Dodge Demon Concept @ 2007 Geneva Auto Show


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The Dodge Demon concept is a compact, nimble "roadster with an attitude," a perfect balance of classic sports car proportion and simplicity blended with modern design and performance.


"While the iconic Dodge Viper is a dream car for many, the Dodge Demon is designed to be an attainable dream car," said Jae Chung – Dodge Demon Principal Exterior Designer, Chrysler Group. "The exterior design is simple yet bold, featuring an energetic combination of curves and intersecting planes."

The bodyside of the Dodge Demon main character line flows up and over the front wheel, then drops diagonally to an angular color-keyed vent on the rear fender that directs cooling air to the rear brakes. In similar fashion, the compound rear fender surface curves up and over the rear wheel, sweeping into a broad diagonal plane extending to the taillamp. The resulting muscular fender form projects boldly beyond the main body, underscoring that the Dodge Demon concept is a rear-wheel-drive machine.

The rear surface of the body is divided into three planes with two chamfered outboard planes, dominated by long, tapering trapezoidal taillamps. The taillamps sport translucent red inset lenses that surround LED back-up lamps.

Up front, the signature Dodge crosshair grille is stuffed into an aggressive, menacing, trapezoidal opening that thrusts boldly forward.

Set into elongated angled triangles, the projector headlamps, delineated by bright rings, are set into black chrome bezels, giving the front end mean-looking "eyes" that accentuate the grille opening. Encompassing the upper portions of the front fenders and sporting two recessed air outlets, the Dodge Demon's hood is hinged at the front, adding a just-for-fun performance-car look and feel.

Featuring an open-spoke design, the wheels are pushed to the corners of the body for a dramatic stance and capable performance. The 19-inch brushed aluminum wheels are set into assertive, asymmetrical openings that reprise the body's playful combination of curves and planes.

The beltline kicks up at the rear and into the higher deck lid contour, giving the lucky occupants an encapsulated, protective feeling.

"In the manner of timeless British sports cars, the interior of the Dodge Demon is purposely functional, not frivolous," said Dan Zimmermann – Dodge Demon Principal Interior Designer. "Everything relating to the driving experience is emphasized, while that which is not is made visually secondary.

"The well laid out instrument panel, for example, is familiar, yet modern. Everything you really need – the gauges, circular AC outlets, radio – is encapsulated in a cross-car brushed aluminum bezel that also accentuates the width of the cabin. Secondary controls and features, such as the HVAC knobs and the passenger-side glove box, are located below this bezel," Zimmerman added.

In a similar functional manner, the floor console is deliberately not a part of, or attached to, the instrument panel. The console is dominated by the squat ready-at-hand silver and black manual shift knob, and its leather boot is set into a bright trim ring. The wide, brushed aluminum console bezel also incorporates the recessed emergency brake handle, with the window switch gear, softly lit cup holders and 12V power outlet organized into a graphically unified shape. The upper portion of the instrument panel, including the cluster brow, is accented by a stitched seam with contrasting silver thread.

"Each of these features is set flush, or nearly flush, with the bezel surface so as to establish a "clear zone" for the driver's shift arm in all seating positions, with nothing in the way of the driving experience," Zimmerman said.

The raised plateau at the rear of the console incorporates a covered storage bin – with a lid that serves as an armrest between shifts – while the portion of the console extending under the instrument panel has an open bin handy for incidentals.

The steering wheel employs an aluminum open-spoke design with each of the three spokes intersecting the small circular hub for a timeless sports car look. The wheel rim itself is brushed aluminum on the inside, complemented with stitched vinyl on the outer rim. Immediately forward of the wheel, the four-gauge cluster features classic white-on-black dials with graphics inspired by sports watches. Each circular gauge is set handsomely inside a finely detailed silver and chrome bezel ring, while gauge pointers are colored to match the exterior.

The doors feature durable, vertical grab handles, each anchored to a silver bezel housing the chrome door remote handle. The lower portion of each door features a stylish brushed aluminum bezel that encapsulates the large circular speaker grille and then drops sharply as it moves rearward to form the map pocket outer panel, mimicking a feature line on the car's exterior.

The Dodge Demon's seats feature contoured bolsters that are just high enough to provide support when cornering, yet do not hinder ingress or egress. Set in exposed low-gloss carbon fiber shells, the black seats with integral head restraints feature inserts of textured "Momentum" fabric mated to fabric bolsters, with specific sew lines accented by silver thread. Individual brushed aluminum and carbon fiber roll bars are positioned directly behind the bucket seats. With long seat tracks, there is ample storage behind the seats. Additional covered storage is provided in the bulkhead between the seats.

The Dodge Demon concept is an affordable Dodge sports car which merges brand cues of bold design and powerful performance with an open-air "fun-to-drive" attitude.


Source - Fast-Autos
 
Re: 2007 Dodge Demon Concept

This car has so many influences it's not even funny. 2 main examples are the previous TT and the S2000. I'm not liking this at all. I think they should just bring back the Dodge Razor concept, at least that is more original than this.
 
Re: 2007 Dodge Demon Concept

This car has so many influences it's not even funny. 2 main examples are the previous TT and the S2000. I'm not liking this at all. I think they should just bring back the Dodge Razor concept, at least that is more original than this.

Agreed Ramen :usa7uh:

Not to mention Chyrsler's own Crossfire.. :eusa_doh: Which I suppose you could expect, but still..

The front..woah. S2000 influence to the max, same front end fender cut, same style hoodline.

:t-cheers:
 
Re: 2007 Dodge Demon Concept

I like, Dodge needs a car like this, and this will certainly sell well, especially in SR-T form.
 
it looks like it's 10 years old.. after the Charger, the Nitro and the Hornet, I'm really disappointed!
 
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Demon on the loose.

For those who've been wondering about the name of Chrysler's new owners, Cerberus, it refers to the three-headed guard dog of Hades, from Dante's Inferno. We don't know if that's a reference to what the troubled automaker will be facing in the future, but perhaps it's appropriate that the star among recent Chrysler show cars was named Demon.
Introduced at the Geneva Motor Show, last February, it's Chrysler's take on the classic, entry-level roadster. Think Mazda Miata or Pontiac Solstice.
Under the skin, the Demon shares roughly the same chassis as found in the current production model, the Chrysler Crossfire, but the roadster show car features a smaller, 2.4-liter in-line four engine.
Firing it up, the Demon let out a nice little burble through an exhaust system unfettered by a catalytic converter. We struggled to get the manual transmission into gear - a sin forgivable in a prototype which had to make its borrowed drivetrain fit whichever way possible. In production form, we'd expect to see a reworked version of the four, which would boast more than enough power for such a lightweight vehicle. (We'd also hope that Chrysler would consider at least one up-market drivetrain option, much as Pontiac as done with the Solstice, however.)
As with the drivetrain, the borrowed steering package was a little notchy and not quite ready for prime time, but the overall feel of this Demon on the loose was perfect for a cool, sunny spring day. While this may officially be described as a concept car, it has the feel of something getting ready for production. And perhaps for good reason, according to Dehner.
While there's been no formal decision, designers had a clear mandate. "The idea behind it was to do an entry-level sports car that, if it were to get approval, could get into production very quickly," Dehner explained, pointing to the Crossfire, which went from concept to production in barely 18 months.
If the Demon gets the go, insiders hint that it would likely share its platform and key components with another entry-level Chrysler minicar. The most probable? The production version of the Hornet show car. The U.S. maker is developing that as part of a joint venture with the Chinese automaker, Chery, and it could reach showrooms by 2009. We're hoping like the devil to see a production Demon around the same time.
We Drive Chrysler’s 2007 Concepts - The Car Connection
 
2010 Dodge Demon

What We Know About the 2010 Dodge Demon

[FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]The Dodge Demon Concept is a "compact, nimble 'roadster with attitude'" and "an attainable dream car," according to its maker. To us, it was Chrysler's answer to the Honda
[FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]S2000[/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif], Mazda [/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]MX-5[/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif], Pontiac [/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]Solstice[/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif], and Saturn [/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]Sky[/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]. In early 2008, Chrysler announced the production version will use a front-wheel-drive chassis sourced from Chinese automaker Chery, so the Demon's sporting pretensions may be in question.
As you've probably heard, former owner [/FONT]
[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]Mercedes-Benz[/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] sold a majority in [/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]Chrysler[/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] to Cerberus Capital Management. So it is not a complete surprise that the Demon's mission may have changed along with ownership of the company. Assuming a best-case outcome, the general view is that your local [/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]Dodge[/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] Boys could be selling Demons by model-year 2010.

The 2010 Dodge Demon bowed in concept-car form at the 2007 Geneva Auto Salon in Switzerland, which observers took as a sign that the Demon would spearhead a major Dodge sales push into overseas markets, where the brand is largely unknown.

Chrysler has lately been trying to increase its non-U.S. business, no surprise given recent sales reverses at home. It's not hard to imagine the Demon introducing Dodge as a sporty "performance" brand to Europe, as well as to fast-growing markets like China.

The 2010 Dodge Demon would be a "halo" vehicle to spark sales of mainstream fare like the compact Caliber hatchback and Avenger sedan. All of which explains why the Demon concept looks so realistic and producible compared to your average pie-in-the-sky show car.

Styling of the 2010 Dodge Demon borrows cues from the hulking V-10 Dodge Viper and would likely carry over with little change from the Demon concept. Ditto dimensions, which are very close to those of the Pontiac Solstice.

The Dodge Demon Concept used a 172-horsepower 2.4-liter four-cylinder engine and six-speed manual transmission. At this point it is unclear if the 2010 Dodge Demon will use an engine that is part of the U.S.-built Global Alliance family shared with Mitsubishi and Hyundai, or an engine sourced from Chery.

The Dodge Demon Concept sported 19-inch wheels, which could be a bit much for a showroom model. Expect 17s to be standard, with 18s optional.

Other concept features would likely survive with little or no alteration. These include the semi-retro cockpit design heavy on brushed-metal trim (or facsimiles); a manual-folding cloth top that hides beneath a hard cover just behind the cockpit; and a stubby rollbar behind each seat to protect occupants in case of a flip.

The rest of the 2010 Dodge Demon package will hinge on marketing decisions based heavily on competitors' pricing, but standards should include modern must-haves such as antilock disc brakes, traction control, and seat-mounted torso side airbags. We also wouldn't rule out a turbocharged Demon as a year-two addition with standard stability control, performance-tuned suspension and special trim.

One thing that might be changed is the name, a point missed entirely by press reports we've seen. Perhaps the writers are too young to remember, but Dodge used Demon way back in 1971-72 for its version of the popular compact Plymouth Duster, complete with logo decals of a cute little cartoon devil. It was all innocent fun, Dodge thought, but some people thought otherwise and wrote nasty letters, enough that Dodge adopted the prosaic Dart Sport handle. Such are the perils of modern automotive marketing.
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Re: 2010 Dodge Demon

i dont like dodge but this one is not bad well cause its a concept lol:)
 
Re: 2010 Dodge Demon

well yeah thats true but i never get any comments
 
Re: 2010 Dodge Demon

Well, you need to post information etc that will entice other users to engage in conversation. I don't recommend filling your posts with your own comments. That usually detracts people from posting. Be patient!

:usa7uh:
 
Re: 2010 Dodge Demon

Well, you need to post information etc that will entice other users to engage in conversation. I don't recommend filling your posts with your own comments. That usually detracts people from posting. Be patient!

:usa7uh:




thanks man ill try:)
 
Re: 2010 Dodge Demon

It'a cute little roadster, me like it. Don't really see Aston Martin here, it's a pretty modern and original design. With its slightly squared wheel archs, it's very good-looking.
 

Dodge

Dodge is an American brand of automobiles and a division of Stellantis North America, based in Auburn Hills, Michigan. Founded by brothers Horace Elgin Dodge and John Francis Dodge on December 14, 1900. In 2011, Dodge and its sub-brands, Dodge Ram and Dodge Viper, were separated. Dodge announced that the Viper was to be an SRT product and Ram a standalone marque. In 2014, SRT was merged back into Dodge.
Offcial websites: Dodge, RAM

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