Originally Posted by
v10addiction
Super Chargers are easy to install, and make great power and torque until they heat soak, but they will not last with regular track use.
Back to back pulls with a super charger on our dyno showed how bad heat soak kills the power after just two pulls.
This why S/C guys carry ice to the dyno to cool the intake and superchargers.
Even water to air inter-coolers can't cut it.
Just look at the ZR1, after one pull it's down 130hp.
Twin turbos are complex to route or fit, and at a nightmare to keep the oil moving back to the pan on a Viper.
Every oil pump on the market short of a dry sump fails rather quickly.
When the turbo oil pump stops, turbos die!
Dry sumps run $10k and up.
Plus turbo have lag issues and require very specialized tuning to be safe, and become a serious potential fire hazard due to the tight fit.
You are unlikely to get a good turbo setup to fit a viper without cutting a lot of the car, especially around the foot wells and front nose for the inter-cooler.
A well built N/A motor, making power and torque over 650 will cost a lot to build and will need exotic fuel to live there.
An average 600+ N/A build will cost $20k+, in most cases $30k.
Valve train alone could set you back $5k without heads.
They are bad ass, but to make that power, it will be unlikely you would drive it very far with the noise level associated with the bigger open exhaust required.
We have built them all, and the king power adder is Nitrous hands down!
Motor stays stock, runs at the track, only makes big power when you need it.
Down side, the bottles do run empty sooner or later.
We use nitrous, even on road race cars for passing.
Nitrous is cheap and easy to install, done properly will not hurt anything, even cleans pistons and valves.
Many companies make the parts, and you can easily hide the nitrous install on a Viper.
If you know anything about electronics, you can build multistage setups with their own fuel supply, allowing you to run 91-93 octane in the tank and supply race gas only during the nitrous shot.
With proper octane and plugs, no timing retarding or retuning is necessary.
Gen I and Gen II's can be tricked to enrich the fuel for use with dry shots up to 140hp.
The hit of the nitrous can be controlled by the design of the lines, so you can get out of the hole with the shot on.
You can also control it with window switches, O2 safety, and TPS detection.
There are some rules you have to follow, but no S/C, TT, or N/A car of equal power can beat a Nitrous car, properly set up and driven.
In short, it can be made idiot proof!
A well set up nitrous system can be built for around $1000.
A nice two stage system for $2000.
Power levels can range from 50hp-300hp+ on a stock Gen I or Gen II, 50hp-200hp on stock Gen 3-4's.
I ran a stock Gen I Rt/10 on a two stage 265hp system for years without any issues.
The car ran high 10's on drag radials.
We pulled the heads last year to put in cometic head gaskets (thinner) for more compression, and were stunned see the rings and cylinder walls were perfect at 67k miles, on all that racing.
The factory cross hatching was still perfect!
I know many who hide nitrous in their Viper, and smoke the newer cars at events, leaving owners shaking theirs heads.
Nothing hits faster and gets you moving quicker then nitrous.
Unlike a Super charger, TT, or N/A motor, whatever power level of Nitrous you run hits with that power no matter what rpm.
Super chargers suffer on the high end, TT's build huge intake heat at big power and lag on the bottom, negating much of the gains.
N/A motors need RPM to make the power, so you end up having to shift it perfectly to see the benefits plus pay through the nose for high octane fuel.
We own them all, and they all have there place.
But a street driven reliable Viper with mean power is easier and cheaper built on Nitrous.
On gen 3-4 Vipers, there are some other safety measures to consider, but we run Nitrous on our gen IV's as well.
If you want a dyno queen, S/C make torque, TT's make horsepower, and N/A make noise, and nitrous can match any of them.
You can even tune nitrous to produce torque over horsepower by simply running a richer shot.
Nitrous power gains do not require you to rev the motor anymore than stock (but will if you want), and shut down instantly for braking.
The same is not easily said for any other build.
PM me if you want details on how to put nitrous on a Viper.
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