RE: Dodge Ram SRT-10 | Spotted
RE: Dodge Ram SRT-10 | Spotted
Tuesday 31st March

Dodge Ram SRT-10 | Spotted

What's madder than an 8.3-litre V10 in a roadster? The same engine - with a manual - in a pick up...


Despite being launched 35 years ago - and with the third-generation model ceasing production almost a decade ago - there’s really nothing quite like the Dodge Viper. The Corvette and the Mustang may have more heritage and more sales associated with them, but for sheer madness the Dodge really has no equal. Pitched as a spiritual successor to the AC Cobra, it really was just as extreme. Usually tribute acts are tamed down to some extent - not the Viper. 

And while its incredible design played a part in its iconic status, the Viper’s USP has to be its engine. Even hailing from a land where there’s never been a replacement for displacement, an 8.0-litre V10 in a two-door sports car remains one of the craziest engineering decisions ever made. Derived from the LA family of V8s with some help from then owners Lamborghini, it was considered loopy even at a time of unfettered fun for the combustion engine. And would only get sillier, of course, growing in size and output as the Viper evolved. By the end, an SRT-10 was rated at 8.4-litre and almost 650hp. With the torque to pull down Mount Rushmore. 

So captivating was the Viper vibe that Dodge wasn’t the only company to make a V10 sports car using its underpinnings. There was the Bristol Fighter for one, and the Zagato-bodied Alfa TZ3 Stradale. Plus a hundred bonus PH points for those that can recall the Spania GTA Spano, which upped the madness further with supercharged and twin-turbo versions. Even Dodge itself wasn’t content for its monumental V10 to stay nestled in the Viper; after a pair of concept trucks, seemingly the bluff was called and a real Ram SRT-10 was made for production. 

Ram is very proud of the fact that the Hemi V8 is returning to its trucks, up to and including the 700hp+ TRX, but they’re nothing in the crazy commercial vehicle stakes compared to the SRT-10. Because the engine was largely unchanged from its original installation, still at 8.3 litres and 507hp. In a Ram. You could even have the six-speed manual, as this one does, for the full Viper crew cab experience. 

Now, obviously, sharing an engine with a Viper doesn’t mean a Ram is going to drive like a Viper. It’s a lot heavier and less sophisticated. Indeed, only 10,000 V10-engined Rams ever sold because, to be frank, it was hard to see the point. On its giant shiny wheels, you weren’t going to put it to hard work on the ranch, even with 525lb ft. Rear-drive further limited its usability. And a chassis toughened up to handle the power was pretty unyielding. One review read: ‘I don't want to hyperbolize, but those mono-tube Bilsteins are so unyielding as to blur my vision. The bed shakes and shimmies like a wet hunting dog, and I noticed a nice collection of trim bits vibrating in a paint-shaker dance that's sure to end in tears.’ This was 20-odd years ago, remember. 

The same review also said: ‘Stuffing a 500hp Viper V10 into a pickup truck is a preposterous idea. So, of course, Dodge did exactly that’. And that’s why the Ram is so lovable. It apparently exists for no other reason than the sheer hell of it, an approach that it’s hard not to admire. The fuel cost will be crippling and left-hand drive has never looked more intimidating, but talk about guaranteed entertainment. This 2005 car has actually been in the UK for the majority of its life, landing here in time for an MOT in 2008. Back then, it was on 5,000 miles and it’s still yet to get past 20k; as discussed, this is hardly a truck for everyday errands. As something to show, however, little could be better. And minimal use means minimal wear, the Ram looking as good as… well, as good as an early 2000s American car could look. But that’s missing the point. The Ram grants access to one of the daftest feats of combustion ever completed, and for that we love it. 


SPECIFICATION | DODGE RAM SRT/10

Engine: 8,292cc, V10
Transmission: 6-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 507@5,600rpm
Torque (lb ft): 525@4,200rpm
MPG: Hope for double digits
CO2: Yes
Year registered: 2005
Recorded mileage: 18,856
Price new: $45,795 (2004)
Yours for: £49,950

See the original advert

 

Author
Discussion

pb8g09

Original Poster:

3,094 posts

94 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
I remember reading about these in a magazine when I was at school some 20+ years ago and lusting for one ever since. Utterly bonkers then and even now in a world of big power and silly SUVs, it’s still mental. No doubt negative comments incoming but I won’t care, she’s still beautiful to me.

biggbn

30,825 posts

245 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
So much want for this...

Chubbyross

4,909 posts

110 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
Oh, I feel so naughty for saying this but I really love that!

Andy86GT

926 posts

90 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
If you like the V10 engine, but prefer 2 wheeled fun, Alan Millyard has the solution;




Robertb

3,576 posts

263 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
This dealer always has interesting stock, they sold that fabulous 12C recently.

There is a V8 one of these in our office car park. It is vast!

Who_Goes_Blue

1,431 posts

196 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
And some people say EVs are the way.....fools

Geoff-Griff500

104 posts

54 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
Got to love these even if it's totally impractical in the UK.
"MPG: Hope for double digits", nice

Turbobanana

8,060 posts

226 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
In the early 2000s, someone I worked for had a hankering for some German army uniforms. I don't know why.

He tracked down someone who wanted to offload some and set up a clandestine meeting somewhere near the Swiss border because such transactions were verboten at the time, I believe.

From about two valleys away he heard what he described as a WWII Spitfire approaching, evidently being given the beans. The noise grew until a huge, V10-powered Ram pickup on open headers swung into view.

Pleasantries and cash exchanged, half a dozen German army uniforms were passed from the pick up to my man's Chrysler Voyager, a process hampered by them being fitted to life-size mannequins who were predictably uncooperative.

I remain unsure how he got the Voyager through UK Customs, but there may have been a hurried visit to a Dutch window tinting company somewhere near Hook of Holland.

For all of the above, I will always have a soft spot for a Dodge Ram with a V10. It makes its own fuel crisis.

//Pedant mode: the article refers to a crew cab - the model shown is a regular cab. Handsome beast, isn't it?

irish boy

3,891 posts

261 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
Love it! Very rare in manual, was only available as a short wheel base. The 4 door was auto only.

don logan

3,887 posts

247 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
Always wanted one of these, shame the bent gear shifter has been replaced by what is probably a better one

CountyLines

4,859 posts

28 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
Robertb said:
This dealer always has interesting stock
The X-BOW they've got is fantastic.

cerb4.5lee

42,307 posts

205 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
I'd struggle to keep up with the fuel bills for sure, but what a thing though. It being a manual just adds to the want for me as well. smokin

parabolica

6,970 posts

209 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
pb8g09 said:
I remember reading about these in a magazine when I was at school some 20+ years ago and lusting for one ever since. Utterly bonkers then and even now in a world of big power and silly SUVs, it s still mental. No doubt negative comments incoming but I won t care, she s still beautiful to me.
Same. In a stroke of coincidence, my cousin ended up marrying a girl who grew up in the states due to her father's career there and they had a Ram SRT-10 - she learned to drive in it! She had a bunch of old early 2000s camera phone videos of her ripping down back roads in Texas in it.

pSyCoSiS

4,220 posts

230 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
Proper mad car. I love it.

I also love the GMC Syclone - the car that did this type of madness, almost 15 years earlier.

SuperPav

1,297 posts

150 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
While not a RAM, growing up spent a bit of time in the states and the F150 SVT Lightning was out at the time, so I vividly recall this type of truck.

It was bonkers then, still bonkers now. But I get great nostalgia vibes from it so one of them would have a space in my euromillions garage.

McRors

435 posts

81 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
Andy86GT said:
If you like the V10 engine, but prefer 2 wheeled fun, Alan Millyard has the solution;



I assume it only needs two gears: 1st and reverse.

smithyithy

7,802 posts

143 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
I'd buy that in a heartbeat if budget allowed. Ridiculous thing cloud9

Quhet

2,831 posts

171 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
That interior is hilariously bad laugh

Rich Boy Spanner

1,801 posts

155 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
Quhet said:
That interior is hilariously bad laugh
Compared with what? For a 2005 commercial vehicle it looks fine to me in design and condition. Looks better than many 2005 cars as well.

R4EVS

134 posts

63 months

Tuesday 31st March
quotequote all
Turbobanana said:
In the early 2000s, someone I worked for had a hankering for some German army uniforms. I don't know why.
He wasn't supplying a certain M. Mosley was he?