Hello everyone, I'm thinking about buying a viper on the other side of the country. I'm located in California. I had a few questions-
I am a fat middle aged guy. Like really fat. 5'9 and 300 pounds. I have a bad lower back, but most of the time it only gets sore when I do stupid stuff like unloading a ton of rocks with a shovel and stuff like that. I drive a Neon SRT-4 and I have a Dakota, and they ride pretty rough, but nowhere near as rough as my buddy's Lotus Exige. My question is - can this car be a daily driver? It doesn't rain here from about now until October or November. I do drive an hour each day in pretty bad traffic, and I know the interior heats up, but I've heard as long as the A/C is on, you're fine.
Is it too rough riding? Am I too fat? I've read up against really tall guys needing seat lowering equipment, but not many threads from big guys.
As far as what to look for - I'm planning on having a service like lemon squad look the car over. I don't know if the dealer is willing for me to coordinate shipping to a dodge dealer and have a viper tech go over it. That being said, what should I look for on a higher mileage viper? This is a 2003, so I know it will have the forged rods which is good, but it has the 120 degree crank oiling which is not good for the rods. Is listening for tapping/knocking, looking at the oil pressure at startup and at regular temp good enough? I'd love to pull the plugs and get a compression test done, along with a crank endplay checked out, but I'm not sure if even Dodge would do that, let alone the dealer allow a private mechanic to wrench around the car for the better part of a day. Am I missing anything else? I know the T56 is pretty robust - no not a TR6060, but otherwise a pretty good gearbox. How long does a gently-driven clutch last?
Thanks again. I wasn't sure if this was the best place to post this, but I thought the new owner probably wouldn't be the best place to ask because they are just learning the cars themselves.
Oh - I think y'all would appreciate this. I finished up a thesis in graduate school in December (I went to grad school very late...No, I'm not in my 20's LOL). It was on autonomous vehicles (blah, I know) but I actually got to have a telephone interview with Bob Lutz. First thing I did was let him know how much I loved the Viper and thanked him for convincing Dodge to build it. (At least that's how it sounded in his book "Guts").
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