Back in 1997, Dodge surprised enthusiasts and the media when it unveiled a strange little concept at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit. This seemed out of step with a company known for teasing brute-force monsters, but Dodge said its new Copperhead concept would be smaller, lighter, cheaper, and more attainable. Some enthusiasts dubbed it a “baby Viper” as an entry point into the company’s performance culture. When the dust settled, the Copperhead had disappeared. Fast-forward to today, and the Copperhead idea seems to be back, but it may now represent something quite different from that original tease.
The Original Attempt At A More Attainable Sports Car
1997 Dodge Copperhead concept painted in red with red and black interiorDodge
1997 Dodge Copperhead Concept Specifications
Engine
Naturally aspirated 2.7-liter V6
Transmission
Five-speed manual
Drivetrain
Rear-wheel drive
Power
220 hp
Torque
~190 lb-ft
In the 1990s, Dodge had quite a reputation for performance products. It had already unleashed the Viper to become one of America’s wildest modern sports cars and may have wanted to see what would happen with a scaled-down version of that excess. The Copperhead concept might have developed into a completely different interpretation of Dodge performance. It had compact proportions and a lot less weight, featured a front-engined, rear-wheel-drive layout, and had a naturally aspirated 2.7-liter V6 under the hood.
Dodge expected the Copperhead to produce around 220 hp, and it had a manual transmission for the purists. The company was targeting a curb weight below 3,000 pounds, and, price-wise, a production Copperhead at around $30,000 would have cost dramatically less than a Viper.
1997 dodge copperhead concept front orangeMarspeed (YouTube)
With the Copperhead, Dodge may have been planning an assault on a specific part of the market occupied by vehicles like the Mazda MX-5 Miata, Porsche Boxster, or BMW Z3. The Copperhead would have been a far more interesting entry-level proposition for sports car drivers, and far less intimidating than the Viper above it.
Many enthusiasts eagerly awaited the next move and believed that Dodge was genuinely interested in building a dedicated enthusiast sports car, leaning toward refinement rather than excess. But Dodge executives were closely watching the broader market and saw that American performance culture was beginning to swing in a different direction. They may have decided that this was not the right moment for lower displacement, restrained horsepower, or nostalgia and quietly rolled the Copperhead into the back lot.
Dodge Eventually Became The Brand Of Maximum Excess
Dodge Hellcat front closeupDodge
As the new century arrived, Dodge found great commercial success by leaning into old-school American muscle. It unleashed the Charger and Challenger as the brand’s centerpieces, with Hemi V8s squarely on the menu. The Hellcat era took matters to an extreme once again, underlining the company’s position as one of the brute-horsepower kings.
As time went by, Dodge continued to build its identity around big engines, burnouts, whining superchargers, and bragging rights for acceleration. It was not afraid to promote entirely unreasonable vehicles like the Challenger SRT Demon or Charger Hellcat, even though the rest of the industry was starting to retreat into its shell. However, Dodge would eventually rein in its enthusiasm and, in 2017, say goodbye to the Viper as its last true sports-car offering. It continued with the Challenger and Charger insanity for several years in the oversized muscle-car segment, but it didn’t have a real halo sports car to lean on.
The market continued to evolve as Dodge stubbornly stuck to its muscle car philosophy. Toyota revised the GR86 and revived the Supra, Nissan dusted off the Z, and Porsche refined its Cayman to become one of the world’s benchmark driver’s cars. Dodge continued to focus on maximum power until recently, with the signals surrounding the Copperhead. Perhaps it’s now ready to create a dedicated emotional sports car again, rather than focusing entirely on muscle after all.
The New Copperhead Appears To Be A Completely Different Take
Dodge SRT Copperhead ConcealedStellantis
If enthusiasts are expecting a brand-new Copperhead (teased above) to be a baby Viper again, they’ll be disappointed, as it won’t be a lightweight, affordable roadster after all. Early reports suggest a low-slung, two-door SRT halo coupe that would sit above the Charger rather than beneath it.
The 2029 Copperhead may be part of an effort to revive the SRT division and become more of a hyper muscle car instead. And while the idea behind the original 1997 Copperhead may have been to democratize Dodge performance, this new offering may instead represent an aspirational flagship. The son of Copperhead may not prioritize simplicity and affordability at all and could be more aggressive, with emotional drama and halo-car energy.
Rumors suggest that conventional internal combustion may be central to the new Copperhead project and that it sits on the company’s STLA family platform. Other reports suggest that Dodge still wants the future performance vehicles to feel emotional at a time when electrification is steering the industry in the opposite direction. If that’s the case, the new Copperhead could still have a connection to the old mini-Viper idea if it arrives in 2029. After all, the original Viper was more than just a brute-force machine. It showed what Dodge could do with a dedicated two-door performance vehicle that sat outside the company’s mainstream lineup.
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From that point of view, the new Copperhead may revisit the same idea and remain separate from the rest of the pack. And that would be welcome in a world where many modern performance cars seem increasingly digitized and difficult to fall in love with. So, even though this new Copperhead concept may be quite different from its predecessor in terms of mechanical and philosophical positioning, Dodge may still be able to revisit the baby Viper space from a broader perspective.
The Difference Between The Two Explains Performance Evolution
1997 Dodge Copperhead concept painted in red with red and black interiorYT: Marspeed
Enthusiast culture has evolved since Dodge teased that Copperhead concept in 1997. Back then, a major American manufacturer could still justify the idea of an attainable lightweight sports car and make it commercially viable. You only had to look at the success of the Miata or the Boxster to see that there was a lot of enthusiasm for compact, analog driving machines. Companies could also manage development and production costs more effectively, giving them room to experiment with niche ideas.
Today, that world has largely disappeared due to a variety of external and internal pressures, such as emissions requirements, modern safety regulations, and platform costs. Consumer preferences have also changed dramatically over these three decades, and that clearly affects the economics of a sports car. It’s increasingly hard for any company to justify the time and money spent on affordable, two-seat enthusiast vehicles, especially as they increasingly have to share architectures across massive global programs.
The format has also shifted wildly over the decades, especially during the 2000s and 2010s, when that world seemed dominated by horsepower wars and launch-control systems. In more recent years, electrification has shifted the industry in yet another direction and has forced every performance brand to rethink its approach. Straight-line acceleration doesn’t seem to mean as much anymore, because EVs are able to deliver impressive numbers almost effortlessly in even the simplest of cars.
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With all those headwinds, it’s no surprise that the new Copperhead concept looks very different from the 1997 version and is shaped by modern realities. But it could yet become a statement piece to help Dodge reinforce its emotional identity as the company and the rest of the automotive world navigate an era of enormous technological transition. And if it does become that statement piece, it may still occupy the role that was once the domain of the Viper itself.
Dodge May Be Ready To Fill The Void Left By The Viper
1997 Dodge Copperhead concept painted in red with red and black interiorDodge
Dodge lost much more than just a flagship model when it killed off the Viper in 2017. This was a very different machine from the other vehicles in the company’s performance lineup, and something genuinely exotic rather than simply brutal. Since 2018, Dodge hasn’t really had anything to replace the Viper in terms of fulfilling an emotional role, but the rumored Copperhead could help. It may not be the lightweight bargain roadster many enthusiasts were hoping for in 1997, but it may yet be a two-door halo sports machine that could exist outside the normal muscle-car hierarchy.
The reality is that even emotional halo vehicles have to justify themselves, both commercially and practically, in the modern era. With this in mind, Dodge may have had to shift the goalposts a little with its new interpretation of the Copperhead. And while the first version may have been chasing true accessibility, this new one may be more ready to chase spectacle and brand identity.
Sources: Stellantis, Dodge.
