a 5.7-litre V8 that makes 375 horsepower. All three come with automatic transmissions for optimum cruising.The gray, white, and red cars are listed at US$64,000, US$60,000 and US$56,300, respectively. That means that the conversion of the vehicle to convertible costs about US$16,000 on top of the base price of an automatic Challenger.Theres no telling what Convertible Builders has done to improve the structural integrity of the Challenger so it can handle the loss of a roof, but from the name of its shop, we can guess this isnt their first rodeo. Perhaps in the future, these conversions will even be seen as a classic move, and command a premium for their
Origin: Dealership creates the convertible Challenger that Dodge won’t

Street-racing Dodge Vipers in B.C. show off more horsepower than skill

In this week’s installment of “Just Because You Can Afford the Car, Doesn’t Mean You Can Drive It,” we have an offering from Surrey, B.C. RCMP there will be using video posted to Twitter to track down what happened when two Dodge Vipers went head-to-head – almost literally – in a drag start off a light gone wrong. The video, posted Monday evening, reveals two freaked-out people in the car with the camera.The red Viper, to the right, takes a left turn into the black Viper almost directly off the light. Maybe one driver thought he was at a drag strip, the other at NASCAR? Either way, all that throttle was under a very inexperienced foot.Warning: The video features foul language.Watch the clip: you can hear the unmistakable sound of two high-powered cars acknowledging their intent as the light turns green. B.C., like many jurisdictions, is introducing more speed cameras and harsher penalties, and much of it is because of drivers like these. These two clowns were on Highway 10, but as you can see, this route is in Surrey at an intersection and is much more residential than freeway. The fact they’re doing this at 7 pm makes it lethal to more than just the idiots behind the wheels of the two cars.While police aren’t saying at this point if the vehicles were racing or not (they didn’t get far enough off the light before the red Viper handed in his race card) they are saying they will be analyzing the footage taken from a car behind the crash. Just another reminder everything you do is no doubt being recorded, and will be used against you.Take it to the track,
Origin: Street-racing Dodge Vipers in B.C. show off more horsepower than skill

Dodge making a Pikes Peak hill climb run with new Charger Hellcat Widebody

Mere hours after letting the rabid feline that is the 2020 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Widebody out of its cage for the first time, Dodge has announced that it’ll be testing the 707-horsepower car on the slopes of Pikes Peak. The automaker is teaming up once more with Michigan racers Wesley Motorsports to bring the Hellcat Widebody to the Pikes Peak Hill Climb in Colorado. The team is hopeful that this year, with the new set of wider tires and adjusted fender flares and fascia, the Hellcat will be more nimble than ever.  Dodge will run its new Charger Hellcat Widebody at this year’s Pikes Peak Hill Climb. Handout / Dodge The stock 2020 Charger Hellcat Widebody has a supercharged 6.2-litre V8 good for those 707 horses and 650 lb.-ft. of torque, and paired to an eight-speed automatic. Top speed is 315 km/h, but that’s running on flat ground. For the sloped test, Dodge and Wesley have added a racing exhaust, upgraded shocks, brakes and tires, stripped the interior for weight, and added roll cage, just in case.  Pro racer and four-time Pikes Peak vetran Randy Pobst will coax the car around the 156 turns and up to the 14,115-foot (4,302-metre) summit of the 2019 Time Attack 1 class this
Origin: Dodge making a Pikes Peak hill climb run with new Charger Hellcat Widebody

Dodge teases Widebody version of 2020 Charger

The next time some hackneyed old Boomer drones on about the good old days of cars and horsepower, please point them to this news article.Dodge, master of the tease, dropped a new video today that alludes to the impending introduction of a Charger Widebody variant. While this isn’t the first time such a machine has been speculated about on these digital pages, it is the first time we have official video from the manufacturer.The quick clips starts off in typical teaser fashion, with the thin veneer of a silk sheet covering the body of what is clearly a Dodge Charger. Its grille-mounted SRT badge is familiar, but those wheel arches portend something much more delicious.Alert readers will recall Dodge showed off a Charger Widebody Concept earlier this year at a SpringFest fan expo. Clad in all manner of camo, the brands head of performance said it was just a prototype. Yep, mmhmm. And the Raptors victory celebration was just a small party.Predictably, the video cuts off before we get a chance to see any of the good stuff, not unlike when someone picked up the phone during the days of dial-up just as the good pictures were about to load onto the screen. Theres every chance in the world well see multiple Widebody variations once production starts, ranging from Scat Pack to Redeye. What? Redeye? Yes, gossip is rife that its not only the body that will be puffed up like a kid on a field trip who got stung by a bee and forgot his EpiPen. Rumours are flying that this, or potentially another variant, will be packing Redeye power under its bulging bonnet. That means we are about to live in a world where one can waltz into a showroom and buy a 797-horsepower sedan with factory warranty.Trust us folks, these are the good old days. We should know more about this beast on
Origin: Dodge teases Widebody version of 2020 Charger

FCA could drop the Dodge Grand Caravan for a new low-cost Voyager: analyst

The 1984 Plymouth Voyager and Dodge Caravan started the minivan segment.FCA As part of a massive retooling of the Chrysler Windsor plant to build a new Chrysler Pacifica, FCA may also plan to bring back the Voyager minivan as an entry-level option.Automotive News Canada reports that FCA plans to invest $350 million into the Chrysler Windsor plant over the summer in order to handle the production of a new all-wheel-drive version of the popular Pacifica minivan.The next step could be to use the extinct Voyager nameplate on an entry-level version of the Chrysler Pacifica, in order to maintain a foothold in the cheap minivan segment after the likely exit of the Dodge Grand Caravan.They just cant afford to risk that foothold that they have in the minivan space, I think theres more of a risk in killing the Caravan and having only one Pacifica and having too many trim levels where they lose the high-end Caravan buyer to a higher-sized Pacifica, according to industry analyst Joe McCabe.Thats where we see the risk. They have to make sure they backfill the more cost-conscientious Caravan buyer.If not for the introduction of a minivan with a lower price point, FCA would at least have to offer better packages and larger rebates on the Pacifica after the Grand Caravan goes away, in order to keep those customers in the fold. Thats the thinking of Ryan Tessier, general manager of Drumheller Chrysler in Alberta, who said a cheaper van is pretty important.Minivan sales have been on a steady decline due to the influx of SUVs, but FCA isnt ready to let other manufacturers take all the
Origin: FCA could drop the Dodge Grand Caravan for a new low-cost Voyager: analyst

Car Review: 2019 Dodge Challenger Hellcat Redeye

OVERVIEW An absolute brute of a muscle car PROSRidiculous power, equally ridiculous exhaust note, retro-cool styling, surprisingly spacious inside CONSFuel economy, too heavy, zero respect for subtlety, Mustang and Camaro handle far better VALUE FOR MONEYFair — on one hand, you get almost 800 HP for a fraction on the price of most supercars. On the other hand, the performance isnt much improved over the standard Hellcat WHAT TO CHANGE?Nothing HOW TO SPEC IT?Exactly like this Clayton Seams: Surely, cars aren’t forever. They’ve been our go-to mode of personal transport for over a century, but it’s inevitable that the car as we know it, especially gasoline-powered ones, will eventually fade away to make room for a newer form of personal transport. It likely won’t fully happen in another 50, or maybe even 100 years, but surely, it will happen. And when it does, and all the cars are relegated to air-conditioned museums with marble floors, we’ll still talk about the Dodge Challenger Hellcat — the last of the dinosaurs, the car that thumbed its supercharger at convention and threw caution (and tire smoke) to the wind. This is a car for the ages. Specifically the ages of 5 to 15 because principally, the 2019 Dodge Challenger Hellcat is a car for children — and childish adults. It has angry cat badges on it, it comes in purple, lime green, bright blue and a handful of other loud colours, and it’s the size of a wooly mammoth. But this isn’t just any run-of-the-mill, 717-horsepower Hellcat. No, this purple people-eater (and tire-shredder) has the $18,000 Redeye package, which bumps output from its supercharged 6.2-litre Hemi V8 engine to an insane 797 horsepower and 707 pound-feet of torque. But what else do you get for your money? Nick Tragianis: First thing’s first — although you may think FCA treats the Hellcat Redeye as its own model, and indeed FCA markets it that way — it’s technically an option package on top of the regular Hellcat. It certainly isn’t cheap, but it comes with a laundry list of goodies all in the name of more speed. For instance, the 2.7-litre supercharger (the largest available on any production car, by the way), is larger than the Hellcat’s 2.4L unit and provides more boost; 14.5 psi in the Redeye vs. 11.6 in the standard car. You also get a higher redline, two fuel pumps, and two final drive ratios — our tester was equipped with the 2.62:1 ratio — plus a few bits off the Challenger Demon, including its Torque Reserve feature, Power and After-Run Chillers, and beefed-up prop shafts, to name a few. Unlike the standard Hellcat, the Redeye is only available with an eight-speed automatic transmission. So, that $18,000 isn’t a complete waste, especially considering the extra 80 horsepower and 51 lb.-ft. of torque. But is it just me, or are the actual numbers not that much more impressive versus the standard Hellcat? We’re talking a zero-to-100 km/h time reduced by a mere tenth of a second — 3.4 seconds in the Redeye versus 3.5 over the regular kitty, and a 326 km/h top speed versus 321. But I suppose those numbers, although piecemeal and ones that will be incredibly rare to experience, are improvements nonetheless. CS: It’s true. Paying $18,000 for more power on an already-overpowered car doesn’t make the most sense, but it’s also a bit of a quagmire to apply logic to a near-800-horsepower car with purple paint. The Hellcat is an attitude machine, attracting jealous stares at red lights and consuming nearby souls every time the throttle is opened. It’s a car that thrives in its wrongness and doesn’t try to fit in for even a second in this mobility obsessed 2019. How does it drive? Violently. At any legal speed, mashing the gas pedal to the floor will send the traction control light flickering for its life as the rear tires squirm for grip and the Redeye catapults itself into the distance. Sure, there are faster cars than the Hellcat; its mid-three-second zero-to-100 km/h time isn’t record-breaking, but it’s the way you get there. The shrill whine from the blower fights for airspace with the tearing V8 exhaust. In a way, you wish it could last longer, but you’ve already passed get a ticket speeds and are now firmly in the go to jail zone. Is the Redeye too fast? NT: Yes, because obviously the regular Hellcat clearly wasn’t fast enough. I firmly maintain the Challenger SRT 392 — or, more accurately these days, the Challenger Scat Pack 392 with the Dynamics Package — is the sweet spot of the lineup, but the Hellcat is truly a different animal altogether. The Redeye is neither light, nor does it handle particularly well, although the 305-section tires do lend a fair bit of grip. But it’s the Redeye’s sheer ferocity and violence that make it entertaining as hell; you’ll crave open stretches of road, highway on-ramps and tunnels. The Ford Mustang and Chevrolet Camaro are far more sports cars than the Challenger will ever be; the Jaguar F-Type offers a far more
Origin: Car Review: 2019 Dodge Challenger Hellcat Redeye

Golfer wins tournament, gifts classic Dodge prize to his caddie

Professional golfer Kevin Na recently gave his longtime caddie a tip worth more than many people’s salaries. After winning the Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas – and the top prize, which included a modified classic Dodge – with a birdie on the 18th, Na embraced his friend and 11-year caddie, Kenny Harms, and said “That’s your car, baby!” We’re not talking some beater, either. Harms was handed the keys to a fully resto-modded 1973 Dodge Challenger. Taking a shining to the automotive prize in practice rounds earlier in the week, Harms had asked Na if he could have the car if he won. Na agreed. With the win Kevin Na gets this 1973 Dodge Challenger car! pic.twitter.com/IRtx83wyOZ PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) May 26, 2019 After @kevinna915 wins this week #charlesschwabchallenge This beauty is mine,” Harms then posted to Instagram, making the pledge public. He’s a good salesman, I guess, Na said after the tournament. He sold me into it. But I’m more than happy to give it to him. He deserves it. There’s no question it was a generous tip, but Na didn’t leave empty-handed. His cash prize for winning the tournament was nearly US$1.3 million. Check out the video of Na handing the keys over to his buddy. How
Origin: Golfer wins tournament, gifts classic Dodge prize to his caddie

Green Party leader cruises Victoria Day parade in Dodge Viper

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May takes part in the 121st annual Victoria Day Parade in Victoria, B.C., on Monday, May 20, 2019.Chad Hipolito / Canadian Press Gearheads like us can rhyme off the OG Dodge Viper RT/10’s stats with alarming ease: 8.0-litre V10 engine making 400 horsepower; rear-wheel drive; and it’ll only get double-digit-MPG fuel economy on a good day. It’s that latter spec that makes it a surprising choice as the Victoria Day parade ride for Green Party leader Elizabeth May. According to news sources in the area, May jumped aboard a 1994 Viper to participate in the Island Farms Victoria Day parade. The move drew some swift criticism for the leader of a political party founded on its commitment to the environment, and whose platform calls for Canadians to trade their internal-combustion cars for EVs. The first-gen Viper is the opposite of an EV in every way, shape and form. It was a rainy ride for sure, and not a Green vehicle. Local #yyj volunteer Pat Peron owns this 1994 Viper. I rode where parade organizers asked me to. 🙂 https://t.co/W9B0O5T15T Elizabeth May (@ElizabethMay) May 21, 2019 In response to a citizen’s tweet poking at the gaffe, May explained the decision to ride in the bright red Viper was made by “parade organizers.” While a short ride in a Viper isn’t the end of the world – and while we personally dig the car very much – a better choice could have been made to improve the optics of the situation. It calls to mind the numerous vehicular blunders to have befallen Canadian politicians over the years, like when Stockwell Day showed up to a press conference on a WaveRunner. He could have at least used a Canadian Sea-Doo. It appears this isn’t the first time Ms. May has selected that same Viper, owned by a party volunteer, as her whip of choice for parade duty. The issue was called out by some media last year, who also posted photos of the leader in the red sports car. Check out video above from this year’s parade. The Viper, and Ms. May, show up at about the eight-and-a-half minute
Origin: Green Party leader cruises Victoria Day parade in Dodge Viper