Two Dodge Vipers will compete in the GT Daytona class this weekend during the Rolex 24 Hours at Daytona. 

Motorsports | January 22 2015

Dodge Vipers on the prowl at Daytona this weekend

UPDATE: The No. 93 Dodge Viper took the win the GT Daytona class at the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona. In 24 hours the car completed 704 laps of the 3.5-mile circuit and finished 13th overall out of 53 cars that started the race. The No. 33 Viper finished in 9th position in the GT Daytona class and 23rd overall. Congratulations to the No. 93 driving team of Ben Keating, Dominik Farnbacher, Kuno Witter, Cameron Lawrence and Al Carter.

The Dodge Viper loves the race track as much as the street. So it’s no surprise that a pair of V-10-powered Vipers will be among the 53 cars lined up this Saturday for the start of one of the world’s great endurance races, the Rolex 24 at Daytona. If you’re a fan of the Viper, you’ll want to watch.

The Vipers, wearing numbers 33 and 93, are being fielded by private owner and Viper retailer Ben Keating. His team will compete in the GT Daytona class with Viper GT3-R cars prepared by Riley Motorsports. The cars’ white, blue and green paint scheme reflects the primary sponsorship by automotive supplier TI Automotive.

In addition to Keating, the driver roster for the Daytona endurance race includes brothers Jeroen and Sebastiaan Bleekemolen, 2014 GT Le Mans class champion Kuno Wittmer, Marc Goossens, Dominik Farnbacher, Al Carter and two-time Trans-Am champ Cameron Lawrence.

Yes, some of those names are familiar to Viper racing fans. Wittmer, Goossens and Farnbacher were teammates last year as the Viper competed in the series’ GT Le Mans class. Goossens started last year’s Rolex 24 race on the GTLM pole, while Keating and Jeroen Bleekemolen raced in the GT Daytona class.

So the Viper racing experience on this team runs deep. It comes in handy when battling competitors driving Ferrari, Porsche, Audi, BMW and Aston Martin cars in the class, as well as entries in the Prototype and Le Mans classes.

Earlier this week, Wittmer visited the FCA US LLC Technical Center to meet employees and sign autographs. It gave us a chance to ask him the difference between a GTLM Viper and the car set up for GT Daytona competition.

“The car we’re in this weekend has a little more horsepower due to less air restriction on the engine. But there are less electronics in the car, no traction control or stability control,” Wittmer said. “It’s a different animal.”

As Viper fans, we love seeing the car go wheel-to-wheel with competitors on the track. So we’ll be tuned into the action at Daytona this weekend.

The Rolex 24 starts at 2:10 p.m. Eastern on Saturday. Want to keep up with the race? Here is the TV and Internet broadcast schedule, along with a meaty list of Twitter feeds you’ll want to follow:

  • Fox Sports will broadcast the race. The broadcast runs on the Fox network from 2-4 p.m., switches to Fox Sports 2 from 4-8 p.m. and switches to Fox Sports 1 from 8-10 p.m. Race coverage during the overnight hours streams on IMSA TV at www.imsa.com from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. Then Fox Sports 1 picks up the telecast from 7 a.m. until the race concludes. You can also listen to the radio broadcast of the race online at www.radiolemans.com. Track live scoring at timing at http://scoring.imsa.com.

Twitter feeds:

Dale Jewett

Do you know your blood type? Mine is 100 octane (not your standard blood bank classification). At any given moment, I’m thinking about cars – driving one, fixing one, buying one or (in my dreams) restoring one. So I love to tell stories that involve horsepower, brake and wheel diameters
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Do you know your blood type? Mine is 100 octane (not your standard blood bank classification). At any given moment, I’m thinking about cars – driving one, fixing one, buying one or (in my dreams) restoring one. So I love to tell stories that involve horsepower, brake and wheel diameters and 0-to-60 times – and the people who make it happen. Because behind every awesome vehicle are amazing people with vision and the desire to make it a reality. I cover Mopar, Dodge, SRT and motorsports for Stellantis Digital Media. I learned to drive on a 1973 Jeep CJ-5 with the rare Super Jeep option package and three-speed manual transmission. I still belong to the dwindling club of people who prefer to shift their own gears, and think the best way to drive is with the top down!