Hennessey Performance Engineering Explained

Hennessey Performance Engineering
Type:Private
Industry:Automotive
Founder:John Hennessey
Key People:John Hennessey, CEO
Products:Automobiles
Divisions:Hennessey Special Vehicles
Location:Sealy, Texas, United States

Hennessey Performance Engineering (HPE) is an American hypercar manufacturer and high-performance vehicle creator.

In addition to building the Venom F5 hypercar, the company specializes in 'making fast cars faster' modifying sports cars from several brands including Chevrolet, Dodge, Cadillac, Jeep, Ford, GMC, and Lincoln. Established in 1991 by John Hennessey, their main facility is located 45 minutes west of Houston in Sealy, Texas. The firm focuses on mechanical component modification for creating high-powered cars. Besides performance automobiles, they also tune pickup trucks and sport utility vehicles such as the Ford Raptor, the Ram TRX and the Jeep Grand Cherokee. They also work on muscle cars like the Ford Mustang, Chevy Camaro, Dodge Charger and Challenger.

Tuner School

In 2008, the Tuner School was founded by the company. It is a private institution dedicated to teach and train high performance vehicle tuner technicians. It is located at Lonestar Motorsports Park, near the Hennessey Performance headquarters. All instructors at this education facility are actual performance tuning mechanics.[1]

Notable cars

Hennessey Venom 650R

The Hennessey Venom 650R is one of the first offerings provided from the tuning company. Available as a package to the 1996 Dodge Viper GTS, the Venom 650R was one of the fastest road legal cars in the world. Upgrades included a US$37,000 engine upgrade that utilised enlarged cylinder bores, and longer stroke to increase displacement from the stock to along with forged steel connecting rods (titanium rods were an extra $3,500) and forged aluminum pistons; the whole assembly was then balanced and blueprinted to bring the total power output to at 5,800 rpm and of torque at 4,500 rpm bumping the compression ratio up to 10.5:1. On the intake, a competition airbox feeds 70-millimeter billet throttle bodies and a port-matched intake manifold. On the exhaust, a set of tuned-length stainless steel headers sent spent gases back to a 3.0-inch stainless exhaust system that retained the stock catalytic converters, but allowed them to be easily bypassed for track day performance. New engine management software increased the idle to 1,000 rpm, disabled the 1-4 skip-shift transmission feature, turned the cooling fans on sooner, and packed recalibrated fuel and ignition curves. Completing the package was the VenomAero carbon fiber body upgrade that reduced weight, added functional brake cooling ducts along with a rear wing and optimized downforce. All of these modifications allowed the car to accelerate from in 3.3 seconds, complete the 1/4-mile in 10.8 seconds at a speed of and propel the car to a top speed of over . A Brembo race spec braking system and a Penske adjustable suspension system with 30 variable damping settings were available as an option. The total cost of the package stood at US$108,500 excluding the price of a stock Viper GTS.[2]

Hennessey Venom GT

See main article: Hennessey Venom GT.

In 2010, Hennessey Performance revealed the Hennessey Venom GT. The Venom GT is based on the Lotus Exige and has a twin-turbocharged V8 engine that is rated at 12440NaN0. The car weighs 12440NaN0 and has a top speed of 270.492NaN2. Three "World's Fastest Edition" Venom GT coupés were produced in 2014 to commemorate the car's speed record run.[3]

A roadster variant dubbed the Venom GT Spyder was launched in 2012 on the request of Aerosmith lead singer Steven Tyler. It is based on the Lotus Elise and adds 30abbr=onNaNabbr=on to the curb weight due to structural changes. The production of the Spyder was limited to five units with a one-off Spyder being produced as the "Final edition" model bringing the total to 6 units. The final edition gained a total of and was lighter than the regular Spyder.

Hennessey Venom F5

See main article: Hennessey Venom F5.

The Hennessey Venom F5, successor to the Venom GT, was unveiled at the SEMA Show in Las Vegas, Nevada, on November 1, 2017, with high expectations of its intended world-beating speed record, having a projected 2.0 second NaNabbr=onNaNabbr=on acceleration time and 301abbr=onNaNabbr=on top speed.[4] The Venom F5 features a bespoke proprietary 6.6-liter twin-turbocharged V8 engine, making this the company's first in-house engine.[5] It is rated at 18170NaN0 and 11930NaN0 of torque.[6] Pennzoil and Shell are partners with Hennessey for the project to help reach the 3000NaN0 top speed mark. The top speed is claimed to be 3010NaN0 through a V-MAX speed-tracking system. Hennessey predicts the car can accelerate from NaNkm/h in a time of under 10 seconds and NaNkm/h in a time of under 20 seconds. Only 24 will be built with each car costing US$1.6 million.[7]

VelociRaptor SUV/Off-Road Truck

The Hennessey VelociRaptor SUV is a luxury off-road full-size SUV modified from the Ford SVT Raptor. The SUV is limited to 30 produced a year, however since its introduction over 400 versions have been made. It uses the same engine Ford uses for the pickup truck version. The second generation version is a Luxury off-road heavy-duty SUV modified from the 2015 Ford Super Duty Lariat Version, with design cues from the Ford Excursion.

As of 2015, the first generation model has been discontinued. In 2018 the Hennessey Ford VelociRaptor 6×6 option was made available, with a 30-inch extended frame and extra axle for a total of six driven wheels.[8]

Hennessey CTS-V

The Hennessey CTS-V is a 2016 Cadillac CTS-V tuned by Hennessey to produce 1000 horsepower.[9]

Hennessey Exorcist

The Hennessey Exorcist is an upgrade package for the Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 offered by Hennessy Special Vehicles. The package includes a high-flow supercharger and intercooler providing 14 psi of boost pressure, custom camshaft, ported cylinder heads, upgraded valvetrain with new springs, lifters, pushrods and valves and long-tube stainless steel exhaust headers with high-flow catalytic converters. The cars equipped with the automatic transmission will require an upgraded transmission at the cost of US$9,950. The optional drag pack includes 315/30-20 rear tires, modifications to the drive shaft, floor jack and tool kit for faster acceleration at the drag strip at the cost of US$8,995. The optional road race pack includes a set of 20 inch light weight Hennessey wheels with Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 tires at the cost of US$6,995. The upgraded engine with the standard package is rated at at 6,400 rpm and of torque at 4,400 rpm, enabling the vehicle to accelerate from in 3.5 seconds, complete the quarter-mile in less than 10 seconds and attain a top speed of, over that of the original ZL1. The package is available at an additional cost of US$57,455 over the cost of the standard ZL1 for both the manual and automatic versions of the car. The vehicle can directly be ordered from Hennessey Special Vehicles, Chevrolet dealers or the vehicle can be sent to Hennessey Special vehicles by the owners for conversion.[10] [11]

Divisions

Hennessey established the Hennessey Special Vehicles division in 2017, in which it builds the Hennessey Venom GT sports car line-up. The division is tasked to learn from its experiences with the Venom GT and apply it to the newest variation, the Hennessey Venom F5, which will succeed the Venom GT. All vehicles sold under the division are branded as a regular Hennessey model, despite being built by the division.

Controversy

Hennessey has been the subject of numerous lawsuits and Better Business Bureau complaints throughout the years, with many BBB complaints left unresolved[12] and, according to court records, many judgements entered against Hennessey. Jalopnik published an article outlining Hennessey's many customer service and potential fraud issues.[13] Thetruthaboutcars also wrote a similar article where Hennessey stole a customer's money without producing a car.[14]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Hennessey Performance Tuner School- High Performance Education. 2019-03-11. Zach. Martin. HotRod Magazine. 2020-05-26.
  2. Web site: Hennessey Venom 650R, the fastest street car we've ever tested. Jeff . Karr. Motor Trend. 1 June 1999. 16 March 2018.
  3. Web site: $1.25M Venom GT 'World's Fastest Edition' is so quick you've missed your chance. March 25, 2014. Autoblog. March 4, 2018.
  4. Web site: 301 mph, 1,600 hp: Hennessey Venom F5 details emerge. Autoblog. Sven. Gustafson. 2017-11-01. 2017-11-01.
  5. News: Hennessey's 1,600-HP Venom F5 Is Gunning For 300 MPH . Jeff . Perez . Motor 1 . 2017-11-01 . 2017-11-19.
  6. Web site: Hennessey Venom F5 Engine Rated At 1,817 Horsepower. 2019-10-01. Anthony. Alaniz. Motor1. 2020-05-26.
  7. News: Venom F5 . 2014-08-04 . Hennessey Venom GT . 2017-06-20.
  8. Web site: Hennessey Ford VelociRaptor 6×6. hennesseyperformance.com. January 28, 2019.
  9. Web site: 2016 Hennessey CTS-V is properly ridiculous with 1,000 horsepower. Autoblog.
  10. Web site: Hennessey Exorcist Camaro Hits 217mph. Maxim. Dan . Carney. 21 February 2018. 4 March 2018.
  11. Web site: The Exorcist, Hennessey's answer to the Demon. Hennessey Performance Engineering. 4 April 2017. Kenzie . Delatorre. 4 March 2018.
  12. Web site: Supercars Can Bite as Hard as They Can Run. Csaba. Csere. September 1, 2002. Car and Driver.
  13. Web site: Ex-Employees Say Hennessey Is A Bigger Mess Than You Ever Imagined. Jalopnik.
  14. Web site: John Hennessey earns crook badge. thetruthaboutcars.