but he has enough sense to realize that the car needs to be built as a complete package.
Good stuff. Keep your customers informed and they'll be safer, all around.
Last year... in June, I think, we had a kid total his Evo during his very first event. Felt horrible for him. Car was almost brand new - younger fella - early 20's - had about 400WHP and nothing else done. Street-racer type who was making an honest attempt to get away from that garbage and try the real thing. No attitude or anything - had promise - good kid.
His brakes lasted half-way through the second 30-minute session. End of the main straight at what was probably about 135MPH, his pedal went to the floor and nothing happened. Panicked, spun the wheel and is lucky he didn't roll over, frankly. Thankfully, he was ok - but the car was pretty far from it.
The Sti I drove was stock 300 hp, it was insanly fast and handled incredable, woulda smoked my challenger.....does not matter to me id still take the challenger over it any day :-)
I didn't read the whole thread; but if it's a newer Challenger or an older, even slightly-worked one, a stock Sti shouldn't pose a threat in a straight line - beyond the advantage of an AWD launch (assuming he doesn't bog it).
While the car "feels" fast due to the forced-induction nature of the torque curve, it suffers from a very high percentage of drivetrain loss.
It's a 13-second car that traps a hair over 101-102MPH, if I recall correctly. A new Challenger should be in the mid-12's but, more importantly, traps around 110MPH, which is the significant statistic, as I'm sure CAP will agree.