RE: Challenger Hellcat Redeye Jailbreak | Spotted
RE: Challenger Hellcat Redeye Jailbreak | Spotted
Yesterday

Challenger Hellcat Redeye Jailbreak | Spotted

One of the very final 6.2 Challengers has made it here, widebody and all - approach with caution... 


There weren’t meant to be any more muscle car icons, really. Those legendary names from the past - Chevelle, Challenger, Camaro, Charger, Superbird, Galaxie, GTO - were sufficiently well established that it was hard to imagine their ranks being bolstered. Especially in leaner times for the genre. But no one told Dodge. Yes, the 21st-century Challenger and Charger obviously used historic names, but their respective reputations as modern muscle car pinups were really cemented by the introduction of a 6.2-litre supercharged V8 to the lineup. You’ll know them better as the Hellcats.

Both Challenger and Charger were likeable enough nostalgia fests with 5.7 litres, of course - but the introduction of the Hellcat motor, however, is what really secured them special status. Here was more than 700hp in a car that cost less than a BMW M4. And from an auspicious start more than a decade ago - with the Charger claiming a ‘fastest sedan in the world’ crown at 204mph - things just got sillier and sillier. If the muscle car genre is all about glorious excess and to heck with the consequences, Dodge proved the absolute masters. 

A few years after the regular Hellcat came the Redeye, nudging 800hp and still available with four doors. The standard supercharged V8 went in both the Grand Cherokee and the Durango SUV, because they could. There was a Hellcat Demon for crying out loud, complete with a Demon Crate to make it even faster down a drag strip; then, because 850hp wasn’t enough, there was an SRT Demon 170, a factory-built Dodge with more than 1,000hp. The Challenger name might have been a classic one, but the Hellcats were undoubtedly a very modern kind of muscle car hero. 

The end was announced in 2021, with a pair of Hellcat Redeye Widebody Jailbreak machines. A further tweak of the V8 liberated more than 800hp, some cool colour combos were offered, and there was something of a bunfight to get them with electrification looming. And even by the standards of EV performance cars, Charger and Challenger haven’t gone great. 

This Challenger is one of the final few, and is notable as a brand-new, unregistered example. Production may have wound up in 2023 (or so it was said), but this one’s factory fresh with 10 miles. And even after so long seeing them on phone screens and TVs (for us, at least), there’s nothing to match the sheer visual wallop of a Challenger. Particularly with the bulked-up arches of the Widebody, those outrageously prominent hood snouts and F8 Green paint. You could spend a lot more than this Challenger is for sale at and make much less of an impact. 

Representing the last vestiges of a much-loved muscle car era, there’s undeniably a significance attached to something like this Challenger. Whatever Dodge does next in its latest combustion strategy, it’s unlikely to be as unhinged as the Jailbreak. Even at 911 Carrera S money, it’s easy to imagine one or two committed Hellcat enthusiasts taking an interest. Because if any Chargers and Challengers are going to be collectable here, it’s the final ones. This is the very embodiment of classic muscle car theatre, entertainment and ain’t-no-replacement potency, but it’s going to be sold on a 26 plate. That appeal shouldn’t take very much effort to understand.


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

SR

Original Poster:

623 posts

231 months

Yesterday (17:17)
quotequote all
Much want for this!

HazzaT

647 posts

71 months

Yesterday (17:49)
quotequote all
I love these so much. Completely ridiculous and not usable 99% of the time but honestly who cares?

TheMilkyBarKid

854 posts

55 months

Yesterday (18:47)
quotequote all
Gloriously silly. I have no use for one but I love it all the same. cool

Davy Jones

79 posts

75 months

Yesterday (18:48)
quotequote all
Would love to have that in my garage.

V12GT

618 posts

116 months

Yesterday (18:49)
quotequote all
TheMilkyBarKid said:
Gloriously silly. I have no use for one but I love it all the same. cool
Totally agree. Doesn’t fit on UK roads, but still would love one. Even more if I ever return to the US.

Baileyk

291 posts

90 months

Yesterday (19:17)
quotequote all
A dying shame they never imported these officially into the UK, as Ford did with the mustang.
But then they don’t have a dealership network and 8mpg would be a hard sell.

DodgyGeezer

47,577 posts

216 months

Yesterday (19:29)
quotequote all
V12GT said:
TheMilkyBarKid said:
Gloriously silly. I have no use for one but I love it all the same. cool
Totally agree. Doesn t fit on UK roads, but still would love one. Even more if I ever return to the US.
although they are rather fat they do fit on UK roads reasonably well - in the same eay that Land Rover Range Rover, Land Rover Discovery, Audi Q8 e-tron, Tesla Model S fit the road reasonably well (not to mention Transits and the like). Whilst I did quite fancy a Hellcat in the end, I decided that the 'sweet-spot' was the (positively wimpy! rofl ) Scatpack with 'only' 485/475 bhp/lb ft - not to mention as cool as the nostrils are I just can't get away from a 'Shaker Hood' and 'Goldschool' wheels...




WelshPetrolhead

980 posts

161 months

Yesterday (19:39)
quotequote all
Ooooof!

nismo48

6,572 posts

233 months

Yesterday (19:59)
quotequote all
Fantastic car and if funds were available I'd have it in a jot

Type R Tom

4,284 posts

175 months

Yesterday (20:06)
quotequote all
I know different strokes and all that, but this makes the Focus RS500 for similar money look daft.

ducnick

2,176 posts

269 months

Yesterday (20:14)
quotequote all
To be fair they aren’t t too big for the roads if a bmw 5 series or Porsche can fit, then so can a dodge.

Properly sinister machines and I would secretly love one, despite the American build quality concerns.

Roger Irrelevant

3,357 posts

139 months

Yesterday (20:20)
quotequote all
DodgyGeezer said:
although they are rather fat they do fit on UK roads reasonably well - in the same eay that Land Rover Range Rover, Land Rover Discovery, Audi Q8 e-tron, Tesla Model S fit the road reasonably well (not to mention Transits and the like).
Yes but it is the law that when talking about any American car you have to say that it is too big for the UK. The fact that it has a smaller footprint than all sorts of European cars whose size only gets mentioned in passing - if at all - is irrelevant. It's the same as Japanese = rust and small and French = 'a hoot'. It is the way of things.

Every day a journey

2,860 posts

64 months

Yesterday (21:04)
quotequote all
Would anyone like to buy my children?

tvrolet

4,708 posts

308 months

Yesterday (21:11)
quotequote all
Pity they never put the red eye or demon in the TrackHawk frown

Twoshoe

990 posts

210 months

Yesterday (21:30)
quotequote all
Absolutely love that - what a fantastic colour (or should that be color) too!

JJJ.

4,977 posts

41 months

Yesterday (22:12)
quotequote all
It's bonkers and hard not to like at the same time. Good luck to the new owner.

Legacywr

15,095 posts

214 months

Yesterday (22:22)
quotequote all
I still look at Callengers on AT, but I’d buy N/A car, they’re more than enough.

Code Black

165 posts

75 months

Yesterday (23:10)
quotequote all
If I could, I would!

Mr Tidy

30,275 posts

153 months

Yesterday (23:39)
quotequote all
Type R Tom said:
I know different strokes and all that, but this makes the Focus RS500 for similar money look daft.
That's for sure! thumbup

SS427 Camaro

8,170 posts

196 months

Much Love for these.
Shame they are so heavy.
Underside corrosion needs to be checked as they were either not under sealed at the factory or it was a dealer option ? We found a low ish miles Plum Crazy one in the States, which was a West side of the country car, but it’s underside floorpans were a bit scabby and if definitely hadn’t been under sealed