Tag Archives: Super Bee

Quick Spin: 2013 Dodge Charger SRT8 Super Bee

By Steven J. Ewing

2013 Dodge Charger SRT8 Super Bee

Filed under:

I can pinpoint the exact moment when I fell in love with this car. It was starting down a nearly straight entrance ramp at 15 miles per hour when I buried the throttle. In a moment, I was thrown back into my seat as the big SRT8’s engine came to life with commensurate sound, fury and force, bringing me up to 75 mph in what felt like two blinks of an eye. This thing feels so much quicker than its 470 horsepower and 470 pound-feet of torque would lead you to believe. And mashing the right pedal never, ever gets old.

But beyond sheer speed, I found a whole lot to like about the Charger SRT8 during my week with the Pitch Black test car here in Detroit. And while the whole Super Bee kit isn’t really my style, it’s really easy to overlook those badges for a package that offers so much for so little.

Driving Notes

  • Like I said, the 392 Hemi engine feels much more powerful than its numbers might suggest. Chrysler estimates that the car will rip off 0-60 times in the high-four-second range, and you’ll pass the quarter mile just before the 13-second mark.
  • And then there’s the transmission. Dodge fits a five-speed automatic unit to its 6.4-liter Hemi here in the Charger, and while that’s almost an archaic piece of technology by today’s standards (and considering that the recently refreshed Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT with the same engine uses an eight-speed auto), it’s still well-suited to the big motor. Shifts happen quickly, both up and down the range, and because there are only five ratios, there’s less hunting around between cogs.
  • There are steering wheel-mounted paddle shifters, but the transmission felt best when left to its own devices. Just hit the throttle when you want to go, and you’ll go. There’s no drama, just speed.
  • The rub, though, is with fuel economy – at best, you’ll manage 23 miles per gallon on the highway, and my average of 16 mpg fell just short of the estimated 17-mpg combined rating. Oh, well.
  • But this thing is just so damn fun to drive. You can get the rear tires to spin at every stoplight, but in an incredibly manageable and playful fashion. Likewise, it’s easy to nudge the rump out around turns, and the thick, leather-wrapped SRT steering wheel is a joy to toss back and forth.
  • This is a big, heavy car, though, and you won’t forget it from behind the wheel. At no point would I describe its handling as nimble or precise, but it’s not nearly as tough to wrangle as you might imagine. There are big Brembo brakes to keep all that power in line, and you don’t need to turn off the traction nannies to have a good time.
  • Visually, the Super Bee kit offers unique, double-five-spoke 20-inch wheels, decals on the hood and rear quarter panel, and a small graphic next …read more
    Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

2013 Dodge Charger SRT8 Super Bee: The Bee Is Back, Again [2013 Chicago Auto Show]

By Tony Swan

2013 Dodge Charger SRT8 Super Bee

Bumblebee butt stripes trace their origin to Dodge’s street machines of the late 1960s, and the trademark graphics still seem to possess some cachet with 21st-century gearheads, or so believe the product-planning denizens of Chrysler’s Street and Racing Technology (SRT) department. Witness said stripes on the new Charger SRT8 Super Bee.

The latest iteration, one of three SRT “Core” introductions at the 2013 Chicago auto show, features a helmet-clad 3D bumblebee emblem on the crosshair grille, in addition to the rear fender stripes, which now include “Powered by SRT” graphics. The 20-inch aluminum wheels are carried over from the 2012 package—we tested it last year—and the black-painted Brembo brake calipers are shared with the other new SRT offerings.

SRT mined its history books for the Super Bee’s new Hemi Orange Pearl Coat paint. The lurid Plum Crazy Pearl Coat, shared with the Dodge Challenger SRT8, also joins the palette. Like SRT’s other big cars, the Super Bee features black cloth-clad bucket seats inside, with subdued striping.

The point, as with the other Core SRTs, is to offer all the performance of the regular car at a cut price. Last year, that meant deleting items like heated seats, the active exhaust, active dampers, and more, to create the Super Bee. Dodge didn’t serve up specifics on the differences between the Super Bee and the regular SRT8 for 2013, but we’ve asked and will serve up the exact details as soon as we have them. We do know that the active exhaust is included this year, and that this car features cast 20-inch wheels in place of forged units.



As with all non-Viper SRT models, the Charger is powered by Chrysler’s 6.4-liter Hemi V-8—470 horsepower, 470 lb-ft—with cylinder deactivation. It’s bolted to a six-speed automatic transmission with launch control. Using the computer assist, SRT forecasts 0–60 in the high-four-second range, a 175-mph top speed, and 23 mpg on the highway. We saw 4.2 seconds to 60 in our test of the 2012 Bee.

The 2013 Charger SRT8 Super Bee will be priced at $42,990 plus gas-guzzler tax when it buzzes into dealers this summer, saving three grand or so on its better-equipped stablemate.

2013 Chicago Auto Show full coverage

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Car & Driver