A short while ago I posted about Grassroots Vipers and how we'd gotten a 2001 Viper for about $30k. http://grassrootsmotorsports.com/forum/grm/the-new-grassroots/2673/page1/
You simply can't test the limits to a car like this on the street so we didn't even try. BTW this has become the daily driver for my friend and he regularly posts 20mpg with the car. It doesn't hurt that he very seldom has to put the car on crowded city streets.
We didn't want to do anything to the car until we'd had a chance to either put it on a track or do an autocross. After looking closely at the tires and the date codes we decided the track was out and an autocross was in. The date codes showed these had to have been the original tires and there was quite a bit of dry rot type of cracking on the sidewall and the beginning of the tread plus they were very hard.
We were pretty sure we wouldn't be competitive but we had to see how the balance was and how the car responded so we'd know how to even set an alignment or what size/type of tires to buy.
We chose to run at the local S2000 club since we knew everyone there and they promised not to laugh too loudly at us.
I got the first 4 runs. I began a very tentative 85 second run. My second run was down to 79 and I worked it down to a 77 second run. We switched seats and my friend worked it down from 77 to 75 seconds. We hadn't seen what anyone else was running but felt we were slow, slow, slow.
The biggest issue other than the hard tires was the brakes. We couldn't believe it, but the brakes sucked big time. The ABS didn't work and the fronts locked anytime you had any hard braking which severely limited our style.
The tires gave no warning between grip and no grip. They didn't squeal all day long. One second you had grip and then you noticed you had none. We couldn't get back on the power after a corner until the car was perfectly straight. Interestingly the car never got out of control or seemed a handful. It was a perfect gentleman even when none of the tires were gripping.
Of course the tires were limiting the braking power, but with no ABS it just made it worse.
At lunch we looked at some times and found that we were right in the hunt with other heavy cars at the event. We were .2 slower than a Z06 with Hoosiers and a Mustang GT with Hoosiers and an excellent, excellent driver. Both of them didn't have passengers for their runs. We didn't feel too bad until we looked at the S2000 and the Miata times - they were in the 71 range.
We came back from lunch with the determination to improve or spin trying. My partner went first and he was initially slower than the morning session, but he improved and finally got a 74.04 time. I jumped in and clicked off two 74.4 runs but couldn't get any better even when I dumped him for a solo run.
Interestingly I had brought a young friend to the autocross. This was only his 2nd autocross and it took a lot to finally get him to come. We had to browbeat him into trying it at the previous autocross and while he was slow he improved almost every lap at the first autocross AND LOVED IT! This time we were running opposite him so couldn't ride with him and give instruction and so he was feeling less than stellar about himself so I loaned him my S2000 since I wasn't driving it. He immediately knocked 4 seconds off his time to beat us.
We had actually brought 2 guys in their early 20's to the autocross. The other guy ended up being first in the street tire class. He must have been sandbagging us and had gone to an autocross or 2 before.
The car didn't really disappoint us as it was as easy to drive as the S, just more ponderous to move thru the tight sections. We can't wait to get some fresh rubber on the car and try it again. We're trying to find some RA1s now which we'll use on the street as well as on the track, but they are tough to find in any size, much less Viper size of 275/35 x 18 front and 335/30 x 18 rear. Oh, and no tire in this size could be remotely considered cheap.
The car is at the Dodge dealer to diagnose the ABS problem. I looked under the hood during lunch at the autocross and didn't find an ABS module but the dealer swears it has ABS.
We also had some interesting tire pressure issues. The tires heated up much more than I was used to. We finally ended up with 36 psi in the right front (due to the number of left handers) and 35 in the rest. I've never had a car that didn't require quite a bit more pressure in the fronts than the back.