: 2008 Dodge Caliber SRT-4 $81 Per Horsepower


mikeyb
09-10-2007, 02:53 PM
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.act.f34.1.500.jpg

One SRT official says the Caliber SRT-4 has an "I'm-going-to-kick-your-ass" face.

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.act.f34.2.500.jpg

Despite a stiffer, lowered suspension, the Caliber SRT-4's tall body still rolls a bit under hard cornering.

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.act.prf.500.jpg

On most roads the Caliber SRT-4 is a pretty well-mannered thing. Just watch your throttle application.

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.eng.500.jpg

It doesn't look that powerful. The turbocharged and intercooled 2.4-liter makes 285 horsepower at 5,700 rpm.

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.act.r34.1.500.jpg

Dodge is claiming no function for the rear diffuser. That is, unless you consider looking wicked to be the function.

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.det.1.500.jpg

With a 4-inch-diameter exhaust tip, you'll have to use a plantain for the old banana-in-the-tailpipe trick. Maybe even some sort of gourd.

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.det.2.500.jpg

Does anyone ever really look at their boost gauge? The boost gauge's odd placement in the SRT-4 interior should discourage the few who might.

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.det.3.500.jpg

The Caliber SRT-4's heavily bolstered seats are a little wide for serious hugging duty. The interior is available only in charcoal gray.

Dodge's approach to the sport compact segment has never been subtle, and its newest, the 2008 Dodge Caliber SRT-4, has all the understated grace of an Apache gunship.

The formula was set with the turbocharged Dodge Omni GLHS (for Goes Like Hell) from the mid-'80s and the more recent turbocharged Neon SRT-4. Both were raucous, crude and cheap, and generous levels of torque steer came at no extra charge. They also looked like the economy cars on which they were based, but they routinely stomped the competition in tests of speed.

It should come as no surprise then that the company's newest performance compact, the Caliber SRT-4, packs big turbo-generated horsepower, strong torque steer and unlikely styling. Oh, and it has a low, low price of $22,995.

$81/hp
All right, so maybe $23 grand doesn't seem all that cheap for a Caliber, Dodge's hunchback small car. But how does $23 grand for 285 horsepower sound? Better, we would think.

That kind of number takes front-drive sport compacts to a new level of absurd power. Even the mighty Mazdaspeed 3, winner of two Inside Line comparison tests, makes 263. After that, nothing comes close for the same amount of coin. Not the Honda Civic Si (197 hp), not the Subaru WRX (224) and not the VW GTI (200).

Dodge starts with the 2.4-liter DOHC four-cylinder that powers the Caliber R/T. We were not particularly impressed by this motor when we tested an AWD version of the Caliber R/T some time ago. It posted a sluglike 10.1-second 0-60-mph time. Although the Caliber R/T's continuously variable transmission was a large part of the problem, the engine looked better on paper than it felt on the test track.

The solution? A big ol' Mitsubishi TD04 turbocharger. The turbocharger, along with a freer-flowing intake, an intercooler and a fat 3-inch exhaust system bring an additional 113 hp to the table. The original Omni GLH (non-turbo) made a whopping 110 peak hp.

Internal engine mods include pistons cooled by oil squirters and mounted to forged connecting rods. Specific injectors flow more fuel (high octane recommended). And an external oil cooler keeps the Mobil 1 synthetic from getting too toasty. The engine cranks out 265 pound-feet of torque beginning at 2,000 rpm.

The engine feels strong, with that familiar turbo-motor swell of power, but it doesn't feel that much stronger than the Mazdaspeed 3's mill, which turns out a sick 280 lb-ft of torque. But we believe Dodge when it says that the SRT-4 will get to 60 mph in "the low 6-second range." The front-drive six-speed Mazda will do the deed in 6.1 seconds. The new Subaru WRX, with a relatively paltry 224 horsepower and a five-speed will get to 60 mph in 5.9 seconds. This leads us to the issue more important than peak horsepower numbers.

Power to the Pavement
All that fat turbo power is routed through a dual mass flywheel to a Getrag six-speed manual transmission through a brake lock differential and onto 19-inch front wheels shod with Goodyear F1 Supercar tires. The result of this is our old pal torque steer.

We're not just digging on Dodge here. To try to quell the squirreliness, Mazda electronically limits torque output in the Mazdaspeed 3's low gears. Launching the all-wheel-drive WRX aggressively might be abusive to the powertrain, but the results speak for themselves.

If the options are (A) torque steer or (B) less torque, we'll take A. Actually, we'll take a rear-wheel-drive car, but that's not what we're talking about here.

Stab the SRT-4's throttle and as the turbo-juiced power swells, the steering starts making decisions on its own, and they're never good ones. If you're driving on a crowned road or you're riding in truck troughs when you stomp the throttle, well, just be prepared.

The SRT-4 will top out at 155 mph.

The cable-operated six-speed requires some muscle to shift and lacks the slick mechanical feel of a Honda or Mazda shifter, but works reasonably well. And the shifter's position, sticking out of the lower part of dash, is more comfortable than it looks.

Big Wheel

And the SRT-4's ride quality is better than we expected of a sport-ified economy car riding on huge 19-inch wheels. We traversed some seriously lumpy two-lane surfaces in rural Indiana and the SRT-4 was never a chore to drive. The tall body is reasonably well controlled and roll is reduced considerably from a standard-issue Caliber.

Dodge lowered the MacPherson front suspension 1.1 inches and dropped the multilink independent rear 0.87 inch. Specifically tuned ZF Sachs dampers are used and carry stiffer springs than those on a stock Caliber. The 24mm-thick front antiroll bar is the same as that of the Caliber R/T. Dodge has increased the thickness of the rear bar (to 18mm) in an effort to reduce understeer. This is largely successful, as the SRT-4 is a neutral-handling machine up to very high cornering speeds.

The brakes, upgraded to 13.4-inch rotors up front and 11.9-inch rotors in back, are stellar. The car we test-drove wore special track-worthy pads SRT says are available through Mopar performance parts but not as a regular option. They felt strong, steady and powerful throughout a day of hard driving.

Our time beating up the Caliber SRT-4 on the bucolic Putnam Park racecourse was genuinely fun, even if the Caliber feels strangely tall and upright for track use. The only major complaint we have about the car's racetrack performance is the inability to put all the power down at corner exits.

We would prefer a proper mechanical limited-slip differential to the SRT-4's traction-control-based arrangement. With the so-called Brake Lock Differential, a wheel speed sensor detects wheelspin and applies the brake to that side to force the transfer of power to the other side. As a rule, we think that applying the brakes to make forward progress is the wrong approach.

The Caliber comes with a full complement of other electronic chassis systems including antilock brakes, traction control and electronic stability control — all standard.

Looks That Kill

Senior SRT cowboy-boot-wearer Herb Helbig says that the Caliber SRT-4 has an "'I'm going to kick your ass' face to it." We're not entirely certain that's what the face says but there is no mistaking the car for something else. A deep front airdam, a center-mounted hood scoop and two hood-mounted exhaust vents give the snub-nosed Caliber a unique brusqueness. Helbig describes the long hatch-mounted spoiler as "a big-ass spoiler." About this, we will not quibble. A 4-inch exhaust tip and a rear bumper cover treatment that mimics racecar diffusers round out the exterior changes.

The interior has the same fit and finish faults as the standard car but SRT dresses it up with a leather-covered steering wheel, a leather "carbon-fiber"-pattern shift boot and heavily bolstered sport seats with grippy fabric inserts. The tachometer also swaps position with the speedometer to take the center spot in the instrument cluster, and a little boost gauge is mounted to the far left of the dashboard.

mikeyb
09-10-2007, 02:56 PM
An available "performance pages" display can record 0-60-mph, 1/8-mile and quarter-mile acceleration times, braking distance and maximum G-force. We'll test its accuracy against our GPS-based equipment when we get one out to the test track.

There are only a few options offered on the SRT-4 and none of them will boost its performance any further. There's a sunroof, an upgraded audio system and polished wheels.

Dodge Boys Drive Bad Toys

The 2008 Dodge Caliber SRT-4 will clearly not be to everyone's taste. Although it's enormously powerful, it's heavy at 3,189 pounds and Dodge admits it isn't any faster than the lighter and less powerful Neon SRT-4 of several years ago. It's also unusual-looking, and by unusual we mean fugly.

- Insideline

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.int.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.ip.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.det.4.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.det.5.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.f34.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.whl.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.act.r34.2.500.jpg

http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/dodge.caliber.srt4/08.dodge.caliber.srt4.r34.500.jpg

Mr. Win
09-10-2007, 03:52 PM
holy ugly.

SATimko
09-10-2007, 04:23 PM
Interesting placement of the FMIC...

Wow. IMO, that car is way too tall and bulky looking to make a performance version of.

mikeyb
09-10-2007, 05:09 PM
I think this thing is fugly. I'll would still rather buy a Mazdaspeed3 or the new Lancer Ralliart with AWD.

Rosshole
09-10-2007, 08:05 PM
didn't they origonally say that this thing was suposed to be closer to 20 grand... after options, this will ba a 27k car... bleh.

k-lea
09-10-2007, 08:49 PM
No.

Rosshole
09-10-2007, 08:58 PM
no it wont cost that much?

k-lea
09-10-2007, 08:59 PM
Haha, I knew you were going to think that.

I don't know, I was saying "No" to the SRT-4

Kooldino
09-10-2007, 09:04 PM
The rest of the article aside, this is fucking impressive:

The engine cranks out 265 pound-feet of torque beginning at 2,000 rpm.


Read that again and compare to your 4 cylinder turbo dynos.

2.4L FTW.

Dammit, Mitsu and your 2.0L.

Rosshole
09-10-2007, 09:15 PM
I will probably test-drive one.

Kooldino
09-10-2007, 09:51 PM
For fun or ferserious?

Kansei
09-10-2007, 11:30 PM
the interior belongs in a minivan. gross

the diffuser is completely non-functional? wtf uggggh

I mean yeah the body styling of the Protege5 isn't for functionality (talking the sideskirts and such) but they don't look like they serve any purpose other than style.

Dodge sucks hardcore. How the hell do they manage to score most of the worst designers in the industry?? (of course leaving the rest behind for.. GM)

Omega
09-11-2007, 12:17 AM
first off, i dont think dodge sucks. Dodge is awesomeness. i can trust anything they put out to be a FUN as hell to drive, well thought up (on the performance end), and reliable. I have no complaints what so ever. Second, most wings or diffusers are NON functional on ANY production car and if it does "work" it is a VERY minor amount.

k-lea
09-11-2007, 12:39 AM
*waits for him to come across my thread*

silvreclipse
09-11-2007, 01:40 AM
i have a charger and its fast and still fun to drive still wish they had stick instead of autostick but hey i,m not complaining.my dad has acaliber but he only bought for room and fuel mileage not for perfomance.they should of just kept the neon IMO.this thing is heavier and taller prolly will roll on a turn going fast.

Omega
09-11-2007, 02:21 AM
my opinion, they should have kept the "neon" and re-imagined it from the ground up, keeping the same sorta style. Like added flared wide body or something, oh ya and more power. I only say this because i have always loved neons!!! this "caliber" thing is sorta cool though im just really not a fan of the back-end..... NEON POWER FTW!!!

Bud
09-11-2007, 04:44 AM
The SRT engineers do a damn good job with the task at hand. I'm an auto enthusiast! Plain and simple. There are plenty that probably don't like my car...that have NOT driven it! I'm curious as to how many people here have driven an Evo. I love the Evo! A good friend of mine bought a new Evo IX a few weeks ago and let me take her for a spin. Awesome car! But....I honestly like the feel/refinement that my SRT8 has a tad bit better! And that's before I send her to the shop in a couple weeks for KW variant 2 coilovers, Hotchkis Sways, Quiafe LSD, Strut Tower Brace, Diablo Sport Tuner, and Vredestein Ultrac Sessanta tires. I guess I'm getting old! LOL

Rosshole
09-11-2007, 01:44 PM
For fun or ferserious?

for fun, I am curious what it drives like. But the dealerships will prolly be fucktard's about test drives...

SATimko
09-11-2007, 01:51 PM
When I got to drive the MS6 and MS3, I had two different salesmen. One told me to push the MS6 to the limits, the guy in the MS3 was telling me to be super cautious. I'm sure there will be alot more SRT's than MS3's per year.

silvreclipse
09-12-2007, 09:47 PM
most of the dealers are like that they dont like people dogging the cars when they test drive them unless you are going to buy them.but other dealers will let you just to convince you to sell you one.