This could affect the market by at least a 20% decline.That's awful. We're all devastated that "gocat" is not going to buy a D170.
It's hard to judge things on a percentage at present... because if you go back to launch pricing, they've lost about 50% in the first year. Of course, those were wildly inflated. The median D170 new price at dealerships right now is in the 160-165k ballpark. That's down over $120k from this time last year. There's still dealers trying to sell for $250k+, but that's just a lot draw with an unrealistic price. The ones actually selling are in that $160ish ballpark... and I've personally seen about 5 dozen D170 listings price adjust down from $200k to that $160k figure this week... so dealers are in fact reducing the price and are seemingly getting some anxiety over this issue.This could affect the market by at least a 20% decline.
Good luck getting any facts out of the self proclaimed insider influencer.I’d like to hear the outcome of the D170 that had a spongey block. You can’t make this sh_t up.
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Why would any squirreled away delivery miles vehicle be out of warranty ever? Doesn't the warranty start when put into service? They're still new, never registered no?It's hard to judge things on a percentage at present... because if you go back to launch pricing, they've lost about 50% in the first year. Of course, those were wildly inflated. The median D170 new price at dealerships right now is in the 160-165k ballpark. That's down over $120k from this time last year. There's still dealers trying to sell for $250k+, but that's just a lot draw with an unrealistic price. The ones actually selling are in that $160ish ballpark... and I've personally seen about 5 dozen D170 listings price adjust down from $200k to that $160k figure this week... so dealers are in fact reducing the price and are seemingly getting some anxiety over this issue.
The reason why you can't assume a net percentage drop is because I don't think the fair market value on the D170 has been firmly established yet, due to how overpriced they were.
But yeah, as others have shown, there's dealers that still have 2 dozen D170s in back storage waiting on the prices to recover. OCMotivator did a vid on one non-Dodge dealer that has 20+ in their storage garage. I'm certain that this isn't unique. In SoCal, Miami, LV, and other halo car hotspots, there's probably 500 or more D170s squirreled away not listed for sale at dealerships across the country as they're too upside down to sell in the current market. They're hoping in the next 3-5 years that prices rebound so they don't end up eating a half million in losses.
If these engine problems persist and/or become validated systemic concerns, then all those delivery mile D170s squirreled away will be out of warranty by the time someone buys it. And yeah, that would greatly harm the selling price as nobody knows if it has a grenade ready to pop or not. Stellantis is already cracking down on replacement engines as they're running out of stock. So, in 5 years, simply going to the dealer for a replacement, even on your own dime, is not going to have guaranteed availability, and most certainly not timely.
The next year or so will determine how severe the engine issue is. If it turns out to be a substantial concern, then yeah, the value of a delivery mile D170 will almost certainly be considerably less than one that's been properly broken in, driven, and proven to NOT be one of these defective cars.
I have 2,500 miles on mine and it runs perfectly. I read the manual and followed it, breaking in my Demon 170 engine the full 1,500 miles before dragging it.I have 2300 miles on mine, zero issues.
How many of these failed engines were broken in per the manual before being raced? When you dont follow the break in procedure you should not be surprised when your engine fails like RacerX's did.Statistically this problem is off the charts when you factor in that so few of these cars are actually driven. This could be the first time that cars with more miles will be worth more than those with no miles. Proof in the pudding, if a D170 has miles/pulls on it... its a good one or at least a fixed one. A car with 12 miles on it... 10 years from now is a scary buy!
THe 2018's had stickers around 85k-90k. Plus, we are in one of the worst car markets that we have ever seen. However, when interest rates drop and the economy eventually turns around there is no reason to think the collector car market won'trespond like it has through-out history. That's not speculation, that is what history has taught us all. Also, a 2018 Demon with 20-30k miles is not nearly as collectible as those with 2k or less. Regardless, I love driving and racing my Demon 170 and have no desire to sell it. Best Challenger ever built in my opinion.Eh, not the first time. The 2018 Demons are trending this direction. 2018 Demons in excellent condition with 20k-30k miles are selling for the same price is those with delivery miles. That being in the $118-$125k range. For OG Demons, delivery mile cars are seemingly not bringing any amount of premium at present.
Here is 2 that i found in a quick search....How many of these failed engines were broken in per the manual before being raced? When you dont follow the break in procedure you should not be surprised when your engine fails like RacerX's did.
They did do testing before they released the car and it was well documented that they were blowing up engines in the process. Supposedly they had that ironed out.My thoughts, the DODGE D170 is a
fricken wicked … ask for forgiveness after the fact-not permission before hand …don’t hate the player-hate the game, type of bad ass muscle car that was ever produced … period!
Would I have considered paying a non greedy ADM on one prior to the publicized issues owners are having …. yes.
Would I consider paying any kind of ADM (or even buying one now) after more and more issues are being documented and witnessed … no way!
Just to many issues have been documented and publicized for any further more of my consideration of one to purchase.
For only 3300 of them ever being manufactured … I can’t comprehend even why at minimal, several D170 owners had issues that needed new motors. WTF
I believe the D170 was rushed to the market and released for sale with still unknown developmental challenges that were not addressed.
Was there assembly line issues, quality control issues, or even workers knowing the end was coming and didn’t GAF issues, ect … 🤷‍♂️
Another thought, was there not driving and testing done using the vehicle in the real word before releasing it to the public for sale …. if so, there was no issues the test vehicles were having (really)?
I could keep going on why the D170 is not a consideration for me BUT sincerely hope the owners out there that have one of them bad azz biatch D170’s, the best of luck that they have no issues of what we all have been informed and aware of.
DODGE … why so many D170 fails?
And transmissions, differentials, drive shafts. Lot’s of destruction developing these cars.They did do testing before they released the car and it was well documented that they were blowing up engines in the process. Supposedly they had that ironed out.
So just what is the mental hang up of not using E85 in these cars? Perhaps one of the other 479 last call edition Challengers would have been a better choice than a flex fuel drag car.
Glad to hear Speedy. I am at 2,500 miles and ran mine Friday night in the 9s again. All runs great. The car is simply amazing on the road and the track and is has exceeded my expectations. I firmly believe after reviewing the stories out there over the past year or so that the people primarily experiencing engine failures are those who did not break them in per the Dodge manual. Time and time again when I ask the question (and actually get a response) you learn they put about 500 miles or so on their Demon 170 before racing it mistakenly believing that is the proper standard - its not. And low and behold these same folks have an engine failure just like Dodge warns can happen in the manual if you dont follow thier break-in instructions including the 1,500 mile standard before tracking . So whether the lack of proper break-in is the problem or not the public record so far certainly points clearly in that direction. And, regardless, you cannot fairly attack the reliablity of a car when you don't follow the engine manufacturer's break-in instructions. Regarding this missing bearing story, I have seen an engine builder or two post that its almost impossible for an engine to run with a missing main bearing, and my Dodge mechanic, who works at a Dodge Power Broker location, claims the such an engine would start knocking almost immediately off the assembly line if it would start at all. So when I have asked for a copy of the entire work invoice behind the story you have posted (excluding personal information of course) nobody is willing to provide it. Thats fine, of course, but if you are not going to back up your story with credible evidence that should be readily available I am not going to give the story much if any credilibity - and neither would a judge in a courtroom by the way. And, I have seen this time and time again with some YouTubers who make bold claims attacking the relialbity of the Demon 170 but provide little to no verifiable evidence to support thier claims in many instances. Why not? Its easy to upload such work orders, right? And, if you can post a 15-30 minutes video calling into question the Demon 170 you can certainly upload supporting documents that take a minute or so, right? Unfortunately, I think certain YouTubers have over the past year engaged in some serious and reckless speculation about the reliablity of the Demon 170, and, as a result, have unfairly tarnished its name and its value. I say "unfair" because of the lack of credible evidence that is almost always absent or highly lacking in completeness. Other you YouTubers scream out that Demon 170 prices are nose diving but ignore recent public sales that clearly indiate otherwise, even when its provided to them in the comment section. To add insult to injury it appars some YouTubers then delete that data (which YouTube permits by the way) to hide those competing sales from their viewers. So, pesonally, I would not be concerned about storing one as these Demon 170s as collector car for a single moment. However, I might change my mind if sombody posted credible evidence of repeated engine failures in Demon 170 AFTER they were first broken-in the full 1,500 miles. You and I both broke our cars in the full 1,500 miles and so far neither you or I have had any type of engine failure problems, and I am seeing that same result on Facebook with other Demon 170 owners as well. Time will tell, but enjoy your Demon 170 my friend. I have very much enjoyed wathing your YouTube channel, and I hope to see you on the track some day!Mine's got over 2,100 miles on it and tons of WOT pulls now plus a track day. No problems so far (knock on wood). I'd sure be leery of having one bubble wrapped away somewhere not knowing though. Some obvious QC issues from the engine line for sure.
I have been reading your posts on this subject, and it seems as if every last post focuses on break-in procedure being the sole culprit. While your theory may be valid, how do we explain missing bearings on some of these? That’s pretty hard to get around. Were there simply a few bad ones? Or are you thinking maybe there really were no missing bearings? Or maybe improper break in destroyed the bearing altogether? Regardless of break in procedure, if there are indeed simply missing bearings at the time of assembly on some of these, that’s pretty bad. The good news is if that’s true then it is not a design flaw, but an assembly issue.Glad to hear Speedy. I am at 2,500 miles and ran mine Friday night in the 9s again. All runs great. The car is simply amazing on the road and the track and is has exceeded my expectations. I firmly believe after reviewing the stories out there over the past year or so that the people primarily experiencing engine failures are those who did not break them in per the Dodge manual. Time and time again when I ask the question (and actually get a response) you learn they put about 500 miles or so on their Demon 170 before racing it mistakenly believing that is the proper standard - its not. And low and behold these same folks have an engine failure just like Dodge warns can happen in the manual if you dont follow thier break-in instructions including the 1,500 mile standard before tracking . So whether the lack of proper break-in is the problem or not the public record so far certainly points clearly in that direction. And, regardless, you cannot fairly attack the reliablity of a car when you don't follow the engine manufacturer's break-in instructions. Regarding this missing bearing story, I have seen an engine builder or two post that its almost impossible for an engine to run with a missing main bearing, and my Dodge mechanic, who works at a Dodge Power Broker location, claims the such an engine would start knocking almost immediately off the assembly line if it would start at all. So when I have asked for a copy of the entire work invoice behind the story you have posted (excluding personal information of course) nobody is willing to provide it. Thats fine, of course, but if you are not going to back up your story with credible evidence that should be readily available I am not going to give the story much if any credilibity - and neither would a judge in a courtroom by the way. And, I have seen this time and time again with some YouTubers who make bold claims attacking the relialbity of the Demon 170 but provide little to no verifiable evidence to support thier claims in many instances. Why not? Its easy to upload such work orders, right? And, if you can post a 15-30 minutes video calling into question the Demon 170 you can certainly upload supporting documents that take a minute or so, right? Unfortunately, I think certain YouTubers have over the past year engaged in some serious and reckless speculation about the reliablity of the Demon 170, and, as a result, have unfairly tarnished its name and its value. I say "unfair" because of the lack of credible evidence that is almost always absent or highly lacking in completeness. Other you YouTubers scream out that Demon 170 prices are nose diving but ignore recent public sales that clearly indiate otherwise, even when its provided to them in the comment section. To add insult to injury it appars some YouTubers then delete that data (which YouTube permits by the way) to hide those competing sales from their viewers. So, pesonally, I would not be concerned about storing one as these Demon 170s as collector car for a single moment. However, I might change my mind if sombody posted credible evidence of repeated engine failures in Demon 170 AFTER they were first broken-in the full 1,500 miles. You and I both broke our cars in the full 1,500 miles and so far neither you or I have had any type of engine failure problems, and I am seeing that same result on Facebook with other Demon 170 owners as well. Time will tell, but enjoy your Demon 170 my friend. I have very much enjoyed wathing your YouTube channel, and I hope to see you on the track some day!
As I have posted here before what I think is really wrong is you got some YT/Influencers had cars on order close or at MSRP and did nothing but talk the car up and praise it prior to delivery knowing good and damn well they were going to sell it for a big pay day. Then after they sold, cashed in and made bank they bashed the car with some (not all) fake news motor failures and also bashed the prices being in the tank due to the engine issues which in turn only hurts the very same people they sold their cars too. Now if that aint a DICK move then I dont know what is. A pure dick move!Unfortunately, I think certain YouTubers have over the past year engaged in some serious and reckless speculation about the reliablity of the Demon 170, and, as a result, have unfairly tarnished its name and its value. I say "unfair" because of the lack of credible evidence that is almost always absent or highly lacking in completeness. Other you YouTubers scream out that Demon 170 prices are nose diving but ignore recent public sales that clearly indiate otherwise, even when its provided to them in the comment section. To add insult to injury it appars some YouTubers then delete that data (which YouTube permits by the way) to hide those competing sales from their viewers. So, pesonally, I would not be concerned about storing one as these Demon 170s as collector car for a single moment. However, I might change my mind if sombody posted credible evidence of repeated engine failures in Demon 170 AFTER they were first broken-in the full 1,500 miles.