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The Dodge SRT Tomahawk Vision Gran Turismo [1] is a fictional concept car created by Street & Racing Technology, a sub-division of Stellantis North America (formerly Fiat Chrysler Automobiles). It was developed as part of the Vision Gran Turismo project, where real-life automakers partner with video game developer Polyphony Digital to create ...
The cars were collectively known as the SRT Tomahawk Vision Gran Turismo, and came in three different trim levels: S, GTS-R, and X. The Tomahawks, having been designed for 2035, possess various technologies that cannot be attained at the present day, such as ultra-lightweight graphene construction and tires that can withstand speeds of over 650 ...
Street and Racing Technology (SRT) is an American badge of high-performance vehicles manufactured by Stellantis, mainly ones of the Dodge brand. [1]Origins of the badge date back to 1989 when a team known as "Team Viper" was organized to develop the Dodge Viper. [2]
The Dodge Tomahawk was a non-street legal vehicle introduced in 2004 by Dodge at the North American International Auto Show, initially as a one-off concept, and then later that year as a limited production vehicle when DaimlerChrysler announced they would sell hand-built reproductions on order. [4]
The designation Dodge SRT-10 can refer to three vehicles, all of them powered by Dodge's V10 engine: Dodge Viper SRT-10; Dodge Ram SRT-10; Dodge Tomahawk SRT-10
The Mercedes-Benz AMG Vision Gran Turismo is a concept car produced by Mercedes-Benz and the Mercedes-AMG division. It was developed as a concept car in a video game but later built as a real-life model.
In addition, the Viper V10 was installed in the Dodge Ram SRT-10, earning the truck the Guinness World Record for fastest production truck (later bettered by the Australian Holden HSV Maloo, which uses the LS2, Corvette engine). The Dodge Tomahawk concept vehicle also uses this engine.
The X2010 was theorised by Newey, head engineer of Red Bull Racing, and Yamauchi, and features exclusively in later Gran Turismo video games. The hypothetical car, designed as an ultimate racing machine, was designed with pure speed in mind, rather than adherence to rules and regulations, making it theoretically superior to a Formula One car in terms of speed and handling.