×

You've read your three free articles!

Register to get two more free articles plus an exclusive subscription discount, or click below to subscribe right away.

Register

Features

Back to Library >
ti icon

Features

Underrated: Chrysler Viper RT/10

2 years ago

Writer:

Steve Sutcliffe | Journalist

Date:

15 December 2023

We didn’t really ‘get’ the Viper RT/10 when it swam across the pond and emerged upon our shores, Kraken-like, in 1993. At the time, us Brits looked right down our noses at this brutish and brash sports car from America, dismissing it for having neither the visual nor the technical sophistication of the more established European sports cars of that era.

In the UK, the car was marketed as the Chrysler Viper, not as a Dodge, mainly because Maximum Bob Lutz (who helped create it) was trying to redevelop Chrysler as a brand across Europe at the time. As such it came with a beguiling absence of frills. The RT in its title stood simply for Rapid Transport while the ‘10’ indicated how many cylinders it had.

Its hood, which was pathetic, looked more like a crashed hang glider and although its 8-litre V10 motor contained an exotic-sounding number of cylinders it was, in fact, related to a truck motor, albeit with its block cast in aluminium. I mean aluminum. Its Tremec T56 six-speed gearbox was truck-based too. Its cabin looked like it had been designed by Tonka while its plastic-composite bodyshell was wider than Rodney Trotter, its extraordinarily long one-piece bonnet seeming to end somewhere in the middle of whichever town your next appointment was in.

You've read your free articles!

Want more from The Intercooler? Subscribers get full access to our new daily articles plus our archive of 1500+ articles, as well as audio articles and exclusive podcasts, all ad-free. Click the link below to check out our monthly and annual subscriptions. Choose a monthly subscription and use coupon code 10SAVE to get 10% off for the first year. Choose an annual subscription for our most cost-effective subscription plus a 30-day free trial.

Subscribe

Already subscribed? Click here to log in.