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THE DEMON LIVES: Sort Of… Meet The 2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock:

Is It A Demon, Or Not?

Drag racing is a part of the Dodge//SRT brand’s DNA. Back in 2018, the American performance brand launched the outrageous 840 horsepower Dodge Challenger SRT Demon, the fastest production mile quarter-mile car in the world. The Challenger SRT Demon bent a lot of rules from other automakers and even though the Demon was only a limited production run of 3,300 units for the United States and Canada, its DNA still lives on in the Challenger and Charger SRT Hellcat Redeye.

2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock. (Dodge).

But while Dodge//SRT promised never to build another Demon once the run was done, it isn’t stopping them from bringing another drag racing package to the fold. Enter the 2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock, the world’s quickest and most powerful muscle car. The Challenger SRT Super Stock gets its name from the “Super Stock” class of vehicle in drag racing. It’s defined by vehicles that may look like ordinary passenger vehicles, but they are highly modified race cars.

The SRT Super Stock is powered by the same supercharged 6.2-liter HEMI® high-output V-8 engine as the Demon and its Redeye brethren and delivering 807 horsepower and 707 lb.-ft. of torque on pump gas. Did you catch that? 807 horsepower on pump gas! If that sounds familiar, that’s because the 2018 Dodge Challenger SRT Demon was rated at 808 horsepower and 717 lb.-ft. of torque on Premium 91 octane gasoline. It’s a clever way to keep the Demon owners feeling special. It took the Direct Connection Controller from the optional Demon crate and unleaded 100 octane fuel to get the Demon to 840 horsepower and 770 lb.-ft. of torque. And just like the Demon, the SRT Super Stock runs the TorqueFlite 8HP90 8-speed automatic transmission and 3.09 gear ratio too.

2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock. (Dodge).

The Challenger SRT Super Stock is standard with the Challenger’s Widebody kit. This allows for the Super Stock to run on the same sticky 315/40R18 Nitto NT05R drag radials at all four corners as the Demon. Of course, the Nitto’s are wrapped around lightweight 18-inch-by-11-inch wheels that were found on the Demon, but this time in Low Gloss Granite finish.

Challenger SRT Super Stock comes with the same uniquely tuned Bilstein high-performance Adaptive Damping Suspension (ADS) as the Demon, helping to shift as much weight as possible to the rear tires at launch for maximum traction. However, there is a couple of things absent from the Demon package on the new Super Stock package. The first is the absence of “Drag” mode in the drive mode settings like the other drag racing Demon and 1320 packages. Instead, it’s labeled as “Track” mode. The drive mode settings on the Challenger SRT Super Stock include Auto (Street) Mode, which sets the Bilstein ADS for a comfortable ride with compliant handling, Sport mode, Track mode and Custom mode, which lets the driver select between Auto, Sport and Track mode configurations for the transmission, paddle shifters, traction, suspension, and steering.

2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock. (Dodge).

When Track mode is activated on the Challenger SRT Super Stock, the front Bilstein shocks are set for firm compression and soft rebound damping just as Drag mode did on the Demon, while the rear Bilstein shocks are set for firm compression and firm rebound damping. That configuration is maintained as long as the car runs at wide-open throttle. When the driver backs off the gas pedal, the system switches to soft compression and firm rebound, both front and rear, for improved handling. And just like Drag mode, during Track mode, the traction control system is disabled to enable the rear wheels to spin for a burnout, but the electronic stability control system remains engaged to help the driver with straight-line performance.

The second thing is from the SRT Super Stock is the TransBrake. Dodge//SRT says the TransBrake on the Demon and 1320 helps to improve driver reaction time and launch consistency by using the steering wheel paddle shifters as a launch trigger. However, we can understand why Dodge//SRT left it off of the SRT Super Stock. Our Co-Editor Jared Balfour spent a lot of seat time behind both our friend Dave Hayes’ 2018 Dodge Challenger SRT Demon and our 2019 Dodge Challenger R/T Scat Pack 1320, as well as one of our reader’s R/T Scat Pack 1320 at the track, the results were that Jared actually ran fasters passes using the footbrake consistently.

2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock. (Dodge).

While those features may be absent, the 2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock does add the rest of the Demon’s tech to the package, like…

  • Launch Assist — Launched on the Challenger SRT Demon as a factory-production car first, Launch Assist helps resolve one of the biggest challenges to clean launches and driveline integrity – wheel hop, which happens when tires quickly slip and regain traction at launch, rapidly storing up and releasing energy in the driveline. These high torque spikes can quickly and severely damage driveline components and, up until now, the only solution was to back out of the throttle. Wheel speed sensors watch for signs that the tires are slipping/sticking. If wheel hop is detected, the engine control module momentarily reduces torque to maximize traction almost instantly – without the driver having to lift the throttle. Launch Assist reduces loads in the driveline from wheel hop by up to 20%.
     
  • Launch Control — Holds the engine at optimal launch rpm and waits for the driver to release the brake. Launch Control then uses engine torque management to optimize wheel slip for maximum acceleration
     
  • Line Lock — Engages the front brakes to hold the Challenger stationary, but leaves the rear wheels free for a burnout to heat up and clean the rear tires. The system will also let the driver perform a controlled rolling burnout and can engage for up to 200 rear wheel revolutions
     
  • Torque Reserve — Becomes active once the engine speed passes 950 rpm. The system closes the bypass valve, “prefilling” the intake with boost, manages fuel flow to cylinders and manages spark timing to balance engine rpm and torque
     
  • Race Cooldown — Also an industry first, minimizes any heat soak effects, allowing the engine to stay in optimum operating temperature. When the engine shuts down, the Race Cooldown feature keeps the engine’s cooling fan and low-temperature circuit coolant pump running to lower the supercharger/charge air cooler temperature. The driver can track the supercharger coolant temperature on the SRT Performance Pages in the 8.4-inch Uconnect touchscreen and know in real-time when the supercharger is at the optimum temperature for another run. Race Cooldown was first featured on the Challenger SRT Demon in 2018 and became standard on the Challenger SRT Hellcat models in 2019.
     
  • SRT Performance Pages — Bring critical vehicle performance data to the driver’s fingertips, including a real-time dyno graph, a g-force heat map, and much more.
     
  • SRT Power Chiller™ — This innovative, award-winning feature comes standard on both the Challenger SRT Super Stock and SRT Hellcat Redeye, diverts the air-conditioning refrigerant from the interior cabin to a chiller unit mounted by the low-temperature circuit coolant pump. Charged air coolant, after being cooled by ambient air passing through a low-temperature radiator at the front of the vehicle, flows through the chiller unit, where it is further cooled. The chilled coolant then flows to the heat exchangers in the supercharger. By lowering the intake air temperature further, the results equal improvement in performance
2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock. (Dodge).

Our opinion is for those who missed out on ordering a Challenger SRT Demon during its limited run, here is your chance. While you can’t order the Demon crate with its unique set of tools, narrow front runners (tires), or the Direct Connection Controller, there are several aftermarket ways to tuned a Redeye to get the power-level from the Demon. With aftermarket companies making Demon-styled hoods, we are sure we will see a bunch of Demon clones running around the streets.

As far as performance, the 2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock has a 0-60 mph time of 3.25-seconds and can tackle the quarter-mile in 10.5-seconds @ 131 mph. It’s top-speed like the Demon is tire-limited to 168 mph.

2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock. (Dodge).

The 2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock will be available in 13 exterior colors, that include, F8 Green, Frostbite, Go Mango, Granite Crystal, Hellraisin, IndiGo Blue, Octane Red, Pitch Black, Sinamon Stick, Smoke Show, TorRed, Triple Nickel, and White Knuckle. There will also be several stripes and appearance packages available.

Dodge has announced that the dealer orders for the 2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock are scheduled to open this summer with production starting at Brampton Assembly Plant this fall. The SRT Super Stock is not a limited production like the Demon and WILL return for the 2021 model year. The first batch of Super Stocks are expected to arrive at dealers later this year and will join the drag-oriented Challenger R/T Scat Pack 1320 and drag-specific Dodge Challenger Drag Pak from Mopar. Pricing will be released at a later date.

2020 Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock Image Gallery:

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Robert S. Miller

Robert S. Miller is a diehard Mopar enthusiast who lives and breathes all that is Mopar. The Michigander is not only the Editor for MoparInsiders.com, 5thGenRams.com, and HDRams.com but an automotive photographer. He is an avid fan of offshore powerboat racing, which he travels the country to take part in.

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