I just wanted to write and let you all know how much fun I've had with my ACR recently. I got the car about a year ago and hadn't been able to drive it much since I was living in one state and it was living in another (long story).
However, recently we've been reunited and I got to drive it quite a bit. Best of all, I finally got to take it to the track. The car lives in Utah, so the place to go is Larry Miller Motor Speedway. I took it to their Wide Open Wednesday and was able to do one session of 25 minutes with an instructor. It was awesome!!!! I can't believe how well the car handles and how capable it is. I'm a beginner driver and found the car very easy to drive. You just have to respect it and remember to be smooth. I disagree with the belief some people have that the car is hard to drive and a brute. You just can't expect the car to baby you and take care of you. I know this for a fact because I did spin the car, but it was my fault.
During one of the last laps, I started to push it and came into a turn a little fast. I got nervous and stabbed at the brakes which was just enough to unsettle the rear end and send it sliding out. If I was a better driver I could have saved it. Thanks to reading a lot of post on here I knew to put both feet down (clutch and brake) and the car came to a quick stop in the middle of the track after doing less than half a turn.
The best thing about the event was I learned about NASA and the full weekend events they have. I was able to take the car to a full day of HPDE 1 driving. I got 4 sessions on Saturday and one on Sunday. (Wife said I had to spend most of Sunday with her. I'm still working on getting her bitten. Apparently she is immune to Viper venom. However, I did see her giggle one time when she took off from a stop light when she was driving the ACR. Maybe there is hope.)
The NASA event was awesome and my instructor is an owner of an orange Viper TA. He saw the ACR and came over and said "I'm going ot instruct you. Us Viper guys have to stick together." Needless to say we had a blast and he taught me that the first rule of Viper nation is that we eat up Porsches. There were two in my group a Carrera 4S and a Turbo. (If there were any Corvettes in my group I don't remember them. They were just blurs as I passed them). It didn't take much work to do a way with the 4S. The Turbo was a different story. We had fun dulling back and forth all day. Those Turbos are fast in a straight line, but the ACR ate it up in the turns. The G's you feel in the fast turns are exhilarating. And I can tell you one thing, I was having way more fun in my analog ACR with its manual gear box than he in his digital Porsche with a computer watching out for him and its dual clutch transmission doing all the shifting. (I'll try to post some pics later.)
I'm now completely addicted and can't wait to track the car some more. If you have one of these cars, and are debating about whether to track it or not. Do it. It's so worth it. Seems like there are two types of Viper owners. Ones who drive there cars hard and another group who like to own the Viper, but don't drive it often because they want to keep it in mint condition or have a sweet car collection and not enough time to drive all their cars. To each their own. At first, I did feel guilty about tracking my ACR because it is hard on the car (I already cracked my windshield when the Turbo shot a rock up and at me), but the Viper is built for the track and can take it. I'm glad I've decided to drive mine. I'm also glad that many Viper owners don't put a lot of miles on their cars because somewhere right now, one of them is ordering my future 2016 ACR with extreme areo. I'll take possesion of it in a few years when it has some where between 2K and 4K miles on it. I just hope they are choosing a color I like.
Oh, one last thing.. I spun the car again my second time out. Again, it was my fault. I have some work to do.
Thanks for reading this long post. Hopefully it motivates some people to take their Viper to the track.
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