Robb Report (USA)

DRIVE

DODGE CHALLENGER SRT DEMON

- BY SHAUN TOLSON

The smell of hot asphalt and burnt rubber wafts into the open windows of the 2018 Dodge Challenger SRT Demon as Jim Wilder, vehicle developmen­t manager, eases the modern-day muscle car toward the staging area at Lucas Oil Raceway in Indianapol­is. Following a prolonged burnout, which cleans and warms the tires, Wilder prepares to launch the 840 hp Demon down the 4,400-foot-long drag strip using an electronic Trans Brake, a feature he helped to develop that allows the driver to increase engine speed up to 2,350 rpm without overpoweri­ng the brakes. The result is quicker power delivery with as much as 15 percent more torque off the line.

THIS HORSEPOWER HELLION IS FRIGHTFULL­Y FUN BEHIND THE WHEEL.

“Launching this car is the most fun, but it’s also the most challengin­g,” Wilder says as I buckle in next to him, eager to experience what the car can do. “It’s a fine line to achieve the right balance of throttle control which delivers the maximum amount of grip. Once you launch, it’s all about getting the torque to the back tires with the nose in the air, feeding the car everything you can.”

The tree of staging lights activates and cycles through the colors. At green for go, Wilder—making the most of his 25 years of drag-racing experience— releases the paddle while stepping on the accelerato­r, and the car surges forward. It’s a smooth launch, one that delivers a maximum of 1.8 gs of force and quickly blurs the landscape beyond the windows.

At the one-eighth-mile mark, Wilder eases off the gas and slows the Demon, though my pulse is still racing. Dozens of such rides during the afternoon have left the engine running a little warm; and

with the day’s temperatur­e hovering somewhere in the low 90s Fahrenheit, conditions are far from optimal. Neverthele­ss, the car sprinted from zero to 60 mph in 2.8 seconds, just five-tenths of a second slower than its best time.

“It’s thrilling every single time,” Wilder says, flashing a grin. “When you get it right, you’re thrown into the back of the seat, and you’re pinned there for the full quarter-mile run. It’s the best 9 seconds of your life.”

That shot of accelerati­on has been the fix for those addicted to automotive speed since the 1960s—an era defined by a youth-led rebellion against the materialis­tic tendencies of the previous decade, especially in the United States. Automakers took note and designed vehicles that stood out—in both appearance and performanc­e—from the ponderous cruisers of the 1950s. Those efforts led to the birth of the muscle car, a street-legal racer that was heavy on horsepower and brought motorsport­s to Main Street.

Just over 10 years ago, when Dodge engineers first approached the redesign of the Challenger, they took inspiratio­n from that original muscle-car era. According to Tim Kuniskis, head of passenger car brands for Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s North America, Dodge’s developers surveyed the marketplac­e and identified the car’s main competitio­n— the Ford Mustang and Chevrolet Camaro. They

recognized that there was little to be gained from creating a car that offered similar specs and driving experience­s to those of these other vehicles. Instead, Dodge debuted a 2008 Challenger that was deliberate­ly larger than its competitio­n.

“We’re going to be more muscle car,” says Kuniskis, recalling the brand’s strategy for the latest Challenger iteration. “More street strip, more lifestyle and attitude than cutting tenths of a second off road-course times. That was the car.”

When engineers from the Street and Racing Technology (SRT) division set out to build the Demon, which starts at $84,995, they began with a supercharg­ed 6.2-liter V-8 engine that pumps out 840 hp and generates 770 ft lbs of torque. Because the car was designed with the drag strip in mind, the SRT team focused on incorporat­ing into a street-legal vehicle the key attributes and abilities that all competitiv­e drag-racing cars share. Every drag racer, for example, features a suspension that mechanical­ly lifts the front end and firmly holds the back end down for better traction. The SRT folks found a way to accomplish that electronic­ally, resulting in a drag mode that maximizes weight transfer to the rear wheels.

The same is true for the aforementi­oned TransBrake. “We duplicated the whole thing with electronic­s,” says Kuniskis. “[With the paddle shifters engaged] the computer holds all the clutches closed

“This stuff isn’t an invention. We just looked

at all the things that drag racers do to their cars— we took all their tricks,

and we modernized them.”

and the car can’t move. Release the paddle, and the car launches.”

Similarly, the SRT engineers found a way to more efficientl­y cool a drag car’s engine between runs. Historical­ly, racers have used bags of ice to chill the upper portion of the engine, which cools the incoming air and produces more power. SRT devised a chilling system that cycles refrigeran­tcooled air to the supercharg­er’s heat exchangers. “With a flip of a switch, the car thinks it’s 30 degrees cooler out,” says Kuniskis.

An after-run cooling system also keeps the engine fan and low-temperatur­e circuit coolant pump running after the engine shuts down. The coolant’s temperatur­e can be monitored on the instrument panel’s touchscree­n, which lets the driver know when the supercharg­er has reached the optimum temperatur­e for another run down the strip. Together, the two systems can lower intake air temperatur­e by as much as 45 degrees Fahrenheit.

“This stuff isn’t an invention,” Kuniskis acknowledg­es. “We just looked at all the things that drag racers do to their cars—we took all their tricks, and we modernized them.”

Only 3,300 Dodge Challenger SRT Demons will be produced, and the demand has been daunting. Kuniskis has heard stories of customers paying as much as $50,000 above the MSRP to guarantee their place on a dealer’s allocation list, which makes him believe that many customers are purchasing the car as a speculativ­e investment. “They’re never even going to take the plastic off the seats,” he says, adding that about half of the Challenger SRT Demons produced are likely to get “put away in storage and never see the light of day until they go through a Barrett-Jackson auction in 20 years.”

Wilder has mixed emotions about such a reality. “It’s cool to have created something so special that it has that kind of investment stature,” he says,

“but if you just park it in your garage, you’re really missing out on a great driving experience.” To hell with that.

 ??  ?? “When you get it right, you’re thrown into the back of the seat, and you’re pinned there for the full quarter-mile run. It’s the
best 9 seconds of your life.”
“When you get it right, you’re thrown into the back of the seat, and you’re pinned there for the full quarter-mile run. It’s the best 9 seconds of your life.”
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 ??  ?? The Dodge Challenger SRT Demon possesses 840 horses and a spirited design inspired by muscle cars of the 1960s.
The Dodge Challenger SRT Demon possesses 840 horses and a spirited design inspired by muscle cars of the 1960s.
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 ??  ?? Enhanced off-theline performanc­e and overall engine efficiency are summoned by the Demon’s electronic TransBrake and innovative cooling systems.
Enhanced off-theline performanc­e and overall engine efficiency are summoned by the Demon’s electronic TransBrake and innovative cooling systems.
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